I recently took an entrepreneurial
quiz which evaluated my answers and informed me I would
do best as a hired hand! So why am I a successful home business
owner? Because I've learned to fill the holes in my entrepreneurial
style, and compensate for my deficiencies.
Let's start with a list of qualities that
might benefit someone working for him/herself:
1. Ability to see the big picture and plan accordingly;
2. Self-discipline;
3. Ability to use time wisely;
4. At minimum, a moderate drive to achieve;
5. Adaptability;
6. Autonomy;
7. Decisiveness;
8. A feeling of control over your own destiny;
9. Having (energy) drive and enterprise;
10. Motivation to grow;
11. Sense of intuition;
12. Ability to spot opportunities;
13. Perseverance;
14. Problem-solving abilities;
15. Risk-tolerance;
16. Self-confidence;
17. Social skills
As an example, let's look at John Doe. John has an excellent
nose for a good opportunity; he drives his wife crazy with
always turning everything into a new business idea. He's
not afraid to make a decision and take the risk. He has
a huge drive to achieve; he wants to be rich! John is confident
that he can accomplish everything he sets out to do.
Then the reality of the rest of John sets in. He's not
real good in the follow-through; as a matter of fact, he
starts one business only to come up with another, and yet
another, idea over and over. He writes up proposal after
proposal, and always stumbles over the concrete details,
such as turning goals and visions into action plans, and
projecting budgets. He starts and stops, never stopping
long enough to evaluate and plan ahead for the success of
the next venture.
John could benefit from postponing his next decision until
he hones his problem-solving skills a bit. He needs to understand
where he's gone wrong and plan for success the next time.
John also could put his vision for his work and his life
down on paper, and learn to use this vision to help choose
opportunities that are in sync with his financial and career
goals.
John is confusing working hard with getting ahead. He needs
to continually evaluate the tasks he is engaged in to determine
if he is, indeed, using his time wisely.
And lastly, John would learn a lot from finding a business
opportunity that would combine teamwork, successful strategies
and skill building to encourage him to apply his abundant
perseverance to ONE business until he succeeds.
John can look at this list and see how one strength could
compensate for another weakness. If he wasn't very decisive,
he could be spared many a bad quick decision, and strong
problem solving skills could bring an eventual understanding
of the right path for HIM. What he lacked in self-confidence
could be made up for with social skills that enabled him
to work well with a mentor or a knowledgeable team. Lack
of enterprise or drive could mean he isn't cut out for over-the-counter
or door-to-door retail sales. But he might shine in the
backroom day-in- day-out details of getting a job done,
or in website-based business.
Oh yeah...and John could also listen to his wife, and just
give it all a rest at least one day a week..
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