Wednesday Wealth Recap:
- Inexperienced investors often try to buy shares of heavy hitters like Amazon and Apple. These companies are too big to fail, right? But the truth is, investors are missing out when they ignore small stocks. Alexander Green reveals the massive potential of tiny stocks here.
- Warren Buffett and George Soros are gods in the investing world. But their returns have been less than stellar for years. Nicholas Vardy explains how things have changed since these 90-year-old gurus were in their prime.
- Oil investors, beware: Things are not looking good for oil and gas stocks. If your portfolio includes any oil and gas companies, you’ll want to hear what our friend David Fessler has to say.
- Everyone loves a good underdog story. That’s what makes penny stocks so enticing. Who doesn’t want to buy a cheap stock and watch it soar to incredible heights? But before you dive in, allow Marc Lichtenfeld to debunk some common myths about penny stocks.
When business writers discuss why so few people become entrepreneurs, they cite “fear of failure” as the No. 1 challenge.
I agree. Fear of failing is a real factor. But to overcome it, you need to figure out what it means in more specific terms.
When I feel trepidation about starting a venture, I’m not worried about something as abstract as failure.
I worry mainly about three things…
One, I sometimes worry I don’t have the knowledge or skill to make the idea successful. Two, I worry I might lose all the time and money I’m about to invest in the idea. And three, I worry if word gets out that I’ve had to close, business people will think I’m a fool – especially those people who doubted my idea in the first place.
Best-selling author Seth Godin talks about that first fear. He says, quite correctly, that most people who buy books on entrepreneurship never get beyond the dreaming stage because “deep down inside they don’t think they have what it takes to succeed.”
I don’t know whether that is the most common fear of starting a business. I wish it were. But I’m afraid too many entrepreneurs have the opposite problem…
They don’t realize they don’t have what they need to succeed.
If you have that fear, you should respect it, because 9 chances out of 10, it is valid.
My No. 1 rule of wealth building is to invest only in what you know. If you think you might not know enough or have the right resources, then you probably don’t.
The solution to that fear is to put your plan on hold and acquire the experience to know what you need to know.
If your fear is being shamed by a failure, you can and should move forward. You can overcome this kind of fear by doing what I’ve talked about before: Imagine the worst possible outcome and visualize being emotionally okay with that.
Another thing you can do is be a bit humble when you are announcing your venture.
Rather than brag about all the money you will be making, keep the claims small and try a little self-deprecating humor: “This is probably a terrible idea, but I’m going to try it.”
If your fear is losing your time and money, then you need to follow the protocol I outline in The Reluctant Entrepreneur: Turning Dreams into Profits.*
- Keep your current job and all your current income.
- Start the business in your spare time at home.
- Spend the first few days creating a short business plan. Identify your product and why you believe you can sell it. List the media where you can advertise. Do a quick and dirty cost-benefit analysis, etc. The entire plan should be no more than four pages.
- Spend the next few weeks or months spending as little money as you can, testing your “optimal selling strategy” – your plan for selling your product. Figure out how you will position it, how much you will charge for it, what media you will use to advertise it and what sort of advertising copy you will use.
- Find a corner of the overall marketplace where you can test your selling strategy cheaply. If your ultimate market is retail, for example, you could consider selling your product on Sundays at a flea market.
- Create a cash flow projection that will allow you to ramp up your marketing if the initial testing is positive.
- If possible, get someone to act as your mentor – a retired business owner who is willing to teach you what you need to know and encourage you to take the steps you have to take.
- When the business starts growing, read Ready, Fire, Aim: Zero to $100 Million in No Time Flat, my book on the subject.* That will give you the details of what you need to do to take your business from inception to $100 million in annual revenues and beyond.
Fear is a good and useful emotion. Successful entrepreneurs don’t deny it. They overcome it sensibly and cautiously by taking baby steps and proving the optimal selling strategy before going big.
If you feel you have what it takes, then don’t let either the fear of embarrassment or the fear of losing time and money get in your way. Keep your risk low and your dreams high.
Good investing,
Mark
*Note: I wrote both of these books under the pen name Michael Masterson.