Experts – Tekrati https://www.tekrati.com Experts' Views on Modern Business Fri, 14 Mar 2025 02:23:55 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=7.0 https://www.tekrati.com/wp-content/uploads/2022/04/cropped-Tekrati-Guest-Posts-32x32.jpeg Experts – Tekrati https://www.tekrati.com 32 32 7 Stand-Out Features that Make Australian Hay Sheds Superior https://www.tekrati.com/stand-out-features-that-make-australian-hay-sheds-superior/ https://www.tekrati.com/stand-out-features-that-make-australian-hay-sheds-superior/#respond Fri, 14 Mar 2025 02:08:52 +0000 https://www.tekrati.com/?p=32835 7 Stand-Out Features that Make Australian Hay Sheds Superior

7 Stand-Out Features that Make Australian Hay Sheds Superior

Are you looking to add a storage shed to your property? Have you been looking at various options, styles, and materials? If so, then you will undoubtedly see many recommendations for sheds built using Australian steel.  Whether you’re looking for a hay shed or a bigger structure to store machinery and equipment, it’s essential to [...]

The post 7 Stand-Out Features that Make Australian Hay Sheds Superior first appeared on Tekrati and is written by Gia Patterson

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7 Stand-Out Features that Make Australian Hay Sheds Superior

7 Stand-Out Features that Make Australian Hay Sheds Superior

Are you looking to add a storage shed to your property? Have you been looking at various options, styles, and materials? If so, then you will undoubtedly see many recommendations for sheds built using Australian steel. 

Whether you’re looking for a hay shed or a bigger structure to store machinery and equipment, it’s essential to choose an option that’s durable, able to withstand the Australian climate and cost-effective. 

 

Always Choose the Best

There are many types of shed types made from a range of materials to choose from. Since not all sheds are the same, it’s essential to select the right option. Our team of experts want to help you with the selection process and will be sharing a few of the more common reasons why Australian-made sheds are the superior choice.

1. Robust Australian Steel

The type of material used to construct your shed should always be your number one consideration. If you want your shed to last for years to come, and the contents to remain dry and safe, then finding the most robust material is crucial. 

Australian sheds made from quality Australian steel are by far the most superior material type. Here are a few key reasons why:

  • Australian steel is made locally to withstand our harsh and unforgiving climate
  • As galvanised RHS (rectangular hollow steel) is durable enough to last a lifetime
  • All components are designed to meet stringent quality control standards which ensure industry-leading superiority

2. Can Withstand Local Climates

Australia is notorious for its harsh climates. You’ll therefore want a shed solution that you don’t need to replace every time the weather acts up. Australian sheds have been designed to withstand whatever the local climate throws their way. 

The most significant feature here is that all Australian sheds feature a category 2 wind rating which means your shed contents will be protected against harsh winds, storms, and cyclones. The Category 2 wind rating is the highest and ensures maximum durability. Anyone living in storm or cyclone-prone areas should always insist on an Australian steel shed. 

3. Perfect for Agricultural Storage

Another top feature of Australian steel sheds is that they are highly customisable. Your installer will be able to tailor your shed design to suit your agricultural or storage needs. These sheds can be made using different types of insulation, flooring options, door types and ventilation options. 

You will easily be able to design a shed that’s ideal for all types of agricultural products. The most common products Australians store in their sheds include hay, cotton, barely, and produce. 

4. Can Utilise the Existing Ground Floor

Depending on what you’re going to store in your shed, you may require some type of stable flooring. Here you have the option to use the natural ground floor, or you can add a solid concrete slab. 

This will not only provide stable, dry flooring for products such as hay and barely or even park heavy machinery on it. Opting for natural flooring is an effective way to minimise initial cost but choosing concrete flooring will give you more flexibility about what you can store in the shed. 

5. Built Using Strong Beams

By using galvanised universal beams that have been made from RHS steel, you can look forward to strength, durability, and longevity. It’s essential to point out that using steel beans rather than the usual timber options means there’s no risk of termites or any other wood-boring insects damaging the internal structure of your shed. 

Steel beams will also give you peace of mind that your shed isn’t going to blow away in the middle of a windstorm. Extending your shed is also much easier when you opt for a steel shed. All you’ll need is the additional roof and wall panels which can easily be added to the existing ones. 

6. Safeguards Your Contents Safe From Intrusive Animals

If you’re not building a shed to house animals, then chances are that you don’t want wild animals or pests such as rats and mice getting in. With the durability of the steel and additional safety features such as lockable doors, you’ll be able to keep unwanted pests of all kinds out of your shed. This is essential if you’re storing produce or hay for your animals.

7. Can Double as a Machinery Shed

Depending on the style and size of the shed, you may also be able to use it to store machinery, tools, and even animals in an emergency. In this instance, it’s a good idea to add a concrete floor with lockable doors and ventilation. If you’re going to use the shed for animals in the winter, adding insulation may be an ideal feature to consider if you live in cooler areas.

Final Thoughts

With the features we’ve highlighted, it’s easy to see why Australian sheds are popular no matter what their intended purpose is. Always opt for the shedding solution that has been designed to withstand local climates and with durability in mind. Being able to customise your shed with a host of different options makes the selection process that much easier.

The post 7 Stand-Out Features that Make Australian Hay Sheds Superior first appeared on Tekrati and is written by Gia Patterson

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53 Stories of Successful Entrepreneurs From USA that Will Inspire You on Your Journey https://www.tekrati.com/successful-entrepreneurs-inspiring-stories/ Mon, 03 Feb 2025 16:34:23 +0000 https://www.tekrati.com/?p=24467 53 Stories of Successful Entrepreneurs From USA that Will Inspire You on Your Journey

53 Stories of Successful Entrepreneurs From USA that Will Inspire You on Your Journey

All successful entrepreneurs have risen through adversity and perseverance. Before becoming established, all firms must go through the starting phase. They have to start somewhere, too. Ask any ambitious entrepreneur, and they’ll tell you about the exhausting, persistent process that has kept them awake countless nights. It’s fascinating to learn about the beginnings of significant [...]

The post 53 Stories of Successful Entrepreneurs From USA that Will Inspire You on Your Journey first appeared on Tekrati and is written by Jed Morley

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53 Stories of Successful Entrepreneurs From USA that Will Inspire You on Your Journey

53 Stories of Successful Entrepreneurs From USA that Will Inspire You on Your Journey

All successful entrepreneurs have risen through adversity and perseverance. Before becoming established, all firms must go through the starting phase. They have to start somewhere, too. Ask any ambitious entrepreneur, and they’ll tell you about the exhausting, persistent process that has kept them awake countless nights.

It’s fascinating to learn about the beginnings of significant corporations that have become household brands. Others of them came from humble beginnings, and some of the well-known firms have founders with fascinating backstories.

In this interview series, we spoke with 53 business owners and executives in the United States to learn how some of the country’s most successful entrepreneurs and leaders faced adversity and triumphed. We have also gone over several strategies that you can utilize to overcome any obstacles that come your way.

INTERVIEW HOST

The host of this interview was Jed Morley. Jed Morley is the CEO of a leading payment processing service provider called PlatPay.


Jed Morley

Table of Contents

The question we asked:

Kristina Alexandra Kovalyuk
Kristina Alexandra Kovalyuk

Kristina Alexandra Kovalyuk

The difficulties with becoming CEO are many and it is a journey not meant for all. As Elon Musk said, “being an entrepreneur is like eating glass and looking into the abyss”. Some of the challenges I faced in becoming a CEO have been:

  • Leaving a comfortable well paying job on Wall Street that provided a salary, benefits and security and going into the unknown. Not knowing where or when my next ‘paycheck’ was going to come from.
  • Marketing. Knowing what my product and service is, is one thing, but how to get it to my target audience, getting it on their radar, marketing, pitching, doing PR.
  • Establishing corporate governance, accounting, operations, structure, CRM.
  • Hiring talent. Probably one of the most challenging parts of being an entrepreneur is finding talent and then being able to give them the freedom to do their work and not micro-manage and let go. This was a very tough part as an entrepreneur wants to instinctively do everything themselves.
Matt Post
Matt Post

Matt Post

Whenever I am confronted with difficulties and challenges as a leader, I always remind myself that great leadership is forged in the fire of adversity. Yes, difficulties can sometimes discourage you from pursuing your goals further, but if you adopt a growth mindset around them, you will learn to embrace each challenge as an opportunity to grow. That is what I have continuously tried to do throughout my career as a serial entrepreneur.

Chris M. Walker
Chris M. Walker

Chris M. Walker

The hardest part for me was learning to lean on other people.

I waited literal years too long for my first hire and once I did it changed the game for me overnight and let me take things to the next level… but I still didn’t learn.

After that hire I was able to add more offers, grow more products and help more people… until I plateaued again, and had to be convinced to hire further.

This was a vicious cycle that I eventually broke out of long after I should have. I have now finally learned that not only can I not do everything myself, but I should do very few things myself so the things that I do, do get me at my best.

Your business is your creation and it is normal to think no one can do things up to your standard, but you can’t do it this way for long if you have any level of success, it will lower the quality of your work, make you hate what you do, and prevent your from rowing.

I am fortunate now to have a great team that handles most everything for me to the point that I joke that I am just the face on the sign like Colonel Sanders… but it took me a long time to get there, and if I hadn’t struggled with this I’d be years further along than I am now.

Brett Larkin
Brett Larkin

Brett Larkin

One of the biggest challenges I faced on my entrepreneurial journey was prioritizing work-life balance. When you start a business, it is hard to focus on anything else, but this hyperfocus can actually cause a lot of fatigue and stress that can lead to burnout.

The key to being a well-rounded leader and business person is to figure out how you can balance your professional life with your personal life. External factors, like friends, family and your social life can actually benefit you hugely by providing comfort and support on your entrepreneurial journey!

Kate Lombardo
Kate Lombardo

Kate Lombardo

The journey to becoming an entrepreneur, also a Yoga Director at YogaRenew Teacher Training is one that is filled with constant challenges. While I’ve faced all the typical ones– from conquering self-doubt to navigating bankruptcy as a result of the pandemic– I think the biggest difficulty I’ve faced is learning to accept that things are always going to change.

When it comes to being an entrepreneur, you have to be open to always learning and growing and learning how to pivot as things around you change. Every time you think you’ve finally got things figured out, something else shifts in the world and you have to adjust in order to stay relevant.

For example, right before the pandemic began I finally felt like my yoga studio was in a good place and then we had to close and learn how to teach online. Thankfully by then, I had already gotten comfortable with needing to always be able to pivot, but that took a long time for me to learn how to accept that I’ll never be “done” when it comes to being an entrepreneur.

The exciting thing about that is that it means you can never truly fail. You just need to keep trying until you find the way that works.

Adam Rossi
Adam Rossi

Adam Rossi

Many entrepreneurs have similar stories on their way to the top. Everyone has problems they face on a daily basis, but what separates those who are good from those who are great is how they deal with the adversity that appears in everyone’s lives.

I’m no different. I’ve faced the same issues, dealt with the same issues of people not believing in me or in my journey toward success. The only difference between me and those who haven’t reached their success yet? I didn’t let any of those problems stop me. That’s the big secret to being a successful entrepreneur. Don’t stop.

Don’t let anything get in your way. You’re going to have problems. You’re going to have haters. It’s inevitable. Don’t let it stop you. Let it fuel your fire. Prove them wrong. Prove everyone wrong.

Devon Fata
Devon Fata

Devon Fata

The core of my journey to becoming a CEO was the slow realization that it was the only way I would be able to work in a way that fit my vision and values.

I started in the web design business right out of college as a salaried employee at a big design firm. While I learned a lot about the industry and built my skills, I found that there were a lot of things I wanted to do differently, but lacked the power to change.

This led me to becoming a freelancer. This gave me a greater degree of control over my work and the freedom to find clients for myself and start acting a bit like a business instead of an employee, but I was still limited both by the clients I could find and by my inability to bring together teams for bigger projects. That’s when I launched Pixoul. Now I can finally implement my vision on entire projects, from start to finish.

Dain Dunston
Dain Dunston

Dain Dunston

One of the biggest difficulties I faced during my career journey was failing as a leader at a tech company, where I lasted only four months. It shook me to my core. The worst part was I knew in my bones it was a bad decision before I accepted the job, and yet I went ahead with it anyway.

I came into the role feeling so uncomfortable for so many reasons that I surely would have come across as inauthentic and even just a little weird. I left feeling crushed, humiliated, and defeated. I had no idea where to go next, yet I was determined to find the answer to one burning question:

How had I become so lost? The experience fired me up to find out why I had made such bad decisions and how I could rewire my mind to be the awesome, inspiring human being I always wanted to be (but secretly doubted I was worthy of becoming). Who among us hasn’t found ourselves in the wrong job, or feeling that we didn’t belong, or wishing we could stop making decisions that took us into dead-end career moves?

My failed job experience allowed me to look inward, and over time, with daily personal practice, I rewired my mind to be the leader I know I could be. Along the way, I helped many other leaders do the same, from CEOs to those just starting out in their careers. Nothing I’m doing today would be happening if I hadn’t gone through that and a few related experiences. All experience happens for one purpose: to increase our awareness.

Ryan Yount
Ryan Yount

Ryan Yount

Establishing a clear direction for the business was the most difficult challenge I faced. Developing strategies that will lead the business in the right direction is not easy, especially when starting from scratch.

You must always be ahead of time to avoid losing the relevance of the business. One of an entrepreneur’s most important responsibilities is to bring what has yet to be done into the present. An entrepreneur is also tasked to find solutions to other business issues, such as poor customer service, which is a challenge due to a lack of experience.

Keeping up with business trends and changes is another challenge I faced. When starting a small business as an entrepreneur, you must adapt to the changing trends in the business environment. Trends create or destroy businesses at their initial stages. Seasoned business owners recognize that a trend is a friend, and they are always ready to adapt their operations to the current trend quickly.

It isn’t easy to keep your eyes open for trends while you are on your journey to becoming an entrepreneur, but the real challenge is always the ability to capitalize on these trends rapidly.

Thomas Mirmotahari
Thomas Mirmotahari

Thomas Mirmotahari

The difficulty I faced was the challenges that accompanied the commencement of this pandemic. Overcoming those challenges meant finally taking a leap of faith to start my own business which I did in 2020. Fast forward to 2022, I have 7 full time employees and 2 part time employees on my team. We are dedicated and focused on producing great results that continue to sustain the enterprise.

I am a Business School graduate and my knowledge on what it takes to be a great leader started at college. So for me, making my way to the top of my own company meant hard work at strategizing a business plan that was relevant to the market, taking the bull by the horns and finally getting down to implementing a marketable solution.

Starting your own business is gutsy. It involves many long hours of hard work. So I could say that developing a higher treshold for discipline, and time management was an initial challenge. I believe that if you truly believe that you have a viable solution to a business problem then test it out and go for it. But have a willingness to work hard. You must be willing to put some skin in the game to make anything happen in life and business.

James Parsons
James Parsons

James Parsons

Digital marketing was already a highly competitive niche in 2018. It was a big challenge to market my company since many digital marketing agencies existed.

The best solution was to offer business proposals to my existing connections at more affordable rates with excellent data-driven results. I hired experienced offshore writers and marketers to save me some money and invested in dependable project management software to boost collaboration and increase productivity.

I created a website for my digital marketing agency and marketed my content marketing services across different online platforms. These steps tremendously improved the company’s online presence, gaining decent traffic for the first year and overwhelming content orders the years after that. More client referrals came in because of the soaring 700% increase in our average clients’ conversion rate in 2020.

William Cohen
William Cohen

William Cohen

One of the issues I had to deal with regularly was criticism. It could be about business concepts, small biz decision-making mistakes, or even launching a firm in the first place.

My business was continuously reminded about the different ways it may fail. People would be jealous of and intimidated by me, so these critics would get personal sometimes.

It’s also quite challenging for any new firm to acquire customers, especially if the company has a limited marketing budget. This concern was always on my mind, and the fact that consumers want to stick with well-known brands made it more difficult for me to advertise.

Tim Absalikov
Tim Absalikov

Tim Absalikov

Being a digital marketing agency, we did not vividly sense the negative effect of the pandemic. We have a mixed staff – both onsite and remote employees – so, we did not have to significantly change the mode of the work. At least, the effect of the changes was not painful for us as we didn’t have to adapt to changing market conditions. We were already practicing remote working, at least part of our staff.

Gian Moore
Gian Moore

Gian Moore

I’m a single mother. So, Building a business while my daughter was growing up was a huge task for me.

Emily Cooper
Emily Cooper

Emily Cooper

Hi Jed,

I’m Emily, the founder of Oliver Wicks, a luxury Italian menswear brand with an online presence.

Being a business leader requires a lot of social responsibility and accountability. There will always be challenges and setbacks present. The only thing that is within your control is your mindset and attitude towards things.

I value integrity and resilience the most in running my business. Enjoy the journey ahead and use the difficult times as fuel to perform better. It’s totally fine to fall down sometimes. The important part is getting back on the saddle and learning from your mistakes.

The first few years of establishing the business are usually the hardest. You are finding your footing, and grappling with growing pains at the same time. It really helps to center on your “why” in venturing into your business, as well as having the right team in place. Never be afraid to ask for help, and always give credit where credit is due.

I hope you find these inputs helpful. I will be happy to elaborate more on the topic, should you need more information.

Warm Regards,

Michael Dean
Michael Dean

Michael Dean

One of the main difficulties I’ve faced while being an entrepreneur is keeping up-to-date on current marketing trends. I never realized the absolute importance of marketing and SEO strategies until I started my own business.

You can have a fantastic idea, but without good marketing tactics, building an audience for that idea is next to impossible. Successful marketing requires an understanding of your brand, and solidifying your brand at the beginning of your business journey can often be challenging.

As someone who is not naturally savvy with social media, I have had to really put in effort and research into understanding how to use it as a business tool. Social media is one of the most accessible and valuable marketing tools out there. If you’re not prioritizing social media and digital marketing for your business, you are missing out on tons of engagement.

Becky Brown
Becky Brown

Becky Brown

I have 20+ years of experience in business, but becoming a CEO took more effort than I could ever imagine. My entrepreneurship journey began remotely when I took control of ShoppingKim, and I had to put in a lot of effort to make it all work.

The initial difficulty was learning how to navigate the online space, getting acquainted with the technology, and learning how to utilize it to grow my business. I had to learn a lot about website development, content creation, e-commerce, and digital marketing.

Managing a remote team was another difficult issue to resolve because I had to learn how to rally my employees to do their best work so that my business can grow.

All things considered, it took a lot of time and effort to learn and understand how everything works in order to make the best decisions as a CEO. Every CEO has to learn the inner workings of their business, but there’s also the need to acquire people and leadership skills to succeed.

Sherry Morgan
Sherry Morgan

Sherry Morgan

The hardest challenge I faced in my road to becoming a business owner and CEO is actually starting the journey. I had a lot of self-doubts and I always thought that maybe I shouldn’t start since I’m sure that there are always people better than me out there.

I got stuck in the planning stage for a long time, always visualizing what I want to happen but not taking any action towards it. Eventually, I decided not to pursue my ideas anymore but then my closest friends talked some sense into me.

They reminded me about the problems I want to solve and why I wanted to start my business in the first place. They also gave me a lot of advice and support and made me feel that I can do anything that I put my mind to.

There may be better people out there, but what’s important is looking at my own progress and aiming to be better than who I was yesterday. This motivated me to finally start and now whatever challenge I face in my business, I’m now brave to face it.

Stephen Keighery
Stephen Keighery

Stephen Keighery

One difficulty I faced on my entrepreneurial journey was keeping my head out of the competition.

Aside from the struggle to stay competitive in the marketplace, you also have to be aware and not get lost in the competition, which may influence how you conduct your business and offer your services.

It is challenging to stay level-headed, especially if you see your competitors earn more than you despite providing the same benefits as you do. You have to learn to extract yourself from that mindset, focus on the quality of services you offer, and establish a good rapport with your clients.

Devin Schumacher
Devin Schumacher

Devin Schumacher

The transition from being a technical consultant or contributor or employee to a full blown businessman providing payroll to others is a large step and it is not always a smooth road to walk on.

The growth pains of building a sustainable business in its infancy on top of a highly irregular business climate with covid-19 is a real challenge. I worked by developing grit and having systems, making small decisions on a daily basis that build into great results.

Here are the things that helped me:

Discipline through a Regimen or Workout
I was able to develop grit and resilience by training in the boxing ring for fitness. This really helped me show up for myself and my business rain or shine.

Center on a Natural Industry of Interest
You can zero in on so many materials when you are incredibly passionate about a subject. So the sucess comes more naturally on the things that feel and seem appealing to you.

Have a Why or Purpose
Ultimately, I thrive in serving clients by making them more digitally visible for revenue. I take pride in being close to the revenue line of my clients and that empowers me everyday.

Erik Wright
Erik Wright

Erik Wright

Any new enterprise has a significant risk because there is always a fear of the unknown. The worry that I carried with me was leaving a well-established and stable job to pursue my dream of being an entrepreneur.

As there is no in-time or out-time while running your own business, it is hard to manage a job and a new business venture at the same time. For the business to succeed, 100 percent devotion is required.

It’s difficult and scary to leave a well-paying career, but if your instincts tell you that being an entrepreneur is the best fit for you, go for it. Do something that makes you happy at the end of the day, and if becoming an entrepreneur is your desire, work hard to make it a reality. That is exactly what I did.

Bryan Scudiere
Bryan Scudiere

Bryan Scudiere

When I think about my journey into entrepreneurship it almost happened by accident. My father lost his job in the ’08 crash which removed college from my option list, and I had to get a job in sales.

With no degree, the only type of sales job i could get was a commission-only D2D position – so I had to completely trust that I was capable of producing results. I spent 4.5years in the ups and downs of a commission based sales role some weeks making great money others, not so much. My first hurdle in my career was actually learning to manage cash flow, so I could survive a dry spell of sales.

This was where I learned budget based/profit first type of budgeting. In 2016 Once I opened the doors of my first franchise, I was off to the races and grew extremely fast in just 30 days, shooting up to a 30 person organization. I was young, audacious, and exceptionally loud haha I was running a sales floor in a Class A office building with incredibly thin walls next door to a 100+ year old Law Firm.

The music blaring and sales reps on the phone trying to close appointments made the owner of the building quite upset. He stormed in, and in front of my entire sales team screamed, smashed my speaker, and proceeded to aggressively kick everybody out.

So about 4 weeks into opening my first business I was banned from ever coming back into that office building [to this day] and had to find another location on the fly, while saving as many reps from quitting as possible. I managed to hold onto 12, find a cheaper bigger office space, and still put up over 300,000 in sales in the next 90 days and over a million the following year.

Garnering me the #1 franchise spot in the company for new business created in 2017. Just one of the many wild stories from owning a small business. Hope this is inspiring and helps people who are on the verge of quitting, I know i sure was back in 2016.

Kathleen Steffey
Kathleen Steffey

Kathleen Steffey

The difficulties faced on my journey to become an entrepreneur/CEO shaped me into the successful business owner that I am today.

When 9/11 happened, I was working as an ex-pat overseas in the Netherlands and I was part of a reduction in force for the European operation. All of a sudden, I found myself unemployed and so far from home during a tumultuous period for our nation.

This was a very pivotal moment for me to stop and reflect on myself, what I want for my future and quality of life while growing my career, similar to the behaviors and decision-making that you see in our current “Great Recession”. This is when I really began to ask myself “What do I want to do?”

I took that hardship and evaluated my life. This hardship gave me a wound to look back on but also to look ahead to new beginnings. Without the events that struck the nation that day and the immediate impact it had on the world and my career, I wouldn’t have had the fortitude or even moment to reflect on what I could make of myself.

I am so glad that I took the entrepreneur road (less traveled) instead of getting back into the corporate rat race. Here I am today celebrating 20 years in business!

Paul Sherman
Paul Sherman

Paul Sherman

The key challenge that I faced in my journey to the top was growing my network. The higher you go, the more you run into groups of people that are closed off to newcomers and like things the way they are. They’ve climbed up the ladder and pulled it away from under them, so to speak.

Breaking into such groups and thus moving my career forward required me to grow my network, but it was a vicious cycle. I couldn’t grow my network because these people often didn’t welcome newcomers, but I couldn’t break into these groups because my network was so small. The solution for me was pure luck. I met someone, who I consider to be a mentor, who vouched for me and helped me break into these networks of very high-achieving experts in the field.

Once I had my first break, it was, ironically, a virtuous cycle of my network growing, being accepted into more business professionals groups, my network growing even further, and so on.

As the saying goes, your network truly is your net worth.

Dragos Badea
Dragos Badea

Dragos Badea

A little over ten years ago I was your standard software engineer working at a design agency when I had the bright idea that it would be great to be able to digitize offices – really make it so that every aspect of the office was interconnected via software rather than all of the random clunky systems and paper-based processes that dominated the office at the time.

A good place to start, I reasoned, was a digital meeting room booking tool. As luck would have it, the concept caught on and here we are in 2022 with a rapidly growing hybrid workforce management solution business that’s been ranked as an industry leader by G2.

Naturally the way to get there was paved with it’s own fair share of difficulties. At the time everyone thought I was crazy. “Why would I pay to stick a tablet to the wall just to tell me whether the meeting room is busy?” is a phrase I heard more than once, which is not a great motivational help after you’ve taken your leap into entrepreneurship.

This wasn’t helped by the fact that I was, as I mentioned earlier, a software engineer. I knew next to nothing about the business side of running a company, but thankfully you really can learn just about anything online these days. I was putting together the tool, gaining our first clients and taking an online sales course on our way to bring in our first million of repeating yearly revenue.

What I took away from this is that not knowing how to do something or going against the way things are done are no real excuse for not giving your idea a try. Find the way to make it work and change the industry paradigm as you’re doing it.

Pati Recarte Iguaz
Pati Recarte Iguaz

Pati Recarte Iguaz

Patricia Recarte Iguaz is the founder and CEO of KADO Networks, a remote networking company. Pati created KADO during the pandemic as a way for businesses and individuals to grow meaningful relationships through a remote app you can download to your phone.

You can learn more about KADO by going to www.kadonetworks.com. Here’s what Pati has to say about some of the difficulties she’s faced on her journey to becoming an entrepreneur / CEO:

“On a personal level, preserving my mental health was an issue and still is, but to a lesser extent. Not managing my personal anxiety and stress levels ended up taking a toll on me. It’s key to find activities that allow your mind to drift away and escape the constant fires that need to be put out. It doesn’t necessarily have to be meditation. It can be anything from going for a run to boxing, or even a night out with friends.

Bringing on a co-founder can also help with the feelings of solitude and stress management. Entrepreneurship is a long and lonely road. Bringing in a co-founder helped me with sharing the weight and also helped with having different perspectives.

On the business side, setting a clear go-to-market strategy and getting our first clients was a real hustle! How can you convince people to use your app when no one else is using it? How can you convince a company to pay for your service when you have no referrals or reviews?

At the beginning, we did a lot of beta testing for free and interviews with potential clients, while also improving the app at the same time. To encourage usage, we’ve been offering it for free to individuals. Having some metrics is critical for SMBs and enterprises to move forward. Potential customers often ask about the number of users or need some name-dropping to be convinced. We are still at the very beginning of our story and this is still one of our key challenges, but we are getting better and improving every single day. “

Kunal Gandhi
Kunal Gandhi

Kunal Gandhi

Kunal Gandhi is the founder and CEO of EZPT, a new at-home fitness app. Kunal’s app tracks movement using your phone’s camera and corrects form using AI technology to prevent injury and encourage a safe workout experience. You can learn more about EZPT by visiting their website at www.ezpt.xyz.

Here’s what Kunal has to say about the personal difficulties he’s faced on his journey to becoming an entrepreneur and CEO:

“Every day is a new challenge. The fun part about building a startup is that we are constantly faced with obstacles that we must learn to jump over while also running at top speed. One of the biggest challenges that I faced as a founder was building product, talking to customers, and staying focused. As a young (& first-time) founder, there were tons of experienced founders and investors out there providing their advice on which direction to take the company. Our technology had a great problem – there were so many industries to apply the technology to.”

“Everything from sports, fitness, physical therapy, warehouses, truck drivers, day-to-day consumers and so many more. Learning about all of these industries and the market opportunity for each has really helped us evolve our roadmap. Focusing in on our core vision and brand values has allowed us to focus on building a movement health platform creating injury specific workouts for patients and providing data to care providers. We’ve also learned along the way to listen to customer feedback first, rather than jumping to the next industry. Talking to customers is a major key.”

Lauren Petrullo
Lauren Petrullo

Lauren Petrullo

I think the biggest difficulty I faced on becoming an entrepreneur and CEO was realizing that my unique set of skills in Facebook Ad has like one tenth of the skills that I would need to lead a team because I have to figure out project management, account management, reporting and every other course service that we offer.

We service lead generation and e-commerce clients which I can do all day long and Facebook ads. We extended our services to include marketing automation with emails and SMS, Google, Bing and Amazon PPC as well as the host of other services and having to mitigate the ability to know enough about services we offer to speak at it at a high level to build our client as well as to hold our team accountable.

The biggest difficulty was like to figure out how to manage a team, manage a remote team, manage a diverse remote team so that when my name, my face, my company is at the forefront, everything we do with every pack member equally represents the same level of quality my customers and clients came to know when they work with just me before I was a CEO.

Barbara Bolotte
Barbara Bolotte

Barbara Bolotte

The pandemic forced a majority of businesses to have to change the way in which they were doing something in order to adapt to their new environment.

At Clean Creations, we saw this as an opportunity to expand our services to help more individuals. During the height of the pandemic, fewer people were going to the grocery store or eating out. In response to this, we doubled down on keeping our staff safe and healthy which included COVID safety protocols like hand washing every hour on the hour.

We have an obligation to our community to keep them healthy and we wanted to maintain our service, especially for those who might not be comfortable leaving their homes to go to the grocery store. The pandemic has only fortified our mission of changing people’s lives with clean eating. We are grateful to be able to continue our mission during these times.

Renee Dominguez
Renee Dominguez

Renee Dominguez

I had struggled from very early on and it has been a journey to get where I’m at today. I was a high school dropout that never truly felt that I would have what it takes to be successful. As the years went on, I learned from many of my positions and I ended up going to private colleges earning multiple degrees. However, I continued struggling with imposter syndrome and feeling that I would never be educated or skilled enough to hold a high-ranking position.

Again, I underestimated myself. I have created glass ceilings for myself that I have also shattered. Now, I teach others to do the same. I went from a statistic to a bad-ass CEO and continue to prove to myself that I can do hard things!

Tapping into my intuition has allowed me to energetically attract the right type of clients. I grew up thinking I didn’t have any skills or talents. I seriously thought GOD missed me when it came to assigning these to babies. It took me nearly 40 years to realize I didn’t just have a skill or talent, I have a superpower. Now that I know this, I don’t doubt my decisions or waver on them. This superpower has guided me to create transformations not just for myself, but also for my clients who are now able to tap into their next levels of success, with ease.

My clients are women in Leadership who are ready to empower themselves and claim their seat at the table. I work in collaboration with you to develop your own unique leadership style in order to be heard, seen, and respected in the workplace. I have created strategic development tools to uncover your core values, true worth, and passions that will lead you to success and future endeavors. My clients are then excited and prepared for what lies ahead for them.

Joseph Gardzina
Joseph Gardzina

Joseph Gardzina

I’m Joseph, the CEO, and founder of ADAPT Programs which provides outpatient treatment services for substance abuse disorders. I’m a licensed US DOT Substance Abuse Professional along with a Licensed Chemical Dependency Counselor. Throughout my professional career, I have worked in several agencies and have worked as the Program Coordinator of their inpatient adolescent treatment program as well as the Director of Programs for Phoenix House in San Diego, CA. I have faced many difficulties in order to get to the position of a leader.

The trek up to leadership.
The journey to becoming a leader is much harder than it seems. Transitioning from a manager or employee or starting your own business is a completely new experience and that difficult part about that is no one ever teaches you how to become a real leader, it’s something that you only learn from experience. The journey towards leadership is one with obstacles at every step.

In my personal experience, when I was working as a manager and the next step was a promotion to a director, every day was a challenge. What differentiates a good leader from a bad one is how quickly you bounce back. Problems will be common in your role as a leader. How swiftly you deal with them as well as stay motivated throughout is how your become a good leader.

Dealing with the challenges.
The hardest part of becoming a CEO was taking the position of a leader. Deciding on goals for the entire team was something that was relatively new for me. I was used to defining goals for myself but forming goals for the entire organization was a challenge. Moreover, the added responsibility of so many people is a huge burden as well. I am responsible for the culture of the workplace and the execution of creating such a culture is a daunting task especially when you want to create a healthy and motivating environment.

The best way, in my opinion, to overcome difficulties on the way to the top is to find mentors and allies. Your support system is what will make or break you. Engage with your mentors who have ideally been in the same position as you and gather their insights on the process. Learning from their mistakes will prevent you from making your own.

One more thing I learnt is to not put off difficult decisions. As a leader you will have to make hard decisions every day. Surround yourself with people who are there for you in these hard times but also encourage you to do the right thing. The journey is not an easy one but staying focused is what works.

Lastly, one of the greatest challenge while on the journey to becoming a leader is learning the art of patience. It’s a removal of the ego and you cannot lash out on anyone if you are in a rut. You must always be calm and collected and embrace tough times as they come. A positive mindset and mindfulness goes a long way.

Will Cannon
Will Cannon

Will Cannon

How Do Leaders Cope with the Challenges
Leadership is what everyone is aiming for. Aside from the power that you are entitled to, it is also a door for more opportunities. However, it does not only take overnight to become one. A lot of successful leaders have endured the hardships that may come along with their careers.

There is no exact formula on how to be a leader. And, there is no precise number of levels of work needed for leadership. Some leaders have to spend a lifetime to attain success. But there are explications to achieve the goal.

How do leaders cope with the challenges?

1. Face conflict positively
2. Always stay calm in every situation
3. Look for opportunities
4. Reach out for help when needed
5. Be proactive and creative
6. Make sure to have a personal time
7. Leaders possess humility. They always remain humble even if they are on top. This characteristic keeps them in position.

Adit Jain
Adit Jain

Adit Jain

As you progress through your entrepreneurial journey, the kind of challenges that you face keep changing. For example, right now our biggest challenge is how to scale the business to $100M in terms of revenue. But for us, we were hardcore techies, so learning sales as just a three-person team, without the money to hire a team was the first challenge we faced.

During those early days, it was about product-market fit, and after that, it was about hiring the best people to build the best solution. That said, hiring the best is a constant challenge throughout a business’s journey.

Now, coming to overcoming these challenges. As I mentioned earlier, we were hardcore techies, and sales were something we had to learn from scratch. But we gradually learned. We understood how to sell to investors and customers alike. To add to that, we were dealing with the fear of “What if someone says no?” But over time, we’ve learned that you have to be comfortable in your skin because 99 out of the 100 times you hear a no. The day you get that lodged; you improve.

That’s one, now coming to the challenge of product-market fit. Product-market fit tells you whether you should start scaling or not, and it is critical because it tells you whether or not your business idea will be a breakout success.

So, we decided to go back to our customers to understand their needs and figure out how we could effectively solve their problems. It is important for entrepreneurs to go back to their customers and understand their requirements. As soon as you see repeatability in your customers, you know it is a fit.

Jonathan George
Jonathan George

Jonathan George

At the age of 26, I was named the Grand Champion Winner on Ed McMahon’s “Next Big Star”. It was the highlight of my career and my dreams were coming true as a brand-new record deal slid across the table… and then they discovered I was gay. I was left with no deal, no direction, and my dreams shattered.

My team tried to get me married, they tried to change my music, they tried to change everything about me. All I heard was…“You’re. Not. Good. Enough.”
You see, I had already spent a lifetime of being relentlessly bullied for not being a sports kid. Also, as the son of a preacher, I was told that I could never fulfill the purpose I knew I had in my life.

Again, “You’re not good enough.”

I didn’t know who I was or how to show up in the world. And no matter the accolades, I truly felt I wasn’t good enough.
That’s when I said “no more” and vowed to become the kind of coach I so badly needed in my own life. I needed someone who wasn’t going to CHANGE me… and make me different from who I was. Instead, I needed someone to help me ROCK the person I already was.

Since then, I’ve spent over two decades developing celebrity personal brands for entertainers, influencers, politicians, entrepreneurs, and professionals. As the CEO of Unleash Your Rockstar – Personal Branding Agency, they now call me The Human Hitmaker because my clients have over 150 million online followers.

My battle wounds gave me purpose and helped me impact the world around me.

Dan Voss
Dan Voss

Dan Voss

Thanks for putting this query out, hope you are doing well! It is true that every leader has faced difficulties and challenges, and continues to do so, that’s what a leadership role is about. As a leader, you are going to pave the way for your team, company, industry, or sector, and it comes with a whole lot of challenges.

One of the biggest I’ve faced in my years of working is ‘people management. Working together synergetically to achieve the best outcome, or to make sure everyone is productive and contributing to their fullest. Initially, it was thought that having the best players in the industry on your team would automatically mean success, but that’s not all that matters.

You need to be able to lead that team, navigate negative attitudes, bring direction, monitor outcomes among the other intangible things, like job satisfaction, culture, work-life balance, loyalty, etc. This for me was a big challenge and learning for me when I started out, but once you get a hang of it, it can be one of the biggest driving factors to your success.

Corey Tyner
Corey Tyner

Corey Tyner

GETTING PAID DIFFERENTLY
Real estate’s financial and technical dynamics were the most challenging aspects when I started as a new agent. Because I was used to salary work, it was a financial challenge. After putting in a certain amount of labour, I was used to receiving a paycheck every month. I only ate what I killed in real estate.

WEARING MULTIPLE HATS
For the first time, I considered marketing budgets, marketing tactics, branding, and lead generation while also attempting to pay the bills. During my real estate schooling, I received training on performing specific tasks and the regulations that govern them. Still, they did not provide me with training on operating other areas of my business. To remain afloat, I quickly understood concepts like lead generation, how to follow up with leads, and organizational procedures.

NO OFF-HOURS
Off-hours work is one of the most challenging aspects of the real estate market. My working hours are opposed to those of my friends and family who work the regular 9-to-5 job. People who purchase and sell houses work full-time throughout the week and are only accessible in the evenings or on weekends. This entails working throughout your friend’s and family’s vacations. Knowing that you are required somewhere else while others enjoy a weekend BBQ can be depressing.

WORKING ALL THE TIME
As a real estate agent, I’m in charge of establishing my business. I have absolute control over my business, which means I can make or break it based on my efforts. There’s always more work that has to be done. This leads to a desire to work as hard as possible and a sense of slacking off when attempting to rest.

Keron Howe
Keron Howe

Keron Howe

I am passionate about helping people and also love real estate. A friend bought me Rich Dad Poor Dad by Robert Kiyosaki. The book made me focus on the idea of building wealth and freedom through real estate, and ultimately led me to co-founding Property Nation in 2011.

The journey has been incredibly rewarding, and I really appreciate that I can help people who are facing financial difficulties. Admittedly, at the start of the business, I had a very steep learning curve and faced many challenges.

Initially, I relied heavily on my business experience, research, and instinct. Real estate investment encompasses a lot of different aspects. Understanding renovations, repairs, and building a list of fair and reliable contracts were some points I needed to learn fast.

Seeking a mentor helped me meet those challenges. I learned it is unnecessary to reinvent the wheel, so to speak. Finding the right mentor for each stage of my journey, to learn from their knowledge and experience, lowered the learning curve whilst motivating me to succeed.

Finding a mentor can be a challenge, but by networking within in the industry and expanding your personal circle, it is possible to find your perfect match.

Sophie Chiche
Sophie Chiche

Sophie Chiche

The greatest difficulty I faced as an entrepreneur is, ironically, also my greatest strength The fact is, when you’re running a company or starting a new business venture, you have to devote virtually all of your time to it.

You have to eat, sleep, and breathe your business; to truly be successful requires an almost 24/7 commitment. But despite the never-ending dedication that your business requires, you still need to find time for yourself – some time to get away, to forget about the business or venture for a bit. Most people can only do so for short snippets of time here and there, but even these tiny respites will help to recharge you and keep your mind and soul fresh.

Unfortunately, as I was getting my business established, I found myself unable to follow this advice. I was completely consumed with growing the business and “keeping my eye on the prize.” I did grow my business – quite well, in fact – but it took awhile for me to learn how to step back and occasionally relax, putting aside all work-related items to “smell the roses.” I’m sure I would have burned out if I hadn’t been able to adopt this mindset. Even if you give 99% of your time to your business, you’ve got to save at least 1% for yourself. That 1% can go a long way towards helping you maintain your sanity and your focus.

Erin LaCkore
Erin LaCkore

Erin LaCkore

1. Following through.

This is the most common challenge a leader faces in their life. They can get busy so much that they won’t even have time to look into every problem. So it is important that a leader creates a priority list that includes which task needs their most attention. This will help them to pay attention and overcome any challenge.

2. Dealing with stress and anxiety.

Having a busy life can cause stress and act as a hurdle in achieving your tasks. So it is important that you take out some time to meditate to deal with your stress and anxiety. When you have dealt with it, you can pay more attention and put all your focus on the work.

James Simmons
James Simmons

James Simmons

James Simmons is the founder and CEO of GameApart, a new online gaming platform. The platform connects users to loved ones via their favorite card game or board game by using virtual software such as Zoom, Teams or FaceTime.

Simmons created GameApart during the COVID-19 pandemic as a way for loved ones to connect virtually. You can learn more about GameApart by going to www.gameapart.com. Here’s what James has to say about some of the difficulties he’s faced on his journey to becoming an entrepreneur / CEO.

“The biggest challenge was learning when to take risks. As a senior leader (but NOT the CEO) you can suggest or advise tough courses of action, but the ultimate decision on whether to bet the deal, the lawsuit, or the company fell on someone else, and there was always a little bit of comfort in the fact that someone else was making the final call on the really big issues (and also a bit of frustration!).

When it’s all on you, the fear of making the wrong choice can be crippling or, conversely, actually making the wrong choice without due consideration can be catastrophic; learning to handle this and find the right balance of caution and boldness (still working on it!) has been a huge part of my personal founder/CEO journey!”

Shawn Plummer
Shawn Plummer

Shawn Plummer

In my journey to becoming a CEO, I struggled with transitioning from a corporate environment where I had a lot of resources and people to support my work to starting my own business where I had to do everything myself.

There were a lot of things I took for granted and having to get everything in place on my own was difficult in the beginning. However, I’ve never looked back. I greatly value working for myself and investing in my own growth.

Stephan Baldwin
Stephan Baldwin

Stephan Baldwin

At the start of my CEO career, I dealt with internal conflicts regarding the conditions of existing care facilities. Many of these centers are well-decorated and promoted with excellent advertising, but they often lack financial support to sustain senior dependents. Some people might say that the negatives drove them to achieve successful businesses, but that disappointing reality nearly deterred my plans.

That experience taught me to leverage the power of research as a professional marketer. If we commit to learning about our competitors, we should also dedicate time towards recovering the facts about our industry of interest.

I realized that Assisted Living couldn’t be better or stand out in an uninformed environment. So I spent months performing a deep dive into senior care facilities, learning about each company’s history and retention rates. My choice to take a journalistic approach to healthcare marketing allowed me to uncover more than 19 000 care centers in the U.S. and Canada that I partner with proudly today.

Here’s the bottom line: If you want to be successful, you need to be willing to accept some hard truths and build on them. Entrepreneurs who shy away from the nitty-gritty work miss out on the foundations for thriving businesses.

Benjamin Rollins
Benjamin Rollins

Benjamin Rollins

The difficulties I faced in my journey in becoming an entrepreneur / CEO was learning to focus on other people instead of myself and not being secretive about the problem I was trying to solve.

I thought that if I talked about the problem I was trying to solve, people might steal my idea or take advantage of it. I was focusing only on myself and wondering why I wasn’t achieving the success I wanted.

After I got over myself and started focusing on helping others, and I started talking to others to get feedback on my idea, I was able to build a better business.

Froswa Booker-Drew
Froswa Booker-Drew

Froswa Booker-Drew

When I started my business, it was the result of dealing with a boss who was threatened. Instead of nurturing what I brought to the organization, my willingness to grow and learn, she saw it as a problem. This experience along with others taught me to value my team and create the space for them to unleash their talent. Insecurity is a trap that destroys your possibilities and the confidence of others.

I was already being asked to provide consulting. I walked out on faith believing I could grow my business. In a year, I exceeded what I made at my job through my business. I’ve had a lot of ups and downs, ebbs and flows. I initially struggled with understanding my value and worth which I cheated myself financially. I undervalued what I brought without accounting for my lived experience and education combined. When you aren’t clear on that, you’ll attract clients who also will not see your value.

Over the years, I’ve had my business in a full or part time capacity but I’ve never stopped. I’ve learned the importance of surrounding yourself with others who can offer support so you can focus on what you are good at—you can’t do everything all the time. As much as the grind is important and working hard to make your dreams a reality, you must take time to focus on building yourself.

You can’t grow stagnant and you must keep learning. Self-care both individually and in community is necessary. It’s important to take time to relax and rest. I remember pushing myself so hard that my health suffered. If you aren’t well, your business suffers. Learning to prioritize is paramount. Relationships are important and neglecting those that bring you life only hurts you.

I’ve learned so much because of the lessons I gained over the years. Your mistakes are lessons. Use them as a foundation to grow and bless others.

Lauren Carroll
Lauren Carroll

Lauren Carroll

In my industry of real estate, my biggest challenge would be where I operate, as potential clients often associate experience with age. As a young entrepreneur, it was a challenge to prove myself as an expert in my market.

Typically in this field, they say it takes seven years to get your business up and running. Of course, this is different for everyone. However, in Real Estate you do have to hustle and find different avenues in which you can generate revenue until you are off the ground. One takeaway from my experiences is that persistence and consistency are essential for new business owners.

Lauren Cohen
Lauren Cohen

Lauren Cohen

AN ANOMALY IN THE LEGAL AND REAL ESTATE WORLD!

Lauren Cohen is recognized as a premier International Legal Expert and Global Expansion Strategist. She operates several international companies focused on delivering full-service solutions for business owners.

She helps expand their global impact by facilitating the logistics of moving businesses and their owners across the country and around the globe. Her superpowers rest in anticipating challenges before they happen to ensure a painless and efficient transition and build sound, goal-oriented business strategies — legally, structurally, and physically. She takes away the worry and the sense of overwhelm away so her clients can stay in their lane, focus on building their business and achieve their version of the American Dream.

After her husband’s deportation on the return trip from their honeymoon, she was devastated. Although the marriage was not meant to be, the turn of events was traumatic and life-changing. She knew she had to make some changes and find a way to have a more significant impact on others to help them avoid suffering a similar plight – or worse. So, she turned to the ever-changing and dynamic world of immigration and international law to help others avoid a similar fate.

As a Canadian immigrant, Lauren received her U.S. green card in 2007 and started her own business in 2008. She gave birth to her son, Zevi, two years later, at the age of 43. Being a single working mother and entrepreneur was challenging. Lauren initially struggled in her career path, especially when balancing her two hectic work and home lives.

Lauren battled with ongoing pre-conceived notions about women in the business field and not having the right to have a “seat at the table” while developing her own. But, with the help and advice of trusted advisors and her determined and gutsy approach to life, Lauren managed to refocus her energy to become the successful business owner and single working mother she is today.

Since its founding, she has transformed her company, e-Council Inc., from a one-woman-operated organization to a small but thriving business. Her expertise as the founder of e-Council Inc. is in advising business owners, entrepreneurs, and investors on immigrating to the U.S. and helping them develop business plans based on visa processes and gaining access to foreign capital. She has since expanded her expertise into other areas of business and advisory services.

In 2017, Lauren founded “Find My Silver Lining,” a 501(c)(3) organization that inspires single mothers, working parents, and “mompreneurs” to focus on the bright side as they strive to lead fulfilling lives. Lauren offers strategic guidance and legal advice to simplify complex business matters. She aims to help her clients develop a business plan, find a work/life balance, and discover their business. She also helps others develop and grow their non-profit entities as they strive to expand their reach and impact.

Lauren since has developed her signature program, “How to Immigrate Through Real Estate,” which exemplifies her years of expertise in moving or investing into the U.S. and international markets. She also has sponsored numerous coaching programs dedicated to teaching women how to invest in real estate worldwide.

She has also created a program where she helps investors establish a path towards a visa through various business models, has partnered with multiple Canadian and American law firms, and maintains active law and real estate licenses. Her mastery lies in building top-tier “power teams” for each client based on her intrinsic understanding of the scope of professional expertise needed for each situation to protect assets, minimize risk with cross-border expansion, and ultimately achieve the client’s short- and long-term goals.

Although her list of accreditations is long, Lauren utilizes the specialized expertise of various vetted professional partners to guide each unique situation on a path to seamless success.

When faced with challenges, Lauren has persevered and thrived time and again. She has continued to create unparalleled international alliances through personal and professional obstacles to offer her clients borderless, quality, conscientious service.

Indeed, the economic and other worldwide challenges faced in 2020 saw Lauren overcome adversity and continue to expand and enhance relationships, develop new partnerships, and teach others how to access funding and strategies for business and investment opportunities. She equally applies her unwavering tenacity to represent her clients’ interests. Lauren’s satisfaction comes from the personal changes she can actualize for her clients through her turnkey suite of services.

In light of the current COVID19 crisis, Lauren pivoted her business once again. She now offers a wide range of services related to business continuity, the coordination of funding solutions, and pivoting strategies for business owners across North America from governmental and private resources.

Having experienced the challenges of immigrating first-hand, Lauren is passionate about helping others – citizens and immigrants alike – to successfully expand domestically and globally by protecting the soul of their businesses so they can invest, live, work, and play anywhere in the world.

How Leaders Overcome Difficulties on Their Way to the Top

Being a leader does not mean that you will consistently achieve the desired outcome. Being a leader means that when you don’t accomplish that goal, you have learned from your mistakes and, most importantly, improved from that moment onward.

All leaders in any professional field are going to encounter difficulties. Whether it is in the industry, you have chosen or your personal life, it is inevitable. There are many skills all leaders must be equipped with when confronting difficult situations. But I believe these to be the main ones: 

The skill of Confidence:

If you don’t believe in yourself and your service, no one will do it for you. It is of the utmost importance that you be confident in what you are doing because confidence alone can open various opportunities for you even when undergoing a difficult situation. Don’t be afraid to take the next step in your career because it may be difficult. Do it, and do it with confidence!

The skill of Communication:

Nowadays, we communicate in so many ways – e-mail, text, phone – it’s hard to tell when nobody is communicating something anymore. When you do, it’s essential to know your audience, but most importantly, to be respectful. I cannot tell you how many times a person has been rude intentionally and even unintentionally. When confronting challenging situations, never respond out of anger. Take a second to cool down, and remember, you are always talking to another person. Be kind to one another, and don’t burn bridges unnecessarily.

The skill of Balance:

Having a work/life balance is crucial for mental health and emotional connection. Spending quality time with your family and friends (and your dog) is essential. Don’t ignore these emotional connections in your daily struggles because they will be your support system through thick and thin whenever you need them.

The skill of Prioritization:

You will have many instances where you are juggling numerous things at once, and perhaps all within the same deadline. Setting a list of tasks and events you prioritize and moving things around will save you from having a mental breakdown. Don’t be afraid to say, “no, I can’t meet with you on Thursday, but I can meet with you next Tuesday.” No one expects you to be available 24/7. You’re only human – don’t put that much pressure on yourself. But, be reliable and be punctual.

The list can go on and on about things leaders can do to overcome difficult situations on their way to the top, but these, I believe, are the most noteworthy.

Michelle Diamond
Michelle Diamond

Michelle Diamond

Starting my businesses was not hard because I got a lot of advice from others who were successful in my field. However, navigating and managing the ups and downs during the years was the challenging part.

The ups and downs did not always necessarily correlate with the economy or external factors. Sometimes it was partnerships that had to end and other times, pivoting to new territories, and expanding or ‘fine-tuning’ my target customers and customer base.

However, through it all, I understand that embracing and understanding change, along with updating my mindset to make room for it, has been the key to success.

Logan Mallory
Logan Mallory

Logan Mallory

One challenge that many people face when they become a business owner is learning how to guide their team to become great leaders. The best way to build leadership is to give people opportunities to lead. Provide guidelines and consult, but don’t take a directive approach all the time.

Of course, you need to manage when there are performance or attendance or handbook issues, but otherwise you should act like a coach. Let your team members test their limits, try new things, and fail without being punished.

Mark Pierce
Mark Pierce

Mark Pierce

One way to overcome difficult times as a business leader is to improve your emotional intelligence. Emotional intelligence can help leaders approach challenges from a more nuanced perspective and use that nuance to find better ways to resolve the issue.

Emotional intelligence helps people not only better understand the emotions and feelings of others, but also control their own emotions and emotional responses to situations. This can help to defuse tense situations, find ways to connect with people to resolve challenges, and in general stay more in control of a situation.

Marla Cormier
Marla Cormier

Marla Cormier

I never wanted to be my own boss. I grew up watching my parents slave away to make their own business successful, and even after all of their hard work and dedication, after 13 years, they had to declare bankruptcy and close.

That entire experience made me think that owning a business was far more work than it was worth. My parents were honest, hardworking people so if they couldn’t make it work, what chance would I have? Many years later I met my husband, a serial entrepreneur who had started his first successful business at age 17. For him, owning his own business was the only option and he started encouraging me to carve out my own path.

At first I thought he was just being nice, you know, telling the new girlfriend how capable she is and taking an interest in her passions. But he never let up. In fact, after we got married he only encouraged me more. Then one day I realized that if I did start my own business, I’d be able to work on all of the things I love without all of the things I don’t. It took a few years but eventually I created my own training company.

I’d love to say that I was a huge success right out of the gate, but like most success stories, there came some huge failures first. My first failure was one of timing. I was selling escape room learning, highly engaging mobile escape room experiences that I would build and host on-site for clients in a training or conference room. It was the most fun training I’d ever developed and the results were remarkable with participants remembering and using what they’d learned months after they attended.

It as a great vehicle for participants to learn essential skills from time management to communication, and collaboration to listening. Unfortunately, I was ramping up right when COVID came on the scene. Within a week, my business model was irrelevant. Businesses were going into lock down and the idea of putting employees in a room together without social distancing was unthinkable. Almost overnight my fledgling business was on the verge of demise.

Since COVID was quickly becoming a long-term concern, I knew I had to make a change if I was going to keep my business going. I decided to abandon the escape room training model and instead, develop virtual training that allowed employees to learn from wherever they were. At a time when companies weren’t sure how to manage return to office, training that could be done virtually was a good solution. I expanded my content to include all the previous topics and many new ones in an effort to capture as many clients as possible.

That brings me to my second failure. I’m a people person so meeting new people and maintaining relationships comes easy to me. Everyone says that should make me good at sales. Well, it didn’t. I had no trouble making contacts and opening up conversations about my services and the benefits to my potential clients, but when it came down to talking money, I got nervous.

In those early days, I didn’t know my own worth and because of that, couldn’t speak to pricing with confidence. Instead of closing contracts in one conversation, it would take me three or more. Rather than being able to adjust offerings and pricing on the fly, I would need to regroup and go back with a new package and price for services. It was exhausting and ultimately had me leaving money on the table while creating a lot of extra stress.

I started to worry that business ownership wasn’t for me but I just wasn’t ready to give up. Afterall, I’d navigated COVID by changing up my offerings and switched from escape room learning to virtual delivery for various topics including leadership and customer service training. I had a small but loyal client base and I really wanted to believe that I was only steps away from figuring out the key element that would take me from surviving to successful.

And then, after a couple years of struggling against my own nature, I realized that I could be hugely successful if I changed my business model. What if I stopped trying to be all things to all people and just focused on my greatest passion, developing emerging leaders? That would eliminate all the packaging and repackaging of services which took up a lot of time and created a lot of anxiety. What if I put my pricing right on my website so I didn’t have to mix and match calculations on the fly? I would probably be able to close more deals more quickly and eliminate all of the anxiety around money.

So that’s what I did. I built a program for emerging leaders and outlined it on my website. And unlike other training companies, I posted my pricing right there for everyone to see. As soon as I made the shift, a giant weight was lifted and I was freed up to do what I’m great at, telling potential clients about my services. It’s amazing the impact this has had on my outlook and how it’s given me the confidence to sell now that price is essentially off the table (or, on the website as it were). I have better discussions with potential clients and close more contracts, most within one call, than I ever could have imagined.

The truth is, deep down I had always wanted to be my own boss. I grew up thinking that I’d take over my parent’s business so when it closed, I was devastated. I somehow took that experience and generalized it, deciding that I couldn’t run my own business. I had so much fear about business ownership that it held me back from dreaming big. That’s the biggest failure I had to overcome. I’d convinced myself that working for someone else, collecting titles, was the safer route.

Thankfully, I married a man who dreams big enough for both of us and eventually, with his support, and his constant push to help me see things differently, I decided to put fear aside and focus on my own happiness and fulfillment. Because I did, and because of my failures, I now have a business I’m proud of, that makes a difference in the lives of employees and in their abilities to grow their careers. I get to do what I love every single day.

Peter Ord
Peter Ord

Peter Ord

I’ll focus on three major difficulties that I have faced during my journey as the CEO of GuideCX and those are:

1. Creating a new software category (Client Onboarding)

Those who have successfully created new software categories know that a great deal of patience and intuition is required to be successful. Because your product is so new and innovative, you don’t have prospects seeking you out yet. We’ve had to build a strong outbound selling motion to overcome this.

2. Staying no.1 in our new category

It’s one thing to create a category, but it’s another thing to lead it. We are grateful that competitors have popped up. They have helped us feel validated, spread awareness for the problem that GuideCX solves for, and migrate our sales motion into a competitive sales process versus an education-based sales process. These are all things that are needed in order to help our company and category grow.

3. Grow our team

I’m a big believer that the first 50 employees define the long term trajectory of your culture and brand. I’m thankful we were patient in the early days by not just hiring people that would be great to “work with” but holding out for people that are great to “be with” and “work with” as well.

Shaun Connell
Shaun Connell

Shaun Connell

I built a small media company in 2014 that went from 0-to-1m per month in one year. I was only 25-years-old, so it was quite a ride. My greatest challenge, hands down, was learning how to build a reliable staff fast enough to keep up with growth.

Up until that point, I’d never hired more than one freelance writer at a time, and suddenly I needed writers, editors, a CTO, COO, etc.

I learned to integrate a simple strategy that worked very well for my situation: hire fast, fire fast. It was a brutal year, but one I’ll remember forever.

I sold that business a year later. I also still build small passion projects for fun, especially for investors. But I’m not looking to recreate anything on that scale.

Brianna Socci
Brianna Socci

Brianna Socci

As a startup founder, you face a lot of challenges during your journey. One of the things I’ve had to learn along the way is being able to bounce back and grow from the failures. Entrepreneurship is a long, bumpy road, and you can’t let the hard times dictate your attitude to advance. Move quickly, fail fast, learn from the experience and do it better the next time.

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The post 53 Stories of Successful Entrepreneurs From USA that Will Inspire You on Your Journey first appeared on Tekrati and is written by Jed Morley

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Various Entrepreneurs From Around The World Tell Stories Behind Their Success & Accomplishments https://www.tekrati.com/entrepreneurs-stories-behind-their-success/ Fri, 10 Jan 2025 21:37:09 +0000 https://www.tekrati.com/?p=24585 Various Entrepreneurs From Around The World Tell Stories Behind Their Success & Accomplishments

Various Entrepreneurs From Around The World Tell Stories Behind Their Success & Accomplishments

Follow us on Linkedin Success is a process, not an event. To do any great task, you must first begin from somewhere. This could be the start of a new idea, a new road, a new approach, or a new business. In our everyday life, we frequently end up focusing on achieving what others consider [...]

The post Various Entrepreneurs From Around The World Tell Stories Behind Their Success & Accomplishments first appeared on Tekrati and is written by Jerome Knyszewski

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Various Entrepreneurs From Around The World Tell Stories Behind Their Success & Accomplishments

Various Entrepreneurs From Around The World Tell Stories Behind Their Success & Accomplishments

Follow us on Linkedin

Success is a process, not an event. To do any great task, you must first begin from somewhere. This could be the start of a new idea, a new road, a new approach, or a new business. In our everyday life, we frequently end up focusing on achieving what others consider to be a success rather than returning to our original goal or purpose. In this interview series, we spoke with a variety of entrepreneurs and leaders from around the world to learn how some of the world’s most successful entrepreneurs and leaders faced adversity and succeeded.

“Success is a journey, not a destination. The doing is often more important than the outcome.” Arthur Ashe

INTERVIEW HOST

Hello, my name is Jerome Knyszewski, I’ll be the host of your interview today. I am the CEO of HeavyShift. My specialties are online reputation marketing and SEO. Looking forward to reading your insightful answers and publishing your featured interview.

Jerome Knyszewski

Table of Contents

The question we asked:

Sweet Ha
Sweet Ha

Sweet Ha

First is the income threshold. Many bosses are the backbone of the company before starting a business. They are highly appreciated by the boss and are naturally worth a lot. However, due to various reasons in the early stage of the business, after a year of hard work, the income obtained is far less than that of part-time jobs. “This vast income gap is a cruel reality that every early-stage entrepreneur must face and accept.​​

Second, family ties. The impact of the decline in income will gradually spread to the family. In addition, entrepreneurs work day and night without taking into account the “internal affairs” of the family. At this time, the family’s resistance tends to increase day by day. At this time, entrepreneurs need to withstand the pressure and work hard. Disagree, keep going.​​

Third, lead the hurdle. There is an essential difference between management and leadership. Entrepreneurs must have specific management skills and strong leadership skills to lead the team in the right direction, continuously create benefits for the company, and benefit team members. More importantly, entrepreneurs can make mistakes in management, but they must not make leadership mistakes; otherwise, the company may encounter danger.​​

Fourth is the human bond. In the early stage of starting a business, entrepreneurs will encounter setbacks and blow in various aspects, especially criticisms from others.

Valentine Okoronkwo
Valentine Okoronkwo

Valentine Okoronkwo

Family
One big difficulty I faced on my journey to become an entrepreneur was pressure from my family to stick to a 9-5 job and not venture into entrepreneurship.

My family never wanted me to become an entrepreneur. They got really depressed and disappointed when I quit my job. This got to me as well. It affected my productivity and also affected my belief in myself.

I noticed it was getting to me, so I had to avoid communication with them for a while to focus on making my business work. I made sure I put in work every day to accomplish my goals to my dream a reality.

Till today, though I earn 10x what I earned in my last job, my parents still encourage me to get a job and still send me job opportunities and offers. However, I am happy they have gotten the fact that this is what I want to do.

But to be honest, it’s just my mother that is happy with the path I chose to take. My father is still disappointed with me because I disobeyed him and went against all the plans he had made for me. So this is a difficulty I still struggle with today.

The thing I have learned from this is that: against all adversity or motivation you have, just to do something every day, no matter how small, that can take you closer to your goals. The action you put in every day will bring results, and those little results or wins will help you believe that you can actualize your dreams, which will also motivate you to put in more work.

Action => Inspiration => Motivation

Mapesho Mukanga
Mapesho Mukanga

Mapesho Mukanga

Running a platform that is centered on creating content which inspires people to improve their lives is always difficult because each person is going through something different but the best way to stay original and authentic is to use your own experience as a map to serve as inspiration for others.

Putting yourself out their in front of others is always going to be challenging but when you think about the lives you get to impact, it becomes much easier for any individual to feel the freedom to speak freely.

Nate Tsang
Nate Tsang

Nate Tsang

The biggest challenge in running your own business is in hiring. You first have the immense difficulty of finding the right person for your specific job.

You’ll find many great marketers out there, for example, but are they informed and experienced enough to market your business in your niche to your specific buyer personas?

I recommend working with a hiring expert who knows your field. It’s an expense, but it also saves you a great deal of time in sourcing candidates. And they can teach you enough about the process to where you can run it more independently in the future. But building those initial skills takes time and expertise.

From there, you also have to give your new hires the right responsibilities. A lot of entrepreneurs I know (myself included, admittedly) have trouble with delegation at first.

They’re accustomed to doing everything themselves and only want to delegate the tasks they have little to no experience in. Recognizing that you’re not the best person for this task—at least in the long-term—takes some self-reflection and involves making tough decisions. But that’s what being a business leader is all about, and if you trust your talent they tend to thrive more than they fail.

Alex Bryce
Alex Bryce

Alex Bryce

When I reflect on my journey, I believe the biggest challenge has been making the right decisions. As a business owner, you will be responsible for making all of your company’s major and minor decisions on your own.

The burden of making decisions is real and unavoidable. One of the common challenges I believe every entrepreneur faces are making decisions on their own while being conscious that making the wrong decision can result in losses. However, I believe that experience improves your ability to make important decisions.

Another obstacle for me, I believe, was pivoting my business during the pandemic. But it taught me one important lesson: everything works out in the end.

Aquif Shaikh
Aquif Shaikh

Aquif Shaikh

The difficulty I had to face while launching my own business was obtaining funds, securing finance is one of the most difficult tasks for new entrepreneurs. Raising funds and obtaining loans was a difficult undertaking for me.

Even the most experienced entrepreneur will have difficulty obtaining financing at first because many capitalists are unwilling to participate in new enterprises.

However, this is only a temporary setback because, if the business idea is innovative, fresh, and compelling, getting an investor to provide startup funding is not a difficult undertaking. As a result, as an entrepreneur, I had a well-thought-out strategy and business model to present to investors and banks to persuade them that their money was being invested wisely.

Meera Watts
Meera Watts

Meera Watts

Our lives were turned upside-down by the pandemic. We changed the way we used to approach challenging situations in the past.

We had to use a variety of methods to teach our students as teachers. We concentrated on offering them online yoga courses. We emphasized tutorials, live sessions, and even fun activities to encourage students to practice yoga at home.

I’m quite pleased with how things are going right now because my learners are enjoying their classes and learning something new every day.

Baidhurya Mani
Baidhurya Mani

Baidhurya Mani

I am Baidhurya Mani, and one of the greatest challenges I have faced towards becoming the CEO of my own company was whether or not I should pursue this lifelong dream.

My biggest enemy was no other than myself. I spent a lot of sleepless nights riddled with anxiety during the week before launching my company. You see, my business is far from the usual, and it will either be a hit or a miss. I was so full of self-doubt, but I am incredibly grateful for all the support I got from my family, friends, and even my previous boss.

I believe in the theory that to overcome this, you have to be careful with the stories you tell yourself. You should stop the self-loathing and start telling yourself that everything will be fine even if you take a giant leap of faith.

One thing I would always tell myself every time things don’t go as planned is that “I stumble, and I rise.” It’s a tremendous mindful practice to keep you going. You have to repeat this to yourself even in the minor errors or mishaps that occur throughout your day so that it doesn’t snowball into heated anger and frustration, which will not help you at all.

Through this, I earned the confidence, and now, I am in my 6th year of running my own company. A dream I never thought would come true.

Smita Das Jain
Smita Das Jain

Smita Das Jain

After 14+ years in leadership roles in Fortune 500 companies, last year I decided to pivot my career to transform my passion of mentoring people to become the best version of themselves into a professional pursuit for coaching, and founded the ‘Empower Yourself’ Coaching Program-a customised set of personal clarity and executive performance enhancement coaching interventions.

The first challenge was the resistance that I encountered from my well-wishers who dissuaded me from leaving a stable job for an uncertain future. It took a lot of willpower, and not insignificant time, to listen to my inner voice and move ahead on the path that my heart was set on.

Then opening my business while simultaneously undertaking three certification programs as opposed to the usual norm of starting a business after completing your certifications was a leap of faith that entailed straddling different time zones and plenty of workload. My time management skills held me in good stead here.

Then came the challenge of a successful Go-to-Market. Given my background, Executives and leaders were more willing to hire me as one of their team than entrust me the task of coaching them or their employees. I decided to focus on Life Coaching to start with and put Executive Coaching on the backburner.

Having a structured yet productive day is a constant challenge for an entrepreneur who is her own boss and works her own hours. So far, I have managed it well by ensuring that I open my laptop at the same time every morning as when I worked for someone else (even though the work hours stretch much longer sometimes), and planning my key priorities for each day of the week, a week in advance.

Discipline, Patience and Consistency has been my mantra to overcome any challenges that I encountered in my business. With less than a year and close to 150 coaching hours, webinars, and live learning sessions, Empower Yourself has positively impacted the lives of many working professionals ranging from entry-level to the topmost hierarchy, I can say that this mantra has worked for me.

I enjoy doing what I do, have never been happier and earn more than what I used to do in my corporate role. Success is not called success unless it entails overcoming challenges.

Adam Jacobs
Adam Jacobs

Adam Jacobs

First, entrepreneurship could be a journey — but often times, it’s a rollercoaster. A journey indicates that there is an end, but in entrepreneurship, that’s not the case. There are highs, lows, ups, downs, twists, turns and then the process repeats itself.

There are so many obstacles you have to overcome, such as the bravery to go ahead and pursue your goals, especially when people tell you that you don’t necessarily have what it takes or that you won’t succeed. The first obstacle is to have a reasonably good idea, and many struggles with this.

Saying you are going to create the next Netflix with no money, no concrete idea on how to make it happen, and without a team to back you up.. this is no surprise, but man, that’s not happening.

The second most pressing obstacle I’ve had is to secure funding or capital. Followed by finding a team: Either in the form of partners, staff or both. Once you’ve got some start-up cash, a plan on how you are going to tackle it, and then a team.

Now take this: People will always be your biggest obstacle – your customers, your staff, your stakeholders. You will have to balance yourself with your staff, staff will have conflicts with you, with each other and even with your customers.

Difficult customers can drain your energy and your cash, and learning to manage them quickly and well will be one of the biggest obstacles that you will have to tackle and need to revisit regularly.

Going back to entrepreneurship being a journey and a rollercoaster — I am sure of one thing: obstacles, big or small, are just bumps on the road to goals – be resilient, be persistent. Know when to zig, know when to zag, when obstacles come up, run through them, over them, and know when to avoid them altogether. Obstacles could be big, they could be small, but just believe that you’re on a monster truck to conquer them all.

Craig Schulze
Craig Schulze

Craig Schulze

My name is Craig Schulze and I have been in business and an entrepreneur for over 20 years.

In short I left home at 15, been financially independent since 17, fired my boss at 21 to follow my dreams and passion.

Started a fitness club which led to be 5 and 22 franchises. I have built business online, been in coaching and consulting throughout the last decade.

I am an investor. Two of my biggest challenges. One was the lessons learned throughout the global financial crisis.

The second was my wife and I losing our first son stillborn which inspired me to build a brand around peoples “One Shot” at life.

I have travelled the world and been to over 120 different cities and gains huge perspective from that experience.

Ashley Bellino
Ashley Bellino

Ashley Bellino

As an advocate for mindful modern living, I launched home decor and styling brand, Stoned Crystals, in an attempt to re-position and redefine the role of crystals in modern society with a focus on ethically sourced a-grade crystals that are used as functional pieces of art. I believe we sit on the knife’s edge of spirituality and design offering decor, furniture and jewellery made from crystal.

Our physical retail store endured 262 days of closure during the pandemic in one of the worlds most locked down cities, Melbourne. Despite this, we were able to increase sales thanks to our virtual live-sales model. To say the retail landscape has changed in the last few years is an understatement.

The global pandemic in particular forced businesses to diversify their business model. Thankfully, we were ahead of the curve in establishing a very successful virtual live sales model. Whether our bricks & mortar location is open or not, we’ve been able to maintain and actually increase our sales through online shopping. And, with social media impacting the way consumers interact with brands, we were able to take advantage of this evolution and create the next generation in e-commerce.

Stoned Crystals further leveraged the virtual live shopping on social media by developing an App that allows for an uninterrupted shopping experience for the customer, while giving control back to the brand. The result is a less static and more immersive experience that allows for a more authentic and personalised shopping experience.

The concept of selling over live video was established with my partner, Jeremy LeBard, in 2017. We have since taken those learning and tuned them into their own Omnichannel App and plan to make this available to like-minded brands. We essentially redefined the bricks & mortar store through an innovative live sales model that turns our space into a virtual showroom.

Our customers can tune in from anywhere in the world and receive VIP service from our Crystal Concierge team who offer styling advice as well as mindfulness and intention setting tips. In a declining physical retail world we were able to transform the intrinsic value of a physical space into the online world. Our live sale business model alongside a message of mindfulness and hope has generated great interest and found itself a very pertinent strategy that saw us continue to take flights, even in the face of adversity during a global pandemic.

Bree Stedman
Bree Stedman

Bree Stedman

The biggest obstacle I faced in my journey towards being an entrepreneur was my own internal insecurities – particularly around feeling like a fake and a fraud. That devil on my shoulder consistently told me I wasn’t good enough, despite my accomplishments.

The second part of this difficulty was finding someone who could help me to irradicate them without having to explore the WHY….. as an ambitious entrepreneur, I already knew the value of Personal Development and growth, however didn’t ‘have time’ to spend hours on hours exploring all of the possible reasons why I felt like I did. And I didn’t want to have to ‘keep working’ on myself. I just wanted a resolution that worked with who I was as a woman, that could get to the root of these insecurities, so I could move forward.

Acknowledging and working on these saboteurs have helped me to confidently build a business while authentically being myself to the point where I now facilitate the training of others in an International company.

J.D. Drayton
J.D. Drayton

J.D. Drayton

After running a locally based branding agency in Melbourne, Australia, I too, was forced to adapt during the pandemic in early 2020.

90% of my clients cancelled their contracts because suddenly we were all stuck in lockdowns (in the city that ended up spending the most days in lockdown, 260 days within 18-months).

I couldn’t survive during the lockdown, so I closed my business. Overnight, I lost all my income! Days later, I launched my coaching and online education business while also launching a new online-based branding agency to serve online-based female CEOs.

The online world was thriving during the pandemic, but I had no idea what I was doing at first. Traditional marketing was not the same as online marketing. Yes, it was similar in some ways, but it was different. It pushed me to think outside the square, but it was not easy, after 20 years doing traditional marketing and seeing clients in-person.

I invested all my savings into online courses and business coaches. Slowly, I started to work it out and to transition online. Transitioning was difficult, as I attempted to translate everything that I had known to the online space.

I was either going to swim or sink, and for a long time, I was sinking fast! I felt hopeless. Defeated. And very lonely, now working from home, without that in-person interaction with clients.

I missed the human-to-human connections, but eventually, I choose to swim as a tiny fish among some big sharks. I became obsessed with self development and online learning and turned to the big names such as Amy Porterfield, James Wedmore, Lewis Howes, Jenna Kutcher, Jasmine Star and Rachel Pedersen.

Marty Spargo
Marty Spargo

Marty Spargo

With the changing marker conditions that involves increase in competition within several industries, our yearly sales massively declined in comparison to the past years. It was indeed a tough time for the business and almost left us bankrupt.

But we didn’t allow this setback to stop us, we formulated a strategy that could help us get our numbers back up again and with everything we’ve got, we rose up to most of the competition and even led the market for some time.

Toby Schulz
Toby Schulz

Toby Schulz

As a young entrepreneur, co-founding a house cleaning business with my brother when I was 21 and he was 26, the biggest challenge I faced was convincing others around me of the goal I was working towards.

Explaining to family and friends that I had to say no to a lot of plans was not easy or readily accepted. I had to make many sacrifices on the personal front to start a successful business.

When you rely on self-motivation to get an entire business off the ground, if you don’t make the time to do something, it won’t happen.

It was a learning curve to figure out where to spend my time, and how to handle things that I’m not the best at, yet need to be done.

Bronwen Sciortino
Bronwen Sciortino

Bronwen Sciortino

I am an International Author & Simplicity Expert.

Having experienced mental health issues after suffering from burnout, and a complete breakdown as a result, I wrote my first book during my recovery which received international critical acclaim and 5-star awards.

During my recovery, I learned a lot about the role that stress and exhaustion play in our lives, and the way that we accept them as a normal way of living. As I pieced my life back together, I made the choice to find the simplest steps for me to move forwards in a way that supported both myself and those with whom I was working.

With burnout on the rise all around the world, this saw me create a global business teaching people there’s a very different way to live so they can tailor-make the life that allows them to lead happy, rewarding AND successful lives.

From burnout to global business happened within 3 years.

There’s nothing normal about being constantly stressed and exhausted AND there are simple and easy ways for people to do things a little bit differently. Everyone deserves the opportunity to create their own life, in the way that is absolutely perfect for them.

Because I live my life governed by simplicity principles I have not been affected by the chaos being experienced around the world and I have been able to easily adapt and quickly move forward in a different way.

Women, in particular, are carrying the load and research conducted pre-COVID showed that they were suffering from burnout more than men. COVID has only exacerbated these statistics.

All three of my books provide individuals with tools and activities that they can apply to their own lives, so they can find their own answers and move forwards on the pathway that is right for them.

I recently launched an online platform to assist busy, professional women to reduce stress and beat burnout. I launched this program (and continue to run it) at a 96% discount so that as many women as possible can access it in these tough times. I’m currently building mini-programs around self-care, stress and energy management so that people can access the information they need to move forwards in bite-sized pieces.

I’m also currently building new online mini-programs that help people to tackle their stress and improve their health and wellbeing in a bite-sized way.

I work with people globally through my books, corporate programs, leadership development programs, conference platforms, retreats , professional mentoring and in the online environment. I share practical and easily implemented steps and inspire individuals to simplify their lives.

I also guest blog regularly for membership platforms around the globe, have been featured on the TODAY Show, Ticker TV, James Miller Lifeology Show and The Author Show and contribute regularly to major online publications such as HuffPost and Thrive Global (Arianna Huffington’s new platform).

I am also frequently asked to be interviewed through global radio, podcasts, vlogs, YouTube, Facebook Live, print media and blogs.

Elley Hudson
Elley Hudson

Elley Hudson

The first difficulty I faced on my journey to becoming an entrepreneur occurred when I was 17. I had dreams of breaking into the real estate industry, but I was turned away for being too young. However, I was determined to prove myself, so I worked as a property management assistant for the next 2 years. My persistence paid off and I eventually landed a career as a real estate sales agent.

Unfortunately, that’s when I faced my next challenge, as I quickly discovered the position had a quick turnaround of relationships. As someone who loves to maintain close connections, I was left feeling dejected and depressed. This, and the ridiculous pressure caused by the GFC, led to me leaving my position. Instead, I returned to my roots and spearheaded the company’s property management division.

Soon after, a new difficulty arose with my superannuation. Long story short, I left the company, made my way to Townsville and became the co-owner of a local agency. However, their staff were poorly trained, and their owners were losing money. The worst part was that despite my position, I was helpless to change things. At this point, I started to believe the difficulties would get the best of me and I was ready to give up.

Thankfully, I remained strong and told myself that if I’m having an issue, I should do something about it. All I wanted was a job that allowed me to create great relationships and work in an environment with well-trained staff. I figured the best way to do that wasn’t to rely on finding the right agency but to become an entrepreneur and create it myself. After all, only you can make your dreams come true.

Ellie Pietsch
Ellie Pietsch

Ellie Pietsch

With a marriage imploding, an 18 month old in and out of daycare – leaving a ‘safe’ job halfway through a global pandemic, to join a team of business owners whose model involved face-to-face delivery seemed like a stupid decision on paper.

But deep down, I knew it was the right time for me to step out of the shadows and into my own light. Pivoting an entire delivery model dependent on building meaningful and trusting relationships into a virtual space virtually overnight seemed crazy, but with a deep commitment to our purpose – helping leaders and teams achieve high performance – and a conviction to live our trademark as colleagues – go the extra yard- , we achieved the unthinkable.

Our business grew 25% during the pandemic, recruiting new team members and building our expertise. And I became the person I always wanted to be. A people-focused, outcome driven business leader who helps leaders and teams improve their performance.

Connor Ondriska
Connor Ondriska

Connor Ondriska

Finding product-market fit was the largest challenge I had. Prior to launching SpanishVIP, I dabbled in some different business models that worked but did not easily scale with my skillset.

This journey, which is quite normal for most entrepreneurs, entailed significant testing and analysis to determine where to focus my energy.

It’s also incredibly important to be a great leader. If you want to do something truly innovative, you will need many smart people to build towards that goal. Understanding how to attract and work with a talented team was something that I struggled with. Studying leadership has and will continue to be of immense value.

Victor Fredung
Victor Fredung

Victor Fredung

AI and ML were relatively new concepts when I got into the industry ten years ago and here I am today, CEO of Shufti Pro, an award-winning AI-driven company that seeks innovation and has 5 international offices.

The way to becoming a CEO of a company is absolutely not easy. It may look like a piece of cake from the outside but when you really get into this game, you realize that there is no such thing as “time-limit,” you have to work day in and out to turn your passion into reality. The same happened to me.

Talking about the difficulties, I had my fair share of challenges along the way. The biggest challenge that came my way when I started out was to make my business flourish between the big giants that were already associated with the industry. To make your space in an already packed room is difficult of course, but I believed in resilience and trusted my team that soon we will be giving them competition, and boom, here we are. A company serving in 230+ countries and territories.

Another challenge that I encountered was my belief in the thinking that I can get everything done single-handedly. I was of the view that only a few teammates would suffice for my company. However, this is not the case. One cannot be the expert on everything and you do need a team of highly skilled people in every department to ensure higher levels of productivity. I am glad that I understood it on time and saved my company from becoming a victim of this thought.

In the end, I would like to say that it’s like to be living in a fool’s paradise if you think that you are headed on a journey of becoming a CEO and would not encounter any challenge. Or you have a smooth path looking your way. No, it does not happen in real life. Challenges are a part of every entrepreneur’s journey. CEO’s/entreprenuers must take these challenges as a stepping stone and motivate themselves to keep doing more and better

Paul Peros
Paul Peros

Paul Peros

I spent over 10 years in management consulting being part of GEA (a “pre-McKinseyan”) strategy boutique in Milano, mainly working on new product and brand development and engaging with global leaders in numerous consumer product categories.

This is where I realised that the majority of the business leaders and models are working in the same way, bringing the same old solution to a problem. I believe this was one of the biggest challenges I faced at the beginning as well – to develop critical thinking skills in order to bring a true and meaningful innovation, one that will address the real concerns of consumers.

Many years of experience has taught me that you need to be adaptive, resilient, always evolving, and going with your instinct, especially during the COVID-19 time. A true entrepreneur should have the courage to see things as they are, the vision to organise resources beyond the way things were done before, and solidarity to trust in one’s and our colleagues’ abilities to tackle challenges.

This critical thinking allowed me to be a true disrupter as a CEO in the beauty tech world. I have been pushing the industry and growing brands from start-ups to companies with more than $1Bilion annual revenue. I am now at the helm of RÉDUIT and our innovative thinking is pushing the high-tech beauty industry further to find the most advanced solutions to skincare needs.

We have merged the laws of physics with beauty to create the world’s only smart and customizable skincare innovation – BOOST. This device and its accompanying app, customize your favorite skincare products, ensuring your skin receives the actives it needs most and provides four times more absorption than fingers alone, to give five times better results.

We launched via Kickstarter and in less than one day secured more than $60,000 in pledges, which is a true testament to how innovative and desirable our solutions are.

Indiana Gregg
Indiana Gregg

Indiana Gregg

Indiana Gregg is the founder and CEO of WeDo, a new app that simplifies work for small business owners, gig workers and freelancers. In Indy’s app, users can connect, make and receive payment and network within their community. Indy created the app during the pandemic and the Great Recession.

You can learn more about the app by going to www.getwedo.today. Here’s what Indy has to say about some of the difficulties she faced on her journey to becoming an entrepreneur / CEO.

“Entrepreneurship isn’t ever easy. It takes grit and belief. When I first started out, probably the biggest challenge was being a woman in tech. It was very difficult. You’d be the only woman in the room talking about a build, and the guys would act like you should be out getting them some coffee. Even now, as the CEO of a fintech, I’m told that I won’t be needed on a tech call even if I’m the only technical person in the conference call.

The second most difficult thing was raising capital on those early rounds. Again, a lot of investors are still skeptical about investing in a female led tech company. Only 2% of VC investment goes to female led companies and even with an outstanding team, a track record of success and innovative scalable fintech, it can still be difficult.

So, from an emotional point of view, that can be very frustrating. I’ve learned that persistence wins over the years and that if you want to make it happen, you will find a way to get through those barriers. Another difficulty was being too early to market, learning that timing is everything and understanding that sometimes you have to keep working on something until the market is ready and the time is right and that the myth of ‘fail fast’ doesn’t always apply.

I think at the beginning, new founders and entrepreneurs are learning as they go, so over time with years of practice in building companies, you learn to be intuitive to the point where you know what your business needs next. This doesn’t always come naturally, so I had to go through a few failures before I had my “overnight success”.

Some people think there’s luck involved in it, I’m telling you, you make your own luck. Overall, I wouldn’t trade my failures for anything. Knowing that you put something out there and learned from your mistakes always leads you to your next success. In leadership, I’ve learned to gather the best people on the planet who align with the mission of the company. That wasn’t always the case with my first couple startups.

You live, you learn. I have a funnel of ideas and a quality filter now that I didn’t have when I started out, so I only create things that I believe will leave the world a better place and help millions of people.

Rafał Młodzki
Rafał Młodzki

Rafał Młodzki

It was a challenge to stay ahead of the crowd. My brothers and I decided to start a business during our studies. I broke away from the typical way of studying – corporate job – next career ladder. Several people discouraged me and told me it wouldn’t work.

They said we have no experience so that we won’t succeed. It caused me to doubt my ideas, and I was on the verge of resigning.

However, thanks to the support of my friends and family, I was able to survive that social pressure. The experience taught me resilience. Now I trust myself and stand by my decisions. I discuss critiques with people I trust and do not worry about others’ opinions.

Tomek Młodzki
Tomek Młodzki

Tomek Młodzki

My journey to becoming an entrepreneur required one big sacrifice. In my twenties, I was studying law. You can imagine that this is not a simple field of study and consumed most of my time. Simultaneously, I wanted to pursue my passion – my first online product, Fiszkoteka.

The idea was simple – my website offered customizable flashcards to learn English and other languages for free. Together with my brothers, I used flashcards to study when we were kids, so I transformed them into the online world!

Fiszkoteka was getting better and better, and I realized I would have to sacrifice something – a secure, respected job as a lawyer or what I really love doing. I don’t believe in the efficiency of partial engagement. You do or do not.

Fiszkoteka’s small successes and listening to the voice of my heart made me choose to abandon the law. At first, I felt guilty, but then I realized that it was the right decision with time.

Johannes Larsson
Johannes Larsson

Johannes Larsson

One of the biggest difficulties in my career was when I had to start over from scratch after months of working hard on my first business. I ran several websites that relied on ads to generate revenue, and it took half a year of hard work and not getting paid to finally make a consistent albeit modest amount of income.

I was happy that my work was finally starting to pay off, but things quickly derailed when my advertising account got banned for reasons I still don’t know. Not only did this prevent me from accessing my earnings; it also got my websites blacklisted.

Fortunately, the skills and experience I had already gained let me start over and work up to the same income in a relatively short time frame. I also decided to change my business model to something more stable to avoid the possibility of getting banned again.

The main thing that got me through this hurdle was the knowledge that I had already succeeded before. I knew that if I worked hard and used what I learned to my advantage, I could build something better that would last for the long term. Today, I’m happy to say that I was right.

Christiaan Huynen
Christiaan Huynen

Christiaan Huynen

Proactive management. Even before a problem arises, I acknowledge the threat and attend to it immediately. Prevention is certainly better than fixing a wide-scale damage in the future.

As a leader, I stay on top of the game through assessing possible difficulties that may be perilous to the business. For example, if a trend on tech is booming, I analyze its connection or relevance to my company. The visionary in me seizes that opportunity to either advance or protect my business from its effects.

Jake Smith
Jake Smith

Jake Smith

The biggest challenge I faced in establishing Absolute Reg was self-doubt amid uncertainty. As a new entrepreneur, I was anxious to make business decisions outside my comfort zone. However, to be a CEO, I need to conquer the fear of apprehension and teach myself when to take a risk.

Success requires a high level of critical thinking skills. Most often, this aspect is what most business-minded people fail to develop. The ability to decipher calculated risks from foolish ones makes an excellent CEO. Only those who possess such immense skill to discern situations worth risking make it to the optimum peak of their careers.

On my journey to becoming a CEO, I trained to be resourceful and mindful with all my decisions as I am my company’s brain. My command is powerful since I have the final say in every transaction we make. One wrong judgment about when to take risks can put my business at stake.

Lucky enough, I have persevered and treated every downfall as a lesson to progress. I have defeated my fear of the unknown and become the successful person I am today.

Nanditha Vijayaraghavan
Nanditha Vijayaraghavan

Nanditha Vijayaraghavan

The biggest challenge I’ve faced in my executive journey so far has been more internal than external.

I’ve had to frequently challenge myself to step out of my comfort zone, as often as I could, dipping my toes into roles that weren’t fully within my job description, and essentially working the role/position ahead of me.

David Bowen
David Bowen

David Bowen

The main difficulty I faced, is feeling like I had to do everything. There is a lot of competition out there, and often, it feels as though you have to be on top of every single opportunity in order to succeed. Especially because everything is so fast-paced nowadays, and people expect your business to cater to absolutely everything.

However, I learned that it’s best to prioritize and focus your efforts on a smaller niche, and to then build a strong management team to help you keep everything on track! That’s certainly how I ended up developing my own business, and not only did it make things easier, it built a more reliable target audience too.

Daniel Foley
Daniel Foley

Daniel Foley

The most difficult thing I found managing was maintaining a healthy work-life balance:

When I launched my business, I could not afford to take breaks. Running a business added to the burden of achieving a work-life balance. Unfortunately, all entrepreneurs are subjected to this strain.

This is because when you started working on your own business, you were only busy during office hours, but once you started working on your own business, there was no clock to regulate.

You are always working without regard for the time of day, and family time is lost, but in order to achieve something, you must make many sacrifices, and things are now in a better place.

James Dyble
James Dyble

James Dyble

Time is frequently one of the most difficult challenges I had to overcome when ascending the echelons. There is frequently the perception that there is not enough time to perform the necessary activities for growth, and this was often the case for me.

As a result, delegation was one of the most critical skills I developed early in my career. Delegation allows for more time to work on the most important tasks and allows for more to be accomplished in the short and long term.

Anthony Mixides
Anthony Mixides

Anthony Mixides

When I first started my business, I experienced a variety of problems. Different difficulties and possibilities need different answers as a firm expands, and what succeeded a year ago may no longer be the ideal approach.

All too frequently, avoidable errors convert what could be a fantastic company into a flop. If your organization is to keep expanding and thriving, you must recognize and overcome the usual problems connected with expansion.

Importantly, you must guarantee that the actions you do today do not cause new problems in the future. Effective leadership will assist you in making the most of the opportunities available to you, resulting in long-term progress.

I believe, confronts a variety of hazards, including insolvency, financial risk, competitive risk, environmental risk, reputational risk, and economic risk. So, in response to the query, I worked on team building to avoid such a danger because a team is the pillar of any company, and I understand that I am not the best to face any difficulty.

We needed experts in specific fields such as financial or demand planning, and I don’t believe an entrepreneur can do everything or be the best in every field, so I worked on team building as a strategy to avoid business difficulties.

Gilles Bertaux
Gilles Bertaux

Gilles Bertaux

When Livestorm was launched back in 2016, we had a few challenges to face: our brand awareness was non-existent, many large competitors were already present in the market and our SEO traffic was weak as we had just launched the website.

We built an early website targeting specific keywords and created a lot of content around our chosen topic. But when it came to prospects further down the buying process, we didn’t have any content to attract them to our website. In January 2018, we came up with the idea to create comparison pages on our website to address that problem.

Our objective was to present Livestorm as an alternative to our main competitors, in a tone that was as neutral as possible.

This project was a success: the comparison pages generated 6% of Livestorm’s organic traffic and they generated links from over 130 referring domains.

Also, we realized that there were quite a few people asking for advice on the Quora platform on how to organise webinars. I took the time to give very detailed answers, which brought credibility to my profile and made Livestorm known by providing answers to some people’s challenges or needs. In addition, these answers were upvoted and he had more visibility on the platform.

However, after a while, a lot of people started to adopt this technique/hack and it was not really useful anymore. Also, Quora is not used much anymore, but it was something that worked quite well in the beginning of Livestorm to give credibility/visibility, and it was a free technique.

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The post Various Entrepreneurs From Around The World Tell Stories Behind Their Success & Accomplishments first appeared on Tekrati and is written by Jerome Knyszewski

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DevOps For ERP: A Practical Guide https://www.tekrati.com/a-practical-guide-to-devops-for-erp/ Wed, 08 Feb 2023 23:57:00 +0000 https://www.digitalistmag.com/?p=6203723https://www.digitalistmag.com/cio-knowledge/2020/05/27/practical-guide-to-devops-for-erp-06203723/ DevOps For ERP: A Practical Guide

DevOps For ERP: A Practical Guide

Part of the “DevOps for ERP” series Whether or not you believe in the value that DevOps can offer to a business – and there’s already plenty of evidence to show that it can deliver major benefits – there’s no doubt that more and more companies are starting to wonder why they haven’t extended this [...]

The post DevOps For ERP: A Practical Guide first appeared on Tekrati and is written by Rob Sterling

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DevOps For ERP: A Practical Guide

DevOps For ERP: A Practical Guide

Part of the “DevOps for ERP” series

Whether or not you believe in the value that DevOps can offer to a business – and there’s already plenty of evidence to show that it can deliver major benefits – there’s no doubt that more and more companies are starting to wonder why they haven’t extended this approach to their ERP systems.

Not so long ago, I regularly had to explain what agile and DevOps meant, but nowadays, people come to us asking how we can help them adopt these approaches.

So why the change? Transformation is the key. It’s a word that’s a bit overused by my colleagues in the marketing world, in my opinion. But with the move to cloud, the constant emergence of new technologies, and growing pressure on businesses to innovate and increase competitiveness, real changes are happening that IT teams simply have to respond to.

Perhaps unlike in years gone by, ERP teams are not immune to this trend. As “systems of engagement” like websites and mobile apps change faster than ever, the “systems of record” that often power them need to keep pace. Otherwise the whole business slows down.

Unfortunately, the ERP development processes most people have been familiar with throughout their careers – the “waterfall” method most often still in use today ­– tend to suffer from a slow pace of change. This can be explained by the concern that changing things in ERP systems has traditionally come with a high chance of failure (an unacceptable outcome for business-critical systems).

DevOps, on the other hand, supports application delivery in shorter, more frequent cycles where quality is embedded from the start of the process, and risk is substantially reduced.

Great, I hear you say; let’s do it! However, even the most enthusiastic organizations cannot implement DevOps in ERP systems in exactly the same way as they’ve done for other applications. The fundamental requirements for DevOps are the same – I covered some of them here­ – but the practicalities are different, not least because standard DevOps tools aren’t capable of doing the job. What’s more, the DevOps experts don’t necessarily understand what’s needed in ERP, while the ERP experts may never have heard of DevOps!

What is the practical reality if companies do adopt DevOps for ERP?

Related Posts:

DevOps Foundation Certification: Key Benefits

TaaS and DevOps: A Perfect Match

Higher-quality development

Delivering software at high speed requires a robust development process that combines clear business requirements and constant feedback. DevOps mandates that ownership of quality “shifts left” and is embedded from the very start of the process. This way, most (and ideally all) problems can be identified long before they get to live production systems (where the disruption caused and associated cost to fix are much greater).

In practice, this means we need to ensure that nothing leaves development without being fully quality-checked. Working practices like daily stand-up sessions, mandatory peer reviews of code, and a set of universal coding standards might not seem revolutionary for some IT teams, but they are new ideas for many ERP professionals. They’re only part of the solution, though, going along with technical elements like automated unit testing and templated lock-down of high-risk objects.

One other practical outcome of DevOps from the very first stage of development is that ERP and business teams must be more closely aligned to ensure that customer requirements are clearly understood. Integration between the development team and other IT functions like QA and operations also establishes an early validation step.

Low-risk, high cadence delivery

Continuous integration is an aspect of DevOps that means that – unlike in many ERP landscapes – changes can be successfully deployed to QA or any other downstream system at any time without risk. The big change here is the ability to deploy based on business priorities, rather than just having to wait for the next release window.

Automation gives you the means to achieve this new high-frequency delivery cadence in ERP systems by providing a way to better manage risk (spreadsheets definitely do not form a core part of a DevOps-based software delivery process!). It enables you to check every change for technical issues like completeness, sequencing, dependencies, risk, and impact and more, ensuring that nothing is promoted prematurely.

This more rigorous, agile approach means QA teams, in particular, can focus their attention on real issues rather than technical “noise,” which accelerates the delivery of functionality that business users or customers are waiting for. Changes can be selectively and automatically deployed with confidence, rather than waiting for the next full release.

Minimal production impact

“Stability is king” has long been an unofficial mantra in ERP environments, given their importance to day-to-day business operations. With DevOps, the required system stability is maintained even though live production systems can be updated far more often. Rigorous controls – built on both technical solutions and new collaborative workflows – ensure that deployments are safely delivered to end users as soon as possible.

But there is always a risk, however small, that a change to live ERP systems can cause problems that stop the business. That’s why Mean Time To Recover (as opposed to the more traditional Mean Time To Failure) is a key DevOps metric. The most effective ERP DevOps processes feature a back-out plan that allows changes to be reversed as quickly as possible so, even if disaster strikes, the impact of change-related downtime is minimal, and business continuity can be maintained.

The culture question

As I’ve explained, when implemented correctly, DevOps fundamentally changes traditional ERP development processes. However, the manner in which DevOps impacts the roles and approach of staff can be just as important. In DevOps, effective collaboration is key. Traditional silos based on job function are replaced by multi-skilled, cross-functional teams that work together to deliver agreed-upon business outcomes. This may require a significant shift in how teams are organized.

It’s normal for some people to find this new way of working challenging, but creating a successful DevOps culture empowers team members to take responsibility at every stage of the development lifecycle. It enables them to collaborate with their colleagues and focus on a common goal of rapidly delivering the high-quality features and functionality the business needs to remain competitive.

DevOps benefits and outcomes

Change happens fast, and companies need to respond quickly. IT systems must, therefore, have the flexibility to rapidly change, expand, extend, and adapt.

But accelerating delivery cannot be done at the expense of business continuity. Successfully adopting DevOps for ERP combines speed, quality improvements, and risk reduction. That provides the flexibility to change ERP environments at the speed the business needs with confidence that it can be achieved without compromising stability.

For more on this topic, please read “How to Build a Business Case for DevOps” and “Self-Assessment: Are You Already Doing ERP DevOps?”

For a practical guide on how to introduce DevOps to your ERP software development and delivery processes, download our e-book.

A version of this article originally appeared on the Basis Technologies blog. This adapted version is republished by permission. Basis Technologies is an SAP silver partner.

The post DevOps For ERP: A Practical Guide first appeared on Tekrati and is written by Rob Sterling

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Unexpected Business Challenges Faced by Entrepreneurs: 17 Inspiring Stories from Asia & Australia https://www.tekrati.com/unexpected-business-challenges/ Fri, 18 Mar 2022 12:36:51 +0000 https://www.tekrati.com/?p=25297 Unexpected Business Challenges Faced by Entrepreneurs: 17 Inspiring Stories from Asia & Australia

Unexpected Business Challenges Faced by Entrepreneurs: 17 Inspiring Stories from Asia & Australia

You might be sitting there right now wondering how you’re going to get your concept off the ground. In order to succeed in any business, you will confront problems that will either motivate you to keep going or cause you to quit up. We spoke with 17 entrepreneurs from Asia and Australia about the greatest [...]

The post Unexpected Business Challenges Faced by Entrepreneurs: 17 Inspiring Stories from Asia & Australia first appeared on Tekrati and is written by Jerome Knyszewski

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Unexpected Business Challenges Faced by Entrepreneurs: 17 Inspiring Stories from Asia & Australia

Unexpected Business Challenges Faced by Entrepreneurs: 17 Inspiring Stories from Asia & Australia

You might be sitting there right now wondering how you’re going to get your concept off the ground. In order to succeed in any business, you will confront problems that will either motivate you to keep going or cause you to quit up. We spoke with 17 entrepreneurs from Asia and Australia about the greatest unexpected business challenges they have experienced and how they overcame them.

INTERVIEW HOST

Hello, my name is Jerome Knyszewski, I’ll be the host of your interview today. I am the CEO of HeavyShift. My specialties are online reputation marketing and SEO. Looking forward to reading your insightful answers and publishing your featured interview.

Jerome Knyszewski

Table of Contents

The question we asked:

The pandemic encouraged many businesses to pivot and adapt to changing market conditions. How did you adapt? Did you introduce additional product lines or services?

Adrian Goh
Adrian Goh

Adrian Goh

We put too many of your eggs in one basket.

Previously, we were a tech recruitment marketplace where up to 90 per cent of our revenue came from placing overseas talents in Singapore companies. When COVID-19 struck, it quickly became a cause of concern when international borders shut.

Amongst the many things we did to mitigate the effect, two main ones were the most crucial.

First, we pivoted from a recruitment marketplace to a digital recruitment firm enabled by technology, with a strong focus on local talents. Doing so allowed us to continue serving our existing clientele with the same employees and capabilities. It was especially crucial in the short term to ensure survivability.

Secondly, we launch a full-stack tech career platform with products for every step of a tech talent career. We knew diversification was needed to ensure we do not rely on one growth stream in the long run. COVID-19 resulted in many losing their jobs and income, so it’s no surprise that the most successful product is NodeFlair Salaries. It is a platform for the tech community to share their salary data, verified by payslip and offer letters. The investments allow us to reach over 250k users globally in 2021 alone.

Angus Chang
Angus Chang

Angus Chang

The customer’s satisfaction

I started my eCommerce business five years ago, and I have faced different challenges during this time. My biggest challenge during my business career is customer satisfaction because customers expect perfection, and sometimes they give negative feedback, which negatively affects our reputation.

A few months ago, I dealt with a disgruntled customer who was not satisfied with her purchase. I took the time to listen to her concerns and offered to talk with her. Once she calmed down, I offered her several options to help resolve the issue. She thanked me for my time when she found the solution that best suited her needs and made another purchase with us in the future.

Advice to new entrepreneurs

You and your employees know the customer’s behavior based on recent purchases. When you notice something wrong with their behaviors, you should not ignore it. Talk with your customers about their problems and ask how you can help them. Give them a solution and improve your business if there are some reasons for their dissatisfaction. Listening to your customers is an effective strategy to improve your business.

Ed Zouroudis
Ed Zouroudis

Ed Zouroudis

Significant changes that our company, Evolt, made throughout of the pandemic included changing to a Software as a Service (SAAS) model and we shifted our focus to research and development.

A silver lining of the pandemic was that it allowed us to bring our tech timeline forward.

As we come out of the pandemic, businesses are back and trading from their bricks and mortar premises and the verticals we supply to are using our product to attract members back into their premises.

The pandemic forced us to pivot and become agile and we are now seeing the results of the decisions we made.

Cooper Jitts
Cooper Jitts

Cooper Jitts

The need for consistency over a long horizon is a bit challenge that often isn’t discussed between business owners.

When starting a business, you need to exert more effort, over a longer time period, than your competitors to assist in establishing a competitive edge.

But the key difference between a business that is truly successful is how long they can sustain this additional effort.

The longer your timeline or horizon, the stronger your competitive advantage. The best way to go about this is to make sure you have a rock solid network around you. Think of both your people network – team, family, friends etc – and your personal network of things you can control – sleep, diet, exercise etc. The more you have these things aligned, the longer you can sustain your operating approach.

Michael Bartlett
Michael Bartlett

Michael Bartlett

Starting a business, in the tech space defiantly has different and significant challenges for each entrepreneur. Those challenges vary from person to person and I am yet to find a founder with the same story, however they are all have the same theme.

We know it will be hard, but what we find the hardest, we never expected. For me it was understanding, accepting and learning how to get the business moving. For many years I have held leadership roles across numerous industries and in those roles, I have had the ability to take something that is functioning reasonably well and improve that business.

That could be in service to customers, profitability, communication or whatever, and in hindsight I found it easy as they were already a rolling beast. They had people ready to contribute, processes they used and technology in place to make life easier and my role was to work with that and make it sing!

But creating that is an entirely different skill set. Improving a business, adjusting a business is easy when you have the correct people, with the right processes, complimented by technology.

Creating that in a start-up environment really threw me. I felt vulnerable and uncomfortable, it created that uneasy feel in me that drove me to seek advice from the experts. I had all this knowledge and was unable to use it as I had to take a step back and go back to the very basics. I had to create all of that, not leverage that.

Creating the business platform from which to launch and get momentum in your space is exceptionally time consuming. The hours I have spent researching and learning how to build this base correctly, to have the right people, process and technology is uncountable. There have been times where I thought I have it sorted, the correct game plan only to read more, listen to mentors and discover I only have 20% of that part of the plan is ridiculous.

It was surprising what I have taken for granted in previous roles. And as I tap this out, I find myself in a ready to go into my old stomping ground. Running a business, taking it to the edge of chaos and succeeding.

After seeking and listening to many people, experts in their field, I now have what I believe to be the best people surrounding me. After much trial and error, I have sleek processes to make sure that “stuff happens” the way it should. And the final piece, my technology is ready. It is complimenting and improving all the time to allow the people to spend more time working on the business and not in it.

So understanding now what I used to take for granted will only make me a better leader, a stronger founder as I now get it. I have built the base well and I am ready to magic happen. If you want to know more about my start up or myself please follow the links below.

Belle Chapman
Belle Chapman

Belle Chapman

I’m Belle from Belle Chapman Photography & The Forevermore Initiative. I’m the Owner and Founder of both these businesses. I provide Family Photography through my main business and free family photography to Australian families facing a cancer diagnosis through my not for profit (Forevermore) www.bellechapmanphotography.com.au

Definitely comparing yourself to others in the industry and imposter syndrome, were my most unexpected challenges.

Working in a creative industry (Family Photography) it is so easy to get swept up in what others in the same field are doing, what are they charging, what does their work look like… and questioning yourself should I charge that or should I make my work should look like that. I think we all go through it in creative arts at the beginning. You admire other peoples work hard at the start and its easy to lose yourself in that. First of all I recognised what I was doing then I could set about fixing the issue.

How I worked on mindset to avoid running myself in circles wondering if I was doing the right thing because of comparing everything to others. (I needed to find my own voice)

  • Look out for the positives or the win no matter how small and celebrate them.
  • Step back and think about what aspects of my journey I really enjoy, for example the natural images I take of people speaks to my soul but still posed images I can take or leave. So I started capturing what stirred the fire in my belly natural or lifestyle family photos.
  • Develop a healthy relationship with failure, I did this by chatting to others about their journey and realising from these conversations we all have bad days.
  • Most importantly keep striving to learn and grow, the more I feel like I am making an effort to learn new things the more I feel like I’m not faking it until I make it haha
Allyson Brown
Allyson Brown

Allyson Brown

My greatest unexpected challenge when launching my business has been finding my ideal client – people suffering from an autoimmune condition and/or struggling with brain fog and fatigue. Someone who wants my help in receiving the education, encouragement and empowerment to take back control of their health naturally, so they can live a healthier and happier life – just as I have done myself!

A person who can truly benefit from signing up to my autoimmune wellness program. Yes, this is a very specific niche, but there are over 320 million autoimmune sufferers worldwide who could benefit from my program… so why is it so hard to find them?

I believed the movie Field of Dreams – “if you build it, they will come”. Boy was I wrong! It just doesn’t work that way. There’s a lot of competition out there and it’s a busy world filled with lots of “noise”. So if you put something out there, it’s likely to be the equivalent of a drop of water hitting the entire ocean – your message is likely to get lost in all the mayhem.

Finding people might be easy for some businesses, but when you have a very specific target market, it can be really tough to find THE RIGHT people who you can help.
My advice to new entrepreneurs is don’t make the same mistake that I did – thinking that if you launch your business, then that’s the hard part done and people will come knocking down your door! It just doesn’t work that way. It takes dedication and consistently reaching out to find people who you are able to serve, and who can truly appreciate and benefit from your services.

For most businesses, social media is your answer. Creating a business page and/or group and inviting people from other groups (people who are your ideal client) to join your group. You have to show up consistently in your group and nurture people but most importantly, you have to offer them VALUE – you can’t just go in for the “kill” and expect it to work.

The one thing I’ve learnt is that people don’t care about how much you know, until they know how much you care. Keep offering people value, be genuine and never give up on your chance for a better tomorrow!

Taz Dunstan
Taz Dunstan

Taz Dunstan

As a business owner and entrepreneur your risk assessment is usually focused on logistics in the business world, as one would expect.

This leaves you wide open to be blind sided by personal challenges such as jealous, competitive or unsupportive spouses, family or friends who embark on acts of espionage and sabotage to debunk your business in a plethora of ways.

I have experienced this repeatedly by several people close to me throughout my career as a business owner and as an entrepreneur.

In 2014 I had one partner tell me daily I would never succeed at my business. I listened to him, but I never believed his attempts to manipulate me, instead I would think “wow, this man must be so miserable with himself, the only joy he will have in life is attempting to steal the light from others” – needless to say, we are not together and my personal training business: XL Personal Training has been up and running since 2015 as an established and credible brand leading the fitness industry.

In 2021 I designed a process to disrupt a Multi Level Marketing company on a large scale. This was again sabotaged by another partner who, without any understanding of my process, began criticizing me, questioning “what right I had as a consumer to quality control any other company” etc. Again, this resulted in me choosing my career and potential to build a life myself and my children deserve over being manipulated and controlled by insecure men who had issues with strong, intelligent career minded women.

I have lost friendships and relationships over peoples refusal to support my vision or believe in me and that is okay. I have not chosen a job over anyone, I have chosen myself, my passion and my self worth over others who could not and would not support and encourage me to be the best version of myself and THAT is what every business person and entrepreneur needs to be prepared to do.

Call out unacceptable behaviour and be clear for your reasons. You can have a sounding board for risk assessment, and it is reasonable for people who care about you to be fearful of risk and the possibility of failure, but when the words of warning or advice become demeaning, degrading and knowingly manipulative, you must always choose yourself over the alternative (regardless of your professional endeavors)

Learn to share your vision with those who support and encourage you and spend less time and energy with those who do not. Never allow someone else’ insecurity to contaminate you or your self belief. It seems ironic that the people closest to you tend to be your biggest liabilities in the business world. Better the devil you know to factor in contingency plans so that success is your only option, both personally and professionally.

Juliet Robinson
Juliet Robinson

Juliet Robinson

When I started my business I expected to struggle with tech, admin and social media marketing. What I didn’t expect was that my greatest challenge as an entrepreneur would be loneliness.

As an introvert I am really happy working on my own and I love the variety of different clients and the mix of online and in person consulting that I do. What I missed was people I could toss ideas around with and share successes and failures.

Talking to family was one way to overcome this and mine could usually be relied upon for love and support. But almost inevitably they didn’t really understand the challenges, the heart stopping moments and unalloyed joy of new clients or successful client outcomes.

What worked for me was a twofold approach. I now outsource day to day aspects of my business (yes, the tech, admin and social media marketing are much better done by someone else!) and this small group are great for tossing ideas around and celebrating client wins.

Then I joined a mastermind group of likeminded people doing similar things to me. There are only five of us in our mastermind and we have a mix of business types. We come together every fortnight to talk about our businesses, give each other feedback and encouragement and discuss our goals.

The meeting chair revolves amongst us and we each set the agenda for ‘our’ meeting so the discussion every fortnight is different. As the trust between us has grown we have been able to have truly open conversations about how we feel, not just what we do. We live all over Australia and have never met in person.

We are not friends in the conventional sense and we rarely talk about our personal lives (although Covid lockdowns certainly tested that). Despite all of that, this is the group I turn to when I’m unsure about something in my business, have a wobble about pricing or am faced with a challenge or dilemma. I know that every fortnight we will get on Zoom with a cup of coffee and have fantastic discussions.

If you are starting out on the entrepreneurial path I encourage you to find your mastermind group early and invest time and energy in meeting with them regularly. If you are an extroverted entrepreneur this is probably doubly important to help you keep your energy up. The trust you will build over time will mean you have a group you can lean on and lean into when business life gets a little bit lonely.

Sam Browne
Sam Browne

Sam Browne

I lost a significant business partner simply because I had become overly trusting about who I spoke to and worked with.

Entrepreneurs that are just starting should read this. If I can give you some advice, it is to constantly retain your position and authority over anyone you are working with, particularly in business situations.

Never suggest a client to one of your suppliers, and never introduce a supplier to one of your clients, even if they might show trust worthiness. When dealing with clients or suppliers, maintain a friendly manner, but do not invest the same confidence in them as you would in a personal relationship.

Because business will always be business, individuals will constantly want to take advantage of their rivals to remain competitive. Always keep that in mind.

Maintaining a clear line of separation between your transactions will provide you with a more secure business flow while also protecting your assets from your rivals’ efforts.

Christopher Roberts
Christopher Roberts

Christopher Roberts

New entrepreneurs! The biggest challenge your going to face is having to learn a whole new perspective about life and how to live it.

The way you think determines who you are, and your going to need to change, and these changes in the way you think isn’t the type of thing you can turn off.

Advancing your entrepreneurial development will change who you are and as a result you will lose contact with a lot of friends who you may no longer be able to relate with.

Marty Spargo
Marty Spargo

Marty Spargo

Nobody warned me about the loneliness that comes with success. As you climb your way up the ladder to your goals, no one’s going to hold your hand and pull you back up when you’re on the verge of falling.

You’ll have people supporting you on the way up, but really, no one tells you that people only support you when they know they can gain something out of your success. The very advice that I wish I could’ve given myself back then was to accept that great things comes with great sacrifice.

It’s a hard fact to accept that you can’t always have it all, but for those of you who do, then I would like to congratulate you for being one of the very few lucky ones to be given such a rare and wonderful blessing.

 

Wilson Casado
Wilson Casado

Wilson Casado

Hello, I am Wilson Casado.
Entrepreneur, angel investor, diversity advocate and of course, family man. I am originally from Brazil and now live in Western Australia where I started Visagio 10 years ago. It started with just me and now we have a team of about 80.

The biggest challenge for me was starting a new life and new business in a country where I didn’t speak the language. However, that was not an unexpected challenge.

What was unexpected was who did and didn’t help me on this journey.

  • It is well accepted that social capital, i.e. the value within networks and relationships, is essential for new ventures and startups
  • I believe that the stronger relationships – particularly personal relationships – I had in the industry would help me close deals at the start of our business
  • I found that those people who I had strong personal relationships shut on me about talking business
  • It was the not so-strong relationships, the ones who had a sense of my reputation, but who were not so close, were the ones excited for me in the new business and helped me along
  • I assume that the reason is that “mixing business and friendship” makes people very uncomfortable

How did I overcome this?

I just kept going and I just kept meeting new people. I focused on building my personal brand so that connections of connections would start to see what I was doing and it was that momentum of attracting people that helped me continue. I never stopped focusing on relationships no matter how strong or weak the connection seemed.

Jody Nichols
Jody Nichols

Jody Nichols

In retrospect, there are two significant unexpected challenges that stand out to me as a result of my journey in business over the past couple of decades.

Firstly, finding new clients, the right type of clients and the right type of work has been unexpectedly challenging. When I started doing this – running a bookkeeping service and then later branching out into offering taxation and accounting services – I expected cashflow to be an issue and it certainly was.

But I didn’t expect finding clients would be tough. In fact, it was the opposite: it was easy to find clients. I started when the Goods & Services Tax (GST) was being introduced in Australia and as a result, there were a lot of unprepared businesses desperately needing help making the transition into a new tax system. As a result, there was a huge pool of work available and most of my clients ended up coming to me via word of mouth.

In recent years, however – and I’m now twenty two years down the track – I’ve largely grown my practice by taking on the client bases of retiring accountants. Until relatively recently, that has meant that I haven’t actually had to do a whole lot of work to grow my business since it has historically been more about servicing my existing client base and value adding wherever possible rather than “hunting and gathering”, so to speak.

Increasingly, however, client acquisition and growth is definitely a challenge, and one I’m looking to overcome through a combination of traditional and digital marketing strategies and sheer consistency. If you are consistent with your service offerings, consistently providing great outcomes for your clients and consistently have happy staff, your customers and their friends come to know they can trust you and that can end up paying dividends for years to come.

The second unexpected challenge I encountered has proven to be a vital and hard won learning experience: you can’t always trust that people will do the right thing. Just because you have diligently and faithfully performed work for a client does not mean they will pay you for that work – even if they said they would – or value the time, effort and expertise you put into it.

That’s why for me now it is crucial that I no longer begin a job without first having a signed engagement letter in place, outlining the terms and conditions of the job to be performed and what the client’s fee will be. I really can’t emphasise enough how important it is to have that paper trail in place.

Not only does it give both you and your client certainty around what is and isn’t in scope and what the expectations are on both sides of the transaction, but it also gives you a leg to stand on should you be legally challenged for any reason. That’s important.

Andrew Jobling
Andrew Jobling

Andrew Jobling

My greatest unexpected challenge was the catalyst for the most amazing transformation in my business.

At the time I was working about 80 hours per week as part owner in a personal training business. As I had learned a lot about good nutrition, I thought owning a café and offering healthy food and great education would be a good move. I made the spontaneous decision to buy the café and try to combine it with an already hectic personal training business.

My vision was large. I had planned to revolutionize healthy eating in cafes, offer great education and a convenient and healthy meal delivery service. My plans were grand, but my implementation left a lot to be desired.

I went from working 80 hours per week in my personal training business, to working well over 100 hours per week in both. I had no real hospitality experience and didn’t understand the costs associated with a café. I did not manage cash flow effectively and started losing money each week. In my mind, I thought it would get better.

However, as Albert Einstein says, “Insanity is doing the same thing over and over and expecting a different result”. After two years I had no life, was working seven days per week and was in close to $100,000 debt. For me, this was totally unexpected, because I naively assumed I would be successful.

Then, at the lowest point in my life, something incredible happened. As I sat there, head in my hands wondering how I got to this point in my life – broke and broken – I asked myself a question that led to a vision that triggered an idea which transformed my life.

As I pondered the life I was living, I asked myself the question: This is not what I want, so how do I want to live? I visualized a life of health and happiness, one that made a difference in people’s lives, enjoying multiple income streams, debt free and enjoying a life of abundance. At that moment, I had the most illogical idea I have ever had: to write a book. So, with no time, experience, background, or qualifications I started the process.

I am excited to say, now 20 years on from that idea and decision to act, I am the bestselling author of eight books and living the life I visualized in that dark moment. I believe everything starts with a clear vision for the life we want to live. For me, in my moment of helplessness and hopelessness, when I was deep in debt and despair, I visualized a life, not just debt free, but one of joy and financial abundance.

As I visualized that life, I got excited and empowered to take action. I stayed very connected to that vision on a daily basis and as a result I created that very reality. We need to constantly imagine the feeling of living the life we desire, as it will keep us moving towards that reality. Essentially, I incorporated the advice I give in my latest book T.E.A.R.S of Joy.

Olivia Vlachou
Olivia Vlachou

Olivia Vlachou

For me, the biggest challenge has been staying OUT of the business so I can work ON the business.

The only way to do this is to bring in people that can be taught to do things the way I would do them (or better!). That brings with it a couple of other big challenges though.

The first challenge is structuring things so that it is repeatable and teachable to someone else. That can be easier said than done, especially if the task requires a level of creativity. But it’s certainly possible.

Even though you might be working things out as you go in the early days, I highly recommend having this in the back of your mind. As soon as you’ve got it working, start putting some structure around it. If things grow, you’ll need help fast, and you won’t have time to train people without a good base to work from.

Which brings me to the second challenge, which is hiring the right people. I’ve learnt that the person that can do the job best, isn’t necessarily the best hire. You need to make sure the role and your company aligns with person’s ambitions, beliefs and personality. There is no point hiring someone that is brilliant at the job for 2 months before leaving for other pastures.

Hiring can be a pretty painful and time-consuming process, so it’s best you take steps to minimise how often you need to do this. Take the extra time to hire right the first time round. Of course, you need to take all their skills and experience into account, but I find following your gut on these things is usually the right way to go!

Ellie Pietsch
Ellie Pietsch

Ellie Pietsch

With a marriage imploding, an 18 month old in and out of daycare – leaving a ‘safe’ job halfway through a global pandemic, to join a team of business owners whose model involved face-to-face delivery seemed like a stupid decision on paper.

But deep down, I knew it was the right time for me to step out of the shadows and into my own light. Pivoting an entire delivery model dependent on building meaningful and trusting relationships into a virtual space virtually overnight seemed crazy, but with a deep commitment to our purpose – helping leaders and teams achieve high performance – and a conviction to live our trademark as colleagues – go the extra yard- , we achieved the unthinkable.

Our business grew 25% during the pandemic, recruiting new team members and building our expertise. And I became the person I always wanted to be. A people-focused, outcome driven business leader who helps leaders and teams improve their performance.

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The post Unexpected Business Challenges Faced by Entrepreneurs: 17 Inspiring Stories from Asia & Australia first appeared on Tekrati and is written by Jerome Knyszewski

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20 USA Business Experts Talk About The Unexpected Challenges In Business World https://www.tekrati.com/unexpected-challenges-faced-by-entrepreneurs/ Fri, 18 Mar 2022 12:25:52 +0000 https://www.tekrati.com/?p=25500 20 USA Business Experts Talk About The Unexpected Challenges In Business World

20 USA Business Experts Talk About The Unexpected Challenges In Business World

We interviewed 20 company entrepreneurs in the United States about the greatest unexpected challenges they faced with their Companies and how the pandemic prompted many companies to pivot and adapt to new market conditions. INTERVIEW HOST   The host of this interview was Jed Morley. Jed Morley is the CEO of a leading payment processing service [...]

The post 20 USA Business Experts Talk About The Unexpected Challenges In Business World first appeared on Tekrati and is written by Jed Morley

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20 USA Business Experts Talk About The Unexpected Challenges In Business World

20 USA Business Experts Talk About The Unexpected Challenges In Business World

We interviewed 20 company entrepreneurs in the United States about the greatest unexpected challenges they faced with their Companies and how the pandemic prompted many companies to pivot and adapt to new market conditions.

INTERVIEW HOST

The host of this interview was Jed Morley. Jed Morley is the CEO of a leading payment processing service provider called PlatPay.


Jed Morley

Table of Contents

The question we asked:

The pandemic encouraged many businesses to pivot and adapt to changing market conditions. How did you adapt? Did you introduce additional product lines or services?

Mike Nemeroff
Mike Nemeroff

Mike Nemeroff

After three very tough years of my siblings and I putting all our time, efforts and money into Rush Order Tees, we were bringing in about $30k a month. We were doing everything ourselves: the marketing, printing, designing, selling, accounting and even shipping.

So the biggest challenge came when after all that hard work, at the end of the year we were either losing money or barely breaking even, even though we were saving every bit of cost we could possibly think of by doing things ourselves. This was when I reached burn out.

My tip for entrepreneurs starting the business is to factor in all the costs, including hiring employees as this is no sustainable. It is emotionally, mentally and physically draining and a business should not depend solely on it’s owners.

When creating a business plan and setting a budget, factor in every possible cost to determine what your expenses really are and ensure that you do not burn out before making by trying to take on too much. It was only when we doubled up on the marketing that we starting seeing really change and managed to slowly and gradually hire new people and work towards becoming a $90 million company.

David Ruggeri
David Ruggeri

David Ruggeri

There are millions of good ideas out there. One issue I have is that I almost have too many ideas. Seemingly daily I say to myself, “oh, that would be a great business…” It is a challenge to keep all these ideas under control. Everyone has a different way of sorting through ideas, but what I do is keep a notebook.

When I get an idea, I write it down. Then I revisit my ideas and go through them. Some ideas, after letting them sit for a while, seem ridiculous, while there are a few that have stayed very strong. I do this for both future artwork ideas, as well as for future business ideas. There are 2-3 business ideas that still get me excited when I re-read them. This excitement tells me that not only they are strong ideas, but ones that I would enjoy the challenge of starting.

For me, writing things down and working through them can really help develop an idea. Additionally, this process can often lead to other ideas. It is impossible to think of every possible variable that goes into creating a business, but by putting effort in the early stages of a business idea can help someone see the scope of what is involved. This should also create a tremendous amount of excitement, and I think that being excited about a business will increase the probability of success.

As important as being excited about a new business is, there is something far more important: research. Once you have your business idea, the research component begins. Starting a business is inherently risky, but these risks can be reduced (never eliminated) by doing quality research. This research will be what guides your decisions, and to succeed you need to make the best decisions you can. The data you collect and knowledge you gain are the foundation of your business.

You need to be knowledgeable on not only what is going on in your industry, but other industries as well. We live in an environment where everything affects everything else. Many variables are out of your control, but you need to be knowledgeable about them for when they change you have a plan ready to react to this change and minimize the impact on your business or optimize the change to grow your business.

No one should start a business without a thorough business plan, SWOT analysis, market analysis, financial analysis, to name just a few. This may seem like a lot of work, and that is because it is. However, these are vital tools that will reduce the risks that every business will face.

Lori Cheek
Lori Cheek

Lori Cheek

I’m an architect by training that one day had a light bulb moment. This moment led me to leave my safe and secure $120,000 per year job and career to build an online dating business I called Cheekd. When I launched in May of 2010, I “did it right” by putting the trademarks, technology, and patents in place to ensure I was protected. I also had partners and strategists, not to mention my own grit and passion as a foundation.

One of the greatest opportunities of my life came when I had the chance to pitch my startup Cheekd on an episode of Shark Tank. But that day has also put me in the cross hairs of someone who watched a re-airing of that episode in July 2015.

Two years later, that same individual named me in a $1 million lawsuit that claimed he “invented” the idea behind my company, while also accusing his former therapist in the same lawsuit of sharing his alleged invention with me. The catch is that the therapist and I have never met and had never spoken and did not know of each other until this lawsuit.

And despite this fact – and despite my having conceived of and commenced building the business before he even began treatment with the above referenced therapist – it took over 10 months and $50,000 to get the case in front of a judge who dismissed the lawsuit in a pre-trial conference on April 5, 2018.

Back? Well here’s where it gets crazier. Because without reproach, the same individual whose case had already been thrown out less than one year ago, has now tendered a second lawsuit against me containing the same allegations! Such is the Kafka-esque world that I’ve found myself thrust into.

So like a terrible movie that keeps generating sequels no one ever asked for, he came back. This time, the stakes skyrocketed into a brand new $5 million lawsuit against myself, my business and the therapist. The suit also requested inventor’s rights to my patent! Further, he asked not only for a “cease and desist” order for Cheekd, but also for our startup business spinoff Networkd, a Bluetooth networking app.

Fortunately, the judge dismissed the $5 million claims, but I was still forced to fight the inventor rights issue. I found myself again fighting to protect all that I have created over the past 12 years by spending over $114,000 that I do not have in order to save what is mine.

After nearly 2 years and 7 months defending my idea, my business and my patent in 2 back to back lawsuits, on December 23rd, 2019, Honorable Judge Englemayer directed the Federal Court of NY to enter judgement for the defendants (ME!) and to “close this case” as “no reasonable juror could find that he is entitled to be listed as a joint inventor.” 

After a series of procedurally complex twist and turns that resulted in an agreement by plaintiff to not oppose defendants’ motion for summary judgment, U.S. District Judge Paul A. Engelmayer (S.D.N.Y.) granted defendants Lori Cheek (me) and Cheek’d Inc.’s motion for attorney fees under 35 U.S.C. § 285 and ruled that plaintiff’s counsel should pay. On May 26, 2020, defendants submitted their fee application seeking $17,000 for fees and the judge granted us these fees but the plaintiff’s counsel has appealed the judge’s decision so ultimately, this could take another year and cost another $17K to fight off the $17K this lawyer’s meant to pay back.

The story gets a little crazier because the plaintiff sued me a 3rd time for going to the press while trying to bring light to what was happening to me in hopes of trying to get my story in front of someone/ anyone that could help financially or legally… he sued me a 3rd time for defamation and all sorts of other claims in a $10Million lawsuit. 

His current lawyer dismissed the lawsuit without prejudice which means the plaintiff can try again. I’ve done everything in my power to keep my business afloat over the last decade but I just can’t see the light at the end of the tunnel fighting this battle with a complete and total stranger that I still have no idea what looks like to this day.

Last spring, this lawsuit came to an end— after almost four years. The lawyer had to pay me a small portion of my legal fees for ‘vexatious conduct’ in the end. I’m still out over $100K in the end but it’s over and I can begin to rebuild now…

There’s my story. And what could help??? Our US legal system is not protecting businesses from frivolous lawsuits. From my conversations and investigations, it is clear that these types of frivolous lawsuits are epidemic and even the best PR support, strategic advisors and board of directors cannot help overcome. 

And while an employee of a company is protected, someone who boldly follows their own vision and chases their own dreams is virtually unprotected from the absurdity of lawsuits claiming that your idea is not actually yours.

As far as my current app (a Bluetooth app) that is meant to help singles connect in real space and time– within a 30 foot radius in bars, cafes, at the gym, etc… Now during this time of social distancing, the beauty of our app has become obsolete… hence the need to evolve.

A New Yorker of 25 years, I recently relocated (due to the above financial reasons) to my home state of Kentucky and am working on a new app idea inspired by my own struggles trying to network and meet new people in a new city during an extremely unsocial time of purposefully distancing. 

My solution will allow users to have a more organic, yet virtual way, of making connections for anything from business, networking, dating, fitness, friendship, hobbies or anything with anyone all over the world!

It’s a big brand new start for me in so many ways… and my dream plan for 2022 is to launch my new dream inspired by this dreadful pandemic.

My favorite quote that keeps me fueled every day of my entrepreneurial journey::: “You just can’t beat the person who never gives up.” – Babe Ruth

Charmaine Allen
Charmaine Allen

Charmaine Allen

BLOCKING OUT THE NAYSAYERS
When you first start a business you are ridiculously overenthusiastic. However, as you progress and you are constantly bombarded with problems or setbacks the doubt begins to creep in.

At the beginning of your entrepreneurial journey, you can find yourself going weeks and sometimes months without clients or sales. When you have this situation exacerbated by the naysayers it’s normal for doubt to start to set in. My advice to entrepreneurs in this situation is to find yourself a seasoned entrepreneur as a mentor who can help you navigate the various stages in your entrepreneurial journey.

Jake Hare
Jake Hare

Jake Hare

The greatest challenge was not realizing how important sales and marketing was when I first started out. I had the belief that if I just built a good product or offer that people would find it and flock to it, and I could sit back and relax. That thinking caused 2 years of frustration, thinking to myself, “We have a great product and offer, and all our customers love it, so why isn’t our balance sheet reflecting that?”. Once I realized how important marketing and sales were, and that without being an expert in those things, I dedicated 100% of my time to learning how to be a scrappy marketer, specifically related to copywriting and traffic generation. Once I did that, the business grew exponentially, and we went from me working in a room above my garage to a team of 12 and growing. The advice I give entrepreneurs now is that if they want to start a company, they better learn how to generate traffic and get conversions before they spin their wheels focusing on their product.

Andrea Sok
Andrea Sok

Andrea Sok

So many new entrepreneurs that I work come to me after diving into marketing their business without a strategy in place. They may have a decent budget, but they don’t see the results because there is no plan! Spend time mapping out your strategy.

What are your goals? Who is your customer? What is your budget? If you start with those three basic questions you can begin to map out a strategy. Also, seek help! A Fractional CMO is a great way to get the executive level strategy and implementation without busting your budget.

Julia O'Mara
Julia O’Mara

Julia O’Mara

One unexpected challenge that I’ve faced while starting Pickle is determining the ideal target audience and most effective marketing messaging. It is very easy to fall for the “if you build it they will come” fallacy, but at the end of the day an inferior product can win market share through superior marketing.

I’ve learned an incredible amount in this space and am continuing to learn what the best strategies are to present Pickle. My recommendation to new entrepreneurs would be to make sure they are focusing on the marketing aspects just as heavily as the product portions of building the business and to make sure they have a marketing strategy in place prior to launch and are ready to adapt as they measure its success.

Deb Porter
Deb Porter

Deb Porter

Honestly, had I known I might not have started at all—so maybe it was for the best that I didn’t know…nevertheless.

I very naively believed that all it would take to be successful was an announcement to friends asking them to share and we would have clients. I did NOT know that it can take 23 touches before someone decides to buy a product or service. I have since learned this is a very common mistake of new business owners.

This led me to scramble to find mentors, and it required grit to continue believing HOLD’s service is valuable and needed in the world. One mentor, Rod Jorgensen, a connection through the SBCA, suggested that my business is unique—that is both the greatest weakness AND the strength.

I heard him, and I have been using that leverage to write articles and speak on Podcasts. I allow people’s natural curiosity to propel both my story and the goal of HOLD, to “Mr. Rogers” the world. Another mentor, Renee Taylor Plain, who volunteers her time at the Adams Hub for Innovation, has been given me invaluable counsel teaching me the basics of marketing–I do the work, but she helps me see what’s next.

I have gone from knowing nothing about marketing, (because really–you can’t count the grade school assignment to make an ad) to confidently identifying and sorting evergreen content, and using a customer avatar to adequately target my ads. I even understand what “brand” means thanks to her. As soon as you stumble on something you don’t know, find a resource or a person to guide you.

I have also kept an open mind, and pursued any and all ideas that came to me, quickly choosing the best way to implement them so that I didn’t get bogged down in my perfectionism or fear. Further, I have a mental image of pouring concrete into the whack-a-mole game to stop negative thoughts. I have learned to ask myself the question, “What is going right?” multiple times a day, and let the positive reframe of that propel me forward.

I have so much joy because I jumped into the unknown and took the risk to bring what I saw in my imagination to life. I hope you do too!

Art Shaikh
Art Shaikh

Art Shaikh

The biggest challenge that I didn’t expect when I started CircleIt was the amount of investors that wanted to own part of the company. There are plenty of startup incubators out there that promise the world to new founders, but they don’t tell you that they want to take 10, 20, or 30% of the company in return. I worked two jobs and created my own seed money to avoid this problem, because eventually, the company wouldn’t have been mine. I think that’s the best advice I can give any new entrepreneurs

John Gardner
John Gardner

John Gardner

The biggest challenge is not finding leads, it’s converting them into paying customers and keeping them on. The problem with the fitness industry is not providing a great product or service, the biggest challenge is convincing your potential users, even though they already know how important fitness is for your health, to actually start heir fitness journey.

Tapping into a users brain and trying to change their habits while they already know what’s best for them and still come up with excuses of why not to exercise isnt an easy task. It takes a lot of pcychk analysis, studying human behavior and finding a mix of health benefits with other benefits that will resonate better with the consumer is a challenge.

We’ve come to realize that user-geenrated content is highly appreciated by potential consumers as it comes from someone who was in their exact position, understanding their struggles, fears and insecurities showing incredible results just by finally taking a step. User generated content has the ability to persuade consumers, trust in the service/product being provided and boost sales like no other.

Nandini Sharma
Nandini Sharma

Nandini Sharma

Entrepreneurs face a range of challenges at one time or the other. Things are tough when starting a business, but even when you have a well-established business, you can run into some unexpected obstacles.

As an entrepreneur, there are some challenges you are mentally prepared to face (shortage of resources, potential losses, failing to hot set sales goals, red-tapism, etc,), and then there are those issues that spring out of nowhere when you least expect them to.

These unexpected challenges make you think out of the box because you had not anticipated them in the first place.

For me, the biggest unexpected challenges came in the form of attracting the right talent, building a results-driven team of individuals, and then retaining your top performers.

Organizations across various industries make every effort in the book to hire the best people. It’s not easy to hire the right people when they are offered attractive incentives by other recruiters. And what makes the task even more challenging is that more people prefer to work for companies that offer them the flexibility of remote work.

I have personally conducted interviews with many candidates and found that they have as many questions as you have as an employer! You have to make them understand how they’ll benefit and grow by joining your organization not just professionally but personally too.

Once you have a dedicated bunch of people working for you, keeping them together is another great challenge that you have to tackle. When people with varied personalities, working styles, and cultural backgrounds work together, there are high chances of conflicting opinions and misunderstandings.

If you don’t control minor issues early on, these can quickly turn into major conflicts. So, I make sure that we regularly organize team-building activities, like team outings, games, and fun events. Such events help team members know each other well and understand others’ way of working.

Now, moving on to employee retention. Again, retaining your top performers is an uphill task as your competitors try to lure them with seemingly lucrative job offers. When your best performers leave, it does impact your business’ productivity and it can take some time to find the right replacement.

I regularly hold one-on-one conversations with the most talented lot of my organization to understand if they are facing any bothersome issues at work. This gives me an opportunity to find the cracks early on. I listen to their problems and if something needs to be fixed from the organization’s end (unrealistic deadlines, excessive work pressure, bad employee behavior), we resolve it soon.

This approach also helps our employees feel that their opinions, problems, and ideas are listened to carefully and acted upon, if required.

I hired the right people who worked tirelessly as a cohesive team to nurture a dwindling startup and turn it into a flourishing business. So, I try my level best to retain our best performers and I can brag that I have succeeded in it!

Greg Friedlander
Greg Friedlander

Greg Friedlander

One of the biggest unexpected challenges in business is, ironically, one that a lot of aspiring entrepreneurs create for themselves. They know they want to be a CEO, and they start there, identifying an industry that aligns with their expertise or passions, and launching a business.

Few, however, plan in advance for (rapid) growth. Not considering this possibility can lead to structural issues in the foundation of your business that will haunt you for years to come and hold you back in times that demand innovation.

The best way to avoid this problem is to plan ahead for all growth possibilities — slow, moderate, and rapid. When I first founded my business, I definitely didn’t fit the mold of a typical CEO — owning a business was never my plan. I have always been a very competitive person, and I saw a way to disrupt the talent booking industry.

By first focusing on people (our team and our clients) and then leveraging the power of technology (via the internet initially, then by building our own proprietary software that we use every day) we’ve been able to grow faster than many other companies in our market.

Two years into a pandemic that hit the event industry particularly hard, and amidst abysmal hiring and retention statistics, our company is breaking records, minimizing turnover and continuing to grow our team. All of these metrics speak to the power of building a scalable foundation based on disruptive ideas.

Chris Gadek
Chris Gadek

Chris Gadek

We were struggling to grow our business past a certain point. We found that we had plateaued and needed an extra boost to build greater brand awareness, so we turned to digital marketing. However, digital marketing can be a fickle friend as it’s challenging to find consistency in the results.

Some months we’ll perform really well and others we won’t. While digital marketing is now a critical part of our overall marketing strategy, we primarily focus on SEO. And working with a digital marketing agency helps increase the number of backlinks to our website. Whether through articles, guest posts, or digital PR, strategic link building creates a network of websites connected to your home, blog, and inner pages.

Having lots of other sites linking to yours builds awareness and authority for your brand, which boosts consumer trust in your business. Backlinks also drive more visitors to your website, leading to greater conversions. While digital marketing agency fees can be pricey, the return on investment is worth it.

Henry Bell
Henry Bell

Henry Bell

Though it’s hard to imagine, founders of a startup, the very individuals who worked tirelessly to turn their vision into a company may be adding to its difficulties. Despite their best efforts, the company’s founders will not be able to do everything on their own.

And even if they could, it’s not something that should be allowed to go place. It’s more than simply a matter of time, it’s a matter of expertise. Good leaders are aware of the limits of their own knowledge and abilities.

A great developer, for example, does not always mean a terrific salesperson, or even a great financial manager or an expert in human resources management. Avoid assuming you can do it all on your own as a startup entrepreneur. Distribute the effort and the responsibility for big choices rather than keeping them entirely to oneself. Fill up your knowledge gaps by hiring other CEOs and listening to what they’ve got to tell.

Gerrid Smith
Gerrid Smith

Gerrid Smith

The absence of guidance

In order to take your product to the next level, it may be that you lack the appropriate advice, market experience, and/or expertise to do so. In order to cross such obstacles, you’ll need a mentor, someone who has the experience and confidence to guide you.

One of the most helpful things you can have when making big decisions is someone to bounce ideas off of who has been there and done that. As a result, not all students will have mentors. Find inspiration from inspiring entrepreneurs you respect via books, articles, or podcasts if you don’t have the opportunity to meet them face-to-face. Focus on expanding your professional network while you’re at it.

It’ll come in handy later on. As soon as you reach the top, use your own hard-earned expertise to help others in need. We’d love to hear about your startup experience now that we’ve disclosed some of our biggest hurdles. Is there anything in particular that you’ve had to overcome as a new company? What were your methods for dealing with them? Please let us know in the comments section.

Laura Schaack
Laura Schaack

Laura Schaack

One of the greatest challenges in starting Tattd was hiring and managing my first employees. I’d managed teams before but it’s so different when you’re hiring the first or second employee that’s having to help you build from the ground up.

It’s such a delicate balance to find someone that not only has a great skill set but also has the commitment and endurance to push through the rockiest of times. When you’re hiring, absolutely prioritize that quality over anything else that an employee brings to the table, otherwise you’ll have to be dealing with turnover during the most important, high-stakes time of your company’s growth.

Mark Daoust
Mark Daoust

Mark Daoust

The biggest unexpected challenge we have faced is tackling our administration needs. Our business is fully remote with employees all over the world, and bookkeeping, keeping track of costs, purchases and sales are necessary and unexpectedly time-consuming.

Adequate bookkeeping is vital to keep the cash flowing. We now have a payroll service that helps take care of our needs, and we have been on top of adopting new technology, which helps us focus on time with our clients rather than administrative tasks.

Gregg Cantor
Gregg Cantor

Gregg Cantor

We are a design – build construction and remodeling firm in San Diego California. Our projects have always been contracted at a fixed cost with our customers who are homeowners.

The greatest unexpected change we faced in our business is the supply chain issue that caused shortages, major shipping delays and huge price increases. At the same time, the municipalities who issue building permits become backlogged causing the process twice as long.

We had to pivot quickly by securing labor and materials much earlier, even before we have permits, to minimize the additional cost to our customers. This type of business challenge is impossible to anticipate. As a new entrepreneur, I recommend having regular communication with your customers and being transparent. It makes all the difference in the world!

Vimal Patel
Vimal Patel

Vimal Patel

The greatest challenge we faced was with the lender – post covid with a CMBS loan, you are still obligated to pay a monthly mortgage and there is no person like a local bank manager that you can talk to, and explain your situation – so we defaulted and we came in real danger of losing our asset, our hotel. In this kind of scenario the owners have to ensure they have enough line of credit or loan available – whether there is a natural disaster or covid, you have to be able to self sustain and meet your obligations – so either don’t do it – don’t go with a CMBS loan or make sure that you have enough reserves at your disposal.

Admir Salcinovic
Admir Salcinovic

Admir Salcinovic

Due to the pandemic, there’s been a shift in focus to essential products. Over the last couple of years, a lot more people discovered how well they enjoyed staying at home while executing DIY home improvement projects which skyrocketed across world.

This shift in focus led to increasing prices of products. More people are now cooking in their homes, spending less on luxury, and spending vacations around their community. The question is “What if you don’t sell essential products? “. It is important for your sales team to identify ways to approach customers and convince them of the necessity of the products you offer. Creating Buyer Personas and understanding their psychology takes priority today, more than ever.

A lot of customers express increased comfort with technology today, compared to the pre-pandemic period. As remote work policies are implemented across numerous industries and workplaces, a lot of people work from home using technological devices like laptops and desktop systems.

They’re savvier about the significant number of identity theft attempts and expect your brand to make security and compliance a priority, protecting their precious information. Embrace new technologies as they arrive and invest in the ones most likely to benefit your users. Look for ways to make the sales funnel run more efficiently for your users.

Employee churn is always a problem for companies. You spend money, time, and effort recruiting and training the best staff you can find. You pour resources into making sure they have the latest skills in your industry. Unfortunately, they often choose to leave for better prospects.

You may not be able to compete with the salaries of the large corporations, but you can offer perks they can’t, such as a family-like company culture, remote work options, and causes they can get behind. Talk to your workers about the things they’d like to see implemented and start the programs you’re able to offer. The more your staff loves their jobs, the more likely they are to stay and not bounce to a competitor.

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The post 20 USA Business Experts Talk About The Unexpected Challenges In Business World first appeared on Tekrati and is written by Jed Morley

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How Businesses Reacted and Adapted To The Covid -19 Pandemic https://www.tekrati.com/business-challenges-during-covid-19-pandemic/ Fri, 18 Mar 2022 11:09:14 +0000 https://www.tekrati.com/?p=25461 How Businesses Reacted and Adapted To The Covid -19 Pandemic

How Businesses Reacted and Adapted To The Covid -19 Pandemic

It’s exhilarating to start and run your own company, but it’s also difficult. Unexpected challenges will inevitably arise, even with the finest available coaching and preparedness. What matters is how you respond to the unexpected difficulty.  In this interview series, we spoke with 20 business owners and CEOs from various companies in the United States on [...]

The post How Businesses Reacted and Adapted To The Covid -19 Pandemic first appeared on Tekrati and is written by Jed Morley

]]>
How Businesses Reacted and Adapted To The Covid -19 Pandemic

How Businesses Reacted and Adapted To The Covid -19 Pandemic

It’s exhilarating to start and run your own company, but it’s also difficult. Unexpected challenges will inevitably arise, even with the finest available coaching and preparedness. What matters is how you respond to the unexpected difficulty.  In this interview series, we spoke with 20 business owners and CEOs from various companies in the United States on how they handled challenges during the Covid -19 Pandemic.

INTERVIEW HOST

The host of this interview was Jed Morley. Jed Morley is the CEO of a leading payment processing service provider called PlatPay.


Jed Morley

Table of Contents

The question we asked:

The pandemic encouraged many businesses to pivot and adapt to changing market conditions. How did you adapt? Did you introduce additional product lines or services?

Renee Bauer
Renee Bauer

Renee Bauer

Tasks have a funny way of stealing your time. When you stop focusing on how to scale your business and only focus on tasks, the growth of your business halts abruptly. Make sure your schedule has plenty of time to work ON the business and not just IN the business.

Paige Arnof-Fenn
Paige Arnof-Fenn

Paige Arnof-Fenn

My biggest challenge was that the people you start with are not always the ones who grow with you. The hardest lesson I learned when I started my company is not getting rid of weak people earlier than I did in the first few years of my business. I spent more time managing them than finding new customers.

I knew in my gut they were not up to snuff but out of loyalty to them I let them hang around much longer than they should have. It would have been better for everyone to let them go as soon as the signs were there. They became more insecure and threatened as we grew which was not productive for the team.

As soon as I let them go the culture got stronger and the bar higher. “A” team people like to be surrounded by other stars. It is true that you should hire slowly and fire quickly. I did not make that mistake again later on so learned it well the first time. I wish I had known it even earlier though but lesson learned for sure! Another key challenge has been about the importance of focus.

There is so much noise out there with social media, 24/7 news, climate change, etc. that for my clients and me staying focused with all the distractions we are bombarded with on a daily basis can be tough. So my top tip is to learn to give yourself permission to say no.

Whether it means passing on joining another committee, delegating to someone on your team to attend the event, sleeping in (no to an alarm clock), meditating, taking a walk, or just turning off my phone and computer (no I will respond later on my own schedule), simple acts of letting myself focus, relax and be present in the moment are the very best gifts I can give myself as an entrepreneur.

Like most small business owners and entrepreneurs there are never enough hours in the day to fit everything in so when something has to give it is usually time I have allocated for myself to think, exercise, read or just relax. What I have come to appreciate and realize in my 50s is that “me time” is not a luxury or pampering like it was in my youth, now it is maintenance! To improve productivity in my experience when you focus and do less you can get more done.

Emily Lawson
Emily Lawson

Emily Lawson

When growing a small business, things rarely go exactly as planned. Within the first few years of the company, we were still understanding the market we were in and figuring out how to produce consistent product. And then all at once, I lost three of my key team members (at that time we were more like a family), and the blow of their departure felt personal.

They all worked on the production of the product and were looking for other opportunities in life, which they all found within a month of each other. This left a gaping hole in the most important role in my company, the production of the product by hands that truly cared what they were producing and that I trusted beyond measure to produce our product. So, I adapted. I rehired and reworked our systems for an entirely new team, brought everything back to basics and got back into the kitchen. The result has put us where we are today.

It was a gift that they moved on and, in the end, we created a new system where people could thrive in their positions, and I made shifts that we didn’t even know we needed to make. These things happen often in growing a small business. All these common issues are things that we deal with and have learned to meet head on. I always have a plan B and have never wanted to give up.

Gary Kohn
Gary Kohn

Gary Kohn

The greatest challenge will always be getting past your own self-created boundaries. No matter how head strong the entrepreneur, there will often be moments of self-doubt, uncertainty and moments where you want to run in the other direction.

The solution is to keep pushing forward, even if it’s just for a small amount of time daily. Over those months and eventually years, the hard work and resilience becomes cemented and helps you get past the times that are extremely challenging. The well-formed habit of working daily on your dreams is hard to break, and will get you through the biggest challenges.

Ewen Finser
Ewen Finser

Ewen Finser

Challenge:

Having a Robust Business Process Documentation If you think documentation has an insignificant role in your business, think again. It is one of the most critical parts that every entrepreneur should focus on, especially when kick-starting any venture.

The documentation process is the structural backbone of any business. Due to the divergent workflow of your business (especially going online, being in a remote work environment, or adopting a hybrid model), your internal operation may be prone to inconsistencies, confusion, and unproductive staff if proper documentation procedures are ignored.

Most especially, when someone tenured or knowledgeable in the team leaves, no one knows what’s going on or how to move forward because there’s no black-and-white procedure to guide everyone.

Also, you will undergo a constant trial and error phase in starting your business. Thus, it requires a robust document-centric process to define what works and what doesn’t.

How to Overcome it:

Prioritize Creating a Standard Operation Procedure (SOP) I know this is an arduous process and painful process. But writing and paying attention to your processes will allow you to map your business process and growth. A straightforward way is to write everything down while you do tasks (or you can record it through video). Outline every process from start to finish. This will allow you to streamline your process, make more informed decisions and reduce errors in the long run.

Ian Sells
Ian Sells

Ian Sells

There was a time when I was still managing my first Amazon brand, that I would launch a product and it would fly and get sold out within hours. The thing with eCommerce is that it grows very fast. In my first Amazon brand, I was astounded with how fast the sales were going.

This success has caused me to be impulsive and expand my brand too fast. I impulsively made the decision to launch a lot of products at once. The thing was, I didn’t have systems in place to keep up with the growth my hasty actions has caused. You may say that it is a good problem. But it would not be a problem if I only planned well and followed a gradual process.

I didn’t have the capital to keep up with the sudden surge of order volume nor the manpower to handle the influx of orders. Basically, I didn’t have systems in place and can’t keep up with the growth. At the time, I was a one-man company. Lesson learned: Scaling your brand sinvolves planning and preparation. Don’t scale just cause the market is good. Scale up when you have enough cash, have the capacity to leverage hard and have the systems in place.

Sardor Umrdinov
Sardor Umrdinov

Sardor Umrdinov

I always associate my business with chess. Everything, like in chess, must be carefully considered from all angles before making a move. It’s impossible to predict every action with 100% certainty.

However, the beauty of this game is that it can be played by anyone because there are no predetermined goals or rules. I believe that if you always go with the flow, you will lose interest in being an entrepreneur. As a result, I enjoy taking risks because it keeps me on my toes and ready for any challenge that comes my way.

I took one of the biggest risks in 2016 for Home Alliance. I decided to design and develop our own software. We sought the help of Ukrainian developers because dealing with this process on our own would be impractical. We created our CRM system, and our profit margins increased by 15%.

However, by growing so fast, we couldn’t keep up. In 2017, the gross revenue growth slowed down. I didn’t make many projections. We had no process in place. It was me managing most of the things myself. There wasn’t enough coaching and accountability. We started becoming the limits to the growth of our organization.

When a company’s revenue reaches $10 million to $15 million, I’m sure it has a crisis. If you don’t adjust, the organization can die or get stuck. Then I learned to trust my people and let go of control. I started delegating and my team learned to delegate to their teams. This was our first step in developing accountability and structure. It’s more dependable. Rather than focusing on people, we’re focusing on roles and functions in the organization.

Every mistake is a chance to learn something new. When you fail, be kind to yourself. Analyzing yourself now will help you avoid repeating unpleasant situations in the future. Put your faith in your employees and team to take care of the most critical aspects of your business. Your company’s systems, corporate culture, and mission are the lifeblood of your company, and they will change regularly.

You will always maintain control and direct the direction in which the business grows based on how you handle these changes. I have learned to practice detachment as one of the most effective ways to manage change in my business and build trust with my employees.

Emily Martin
Emily Martin

Emily Martin

Too many tools…..as a first-time entrepreneur, I feel like it’s hard to decide what tools to use for which purpose. While I don’t know things about legal contracts and business operation, there are 15+ different platforms to decide to use for contracting and even then you don’t know what it means.

There are 15 different accounting tools but not all of them connect to the same banks. Also, there are HR management and payroll platforms but not for all types of employees.

It feels like when creating and growing your business you choose a tool that is good for now but then, it adds 10 other tools for other specific use cases. I wish there was just 1 tool – a business-use platform…. where accounting, payroll, contracts, etc. All were in 1 place. My advice is to find a founder with a similar business model to you and follow their tech stack and business setup.

Try to leverage other founders who have already done it and understood the benefits of the software they chose.

Alex Lefkowitz
Alex Lefkowitz

Alex Lefkowitz

I’m Alex from Tasty Edits, a video editing company for content creators. I founded Tasty Edits in 2020 as a solo entrepreneur, and bootstrapped it to a team of 10 that has become the best video editing service on Google (in terms of organic traffic.) My answer is about managing crises and what to do when they occur. ———- Being an entrepreneur is hard, especially if you’re a solo founder, because the onus of finding a solution when something goes wrong is solely on you.

When you’re starting your business, solving a crisis doesn’t seem like a big deal because you have very few processes in place, thus, only a limited number of things can go wrong at any given time. As you build your business, however, the number of potential crises increases commensurate with the number of processes you create and the complexity of your workflow / supply chain.

I made the mistake of thinking that once something is done — in other words, a system is built or a process is created — it’ll work perfectly in perpetuity. Unfortunately, that’s not the case. At one point in late 2021 I found myself overwhelmed by multiple crises occurring all at once, causing me an insane amount of stress, needing to work non-stop for weeks straight, and ultimately questioning if I should give up on the business.

To make a long story short, I spent several weeks building a video order workflow and quality assurance system. The goal of which was to make sure we’re producing the highest quality edits to reduce churn. Shortly afterwards, I started working on building our own custom project management software, dubbed our Video Order Management Application or “VOMA”, for short.

Everything was advancing about as well as I could have expected until, simply put, it wasn’t. Seemingly all at once, several of our editors suffered personal emergencies, our quality assurance workflow brokedown resulting in angry clients, and software compatibility issues wreaked havoc on VOMA. Handling the stress of it all at once was too much to bear, and I vividly recall leaning against the shower wall with warm water running down my face thinking, “maybe I should quit.”

Luckily I didn’t. Through sheer perseverance I put my nose to the grindstone and worked non-stop for weeks until everything was resolved. Everything turned out ok in the end, but it was honestly very traumatic. My advice to new entrepreneurs who want to avoid a similar situation is to be prepared before things go wrong. In other words, actively expect that things will break (even if they’re working perfectly right now) and put a plan in place to fix them if they do.

That might mean setting up an alternative workflow system that you can easily switch to if your current one breaks, or having employees on call in case you need them. Another tip is to not build too fast, especially if you’re a solo founder. You’ll find that most problems present themselves within a week or two, so wait for them to pop up before starting the next item on your roadmap. Alternatively, find a cofounder who can help you shoulder the burden when something goes wrong.

Lastly, I’ll say that money can solve many of the problems you’ll face when something goes wrong, so consider searching for angel investors or pitching VCs. Tasty Edits is, for better or for worse, fully bootstrapped so this was never an option for me — you need to have the money ready before crises occur. In other words, don’t search for an umbrella during a tempest.

Michaela Vybohova
Michaela Vybohova

Michaela Vybohova

When I was starting my brand I had an idea how the industry works seeing it from the other side working as a model for other designers but boy was I wrong.

The greatest challenge I’ve had is how to get established and find distribution without a budget, i bootstrapped my business without any funding, I think that’s were most people struggle and are scared to even start a brand of their own.

Best way to overcome it is to start small, meaning that don’t go into major production ordering thousands of units and then sit on inventory.

If you are new, take baby steps, don’t do something that will bankrupt you if it doesn’t work out, ideally invest maximum 30% of your savings at the begging and whatever your returns are, invest it back into the company, it will take time but there’s a room for everyone and I believe you can make it if you play it smart.

Cody Miles
Cody Miles

Cody Miles

No one ever said running a business would be easy. As an entrepreneur, you’re always being surprised with new and unexpected challenges, what determines your success is how you handle them.

I started Ashore, an online proofing and approval software, with one goal: to make collaboration accessible to everyone. Today, our app is used by creatives worldwide, including the creative teams at Disney, Adidas, Uber, and Coca-Cola, but it took a lot of work to get to this point.

The biggest challenge we faced, hands-down, was funding. We bootstrapped Ashore, and without big investors, we had to rely entirely on our product to bring in capital. We couldn’t afford much. So, instead of employing massive marketing efforts, we focused on building relationships, and instead of hiring professionals with years of experience, we found people with hidden talent.

Eventually, we were able to overcome this challenge. To start, we focused on our sales and development velocity, as the amount of time it takes to gain a customer or to develop new features is a huge determinant of your trajectory. This helped us keep money coming in the door, which was vital to our long-term efforts.

For other companies facing funding challenges, I’d recommend doing the same. Focus on your sales and development velocity, make sure you have money coming in, and don’t lose sight of your long-term goals.

Rany Burstein
Rany Burstein

Rany Burstein

Our biggest early-on problem was a technical one. We started Diggz, our roommate finder web app, with a MVP version that worked great and quite fast. As we grew and acquired more users, our app slowed down and the user experience was quite bad.

At one point, our roommate search section took longer than 10 seconds to load. Our MVP wasn’t built for scale and we didn’t plan for it initially. To solve this problem, we sought guidance from several technical growth experts (who actually helped us voluntarily).

They advised us about what technologies to implement to speed things up and how to redesign our algorithm and database to work in a more efficient manner. We implemented multiple of the proposed solutions and that got our roommate search to load in less than two seconds. Major improvement.

This problem challenged us not to think only on how to make our app work today, but build it for scale and for continued growth. This lesson had an impact on any new feature we released since and we continueosly work to improve our user experience even when it seems it works well at the present.

While you don’t want to spend time and money building the perfect platform or app with all the bells and features from day one. You still want to keep your eyes on the road ahead, and not end up paying for “technical debt” later. Build things simple, but make sure you have a plan for scale, whether it’s your code, infrastructure or even team.

Mark Aselstine
Mark Aselstine

Mark Aselstine

Without a doubt, it’s government regulation and enforcement, especially when both of those things change consistently!

When we opened our wine club, we saw a number of court cases moving through the system, all of which seemed to suggest that more states would be open to more types of shipping of alcohol. That happened, but only for wineries and not for retail.

How can you overcome it? While government regulation is always going to change, especially after elections, there are almost always work arounds. Even in alcohol sales, which we’ve been arguing about in this country for over a century now, there are work arounds.

Sam Cohen
Sam Cohen

Sam Cohen

The biggest challenge I faced in recent years was finding suitable candidates for vacant positions after the Great Resignation. A lot of employees quit their jobs which left me in dire need to hire new people.

However, it was not as easy as I thought it would be. The applicants that were applying didn’t have the experience or the skills to fill in the role. So, I took a different route after constant failure to find what I had been looking for in potential hires.

I automated my accounts by using bookkeeping software’s like Zoho and QuickBooks. It took some burden off my shoulders, as I wasn’t manually doing the finances on my own. Therefore, I advise every young entrepreneur to automate any process they believe is demanding too much of their time and energy. This helps you to focus on what’s more important in the growth and stability of your business.

Michael Dean
Michael Dean

Michael Dean

The most unexpected challenge of running a business was how much goes into maintaining an online presence. If you are a business leader and you are not investing in your online presence, then you are missing out on endless opportunities for growth and longevity.

Consumers are spending more time on their devices than ever, so optimizing your business’ website and marketing for the digital landscape is crucial. When I first started my business, I underestimated the importance of social media and SEO, but now it is a top priority, as those are two major factors in securing my business’ audience and brand.

Having a good online presence includes unique social media content, an accessible website and consistent communication with your audience. All of these factors have the ability to set your business apart from your competitors, but it is up to you to invest the time and money.

Regan Ervin
Regan Ervin

Regan Ervin

Snippet:

I started my business on an ethical premise. The problem was that I needed excellent, agency-caliber storytelling to develop the concept and make it viable, yet I’d left behind my job to do the right thing (a financially risky choice). My now-partner and I began an unconventional creative partnership to help me accomplish all this, and it worked out for us.

Detailed Story:

Three years ago I started Capital E Advisors, a wealth management firm in the Kansas City area. Leaving an established firm to start my own business was a Jerry-McGuire-kind-of-moment for me. I had quit my job because I believed a large swath of the financial services industry had gotten some fundamental things wrong, and I was embarking to get it right.

I had a big vision, and knew the unique advantages I planned to offer our potential clients were compelling ones. The challenge I faced was communicating my business’ messages in a simple, effective way—and doing so without hiring a big agency with an even bigger price tag.

The answer to my problem was simple, strategic storytelling. I formed a partnership with a local creative director, Stephanie Klein, who used a combination of her academic background in fiction-writing and the StoryBrand marketing method to tell my story. Eight months after launching the new brand, we’ve been able to gain 250+ followers on both LinkedIn and Facebook, 100+ on Instagram, and high-relevance engagement on our Twitter.

We’re also very pleased with our client acquisition rate since then. Attached to this email is a simple case study with audience data and financial results included.

We credit our success to four distinct solutions. The first solution was a brand messaging guide with story-driven messages. The second solution was implementing those meaningfully and strategically. We implemented these messages on a new website, social channels, and a short video series. Implementing our guide also included a visual rebrand to match the messages we’d written.

The third solution —which powered the first two—was an unconventional, small-business-to-small-business partnership. Solution four was simple, but can’t be overlooked. We had a business model that was worth taking a bet on.

Solution Number One: Our Brand Messaging Guide

The brand messaging document was intended to make sure our marketing copy was purposeful and succinct (and it’s done just that). Creating powerful messages required a deep dive into the brand’s history and motives. Stephanie was emphatic that we were thorough with this part, reminding us that the story has to be deeply true for story-centric marketing to work.

We spent several days in interviews, ending the research with beers at a local brewery. Stephanie recorded the conversations, journalist-style, just like she had been doing all week. During that conversation, the four of us who were involved in the interviews collectively hit the answer we’d been looking for. A couple weeks later, she called me, saying she’d finished the first draft. It needed more work, as she’d indicated it would, but the feeling I got even at that early stage was that we were
telling our client’s story. And, by extension, our own.

The above order of the characters in our story is particularly significant. We know now that the most captivating stories for customers place them in the main characters’ role and help them imagine a successful journey with a brand. We found it to be crucial that potential consumers see one of our messages and feel immediately seen. This messaging step set us up well because we had a central checkpoint for our marketing strategy, something to make sure whatever we were writing aligned in all the ways we decided were important at the onset.

Solution Number Two: Implementing the Messages

We took on a massive amount of work to implement our messages. Maybe even more than we needed to. But it ended up being more fun than tedious. We built a website with the help of a local developer, spent a couple of days shooting the videos (and many weeks editing them). Once the brand was ready, we established social media objectives and channels to meet those objectives. The process took months, with a launch date almost a year later.

Stephanie shares her perspective of this stage here:

One of the coolest moments we had was after the brand was launched and we started running a social paid campaign. We’d been pretty thorough in our audience research, and we noticed that there were some big gaps in the potential audience and the current audience being targeted by other firms.

  • We identified that millennial men of all ethnic and racial backgrounds, and women 35 and up, would be interested in the transparent promises of our brand, and we believed that there was data out there that proved this interest would turn into leads.
  • After we launched the first brand awareness campaign, our click spend was incredibly low—and we discovered that 60 percent of our audience was women in the targeted age bracket.
  • Finally, we noticed that the men who engaged with us were from a far more diverse age and race demographic than other firms were experiencing.

Solution Number Three: Building a Partnership

Like most new business owners, I needed to find a way to market my business without adding more financial risk than was fiscally prudent. A partnership was the solution, and we both had to take risks
to form one.

As I mentioned earlier, my big vision was difficult to convey. I was inspired, but I needed help captivating and inspiring others. I’m merely an entrepreneur with an idea, and I needed a creative with vision of her own to take this idea and mold it into a tale that can have an impact.

Finding the partner I needed required me to take a risk. Agency costs for the kind of project we completed are intended for corporations, and even small-scale collaborations with creative consultants (like the one I opted for with Stephanie) can eat profits in those early days. In my case though, the story and the business were so dependent on each other that I couldn’t see myself waiting to work on the brand.

I haven’t heard of a financial firm with a creative partner before, but doing it this way meant both of us could experience exceptional results. We feel great about the success we’ve found in this joint venture.

Stephanie’s perspective:

When we started negotiating, we chose to be transparent about our mutual business goals. If we hadn’t started this way, I don’t know if it would have worked in the long run. We ended up reaching an agreement that included profit-based compensation for me, and ownership of certain business assets at a second growth stage. It was a risk for both of us. There was risk for me because there was a lot of commitment involved up front, and for Regan, he was giving up a significant share of future earnings if we were successful.

I think the reason why this arrangement worked is because we both really believed in this idea. Regan was willing to take me on based on my passion for his story. He chose to overlook the fact that my corporate acumen was different than partners he may have envisioned having when he made the leap—he was a former COO at a successful investment firm; I was a former English instructor finishing an MFA degree.

When we met, I was wearing a teacher’s blouse and cardigan, and probably came off as a little reserved. I was definitely the unconventional choice, and it would have been easy to dismiss me as “not a good fit”. But he prioritized risk differently, and we’ve both benefited from it.

Solution Number Four: A Business Idea Worth Betting On

When I launched Capital E, I had a big vision to genuinely help clients simplify their financial lives without sacrificing investment quality. I believed there was a better way to serve clients and I was eager to put this into practice. Under a standard fee structure, I aimed to deliver a robust, holistic client experience inclusive of estate planning, tax preparation, financial planning and unique investment management that prioritized value-added activities.

I knew how improved the results would be compared to traditional RIA outcomes, even from good firms. Stephanie had to have her own discovery of my idea. Her’s came from an outside perspective of what I was offering (one that was more similar to what my clients might have). But the important part was that, looking at it from either end of the idea, the business was a solid concept.

Stephanie’s take:

One of the things I like best about telling stories is this possibility on the horizon that I might discover someone with a really great story. I didn’t know when I met Regan that I’d get that feeling of epiphany. But during our early days of what we marketing professionals call “brand discovery”, I started to realize he had that indescribable thing I am always hoping to find when I met with a new client.

We connected over the logic (and yes, it was logic) of why he’d quit his incredible c-suite job at a respected firm to rally a small slew of clients under a different premise. As Regan described to me the systemic problem he noticed —across the investment industry—I realized he was pitching something brave. Smart. And in an industry nearly void of empathy—his whole idea was particularly empathetic.

In the investing industry, most clients hire their advisor to manage their money. Therefore, the advisor needs these clients to believe they are good investment managers. But studies repeatedly indicate the vast majority of investment managers underperform their benchmarks. Regan had data to show how he’d corrected this aspect, but the corrections he’d made for investment performance were only part of his overall plan.

He explained that the over-focus on investment decisions distracts from the aspects of wealth management in which advisors have a greater impact on their clients’ well-being. Regan reprioritizes the allocation of resources to those items he can control.

Truly knowing each client as a person allows him to identify the matters that are a source of financial anxiety and complication. Consulting with clients on financial matters that are important to them, keeping clients organized and on task, helping clients optimize their financial decision making, facilitating the completion of estate planning and tax preparation by professionals –these are the things an advisor can do to add value. After all, isn’t the experience of wealth the whole point?

This realization was my moment of epiphany. I thought of luxury brands I’d worked on and how honesty and adding holistic value was high on the “needs” list of Regan’s high-net-worth client demographic. I also thought of big brands who successfully told their disruptor stories and changed their industries.

For me as a storyteller, a disruptive brand with a big heart is one heck of an exciting find, especially since I could also see how the business could scale. The story and the scaleability combined gave me the courage to jump in with both feet.

John DiBella 
John DiBella

John DiBella

The greatest challenge that my business has ever faced and had to overcome was the sudden demand for our services when the pandemic hurt. All of a sudden, everyone was working from home, launching their own online businesses, and looking for any edge that they could utilize to increase their profit margins.

And it felt like they all decided at exactly the same time that the one thing they really needed if they were going to be the best at what they were doing was SEO optimization. The sudden influx of business meant that we went from working eight-hour days to twelve-hour days, and we’re still locked into the same pattern, and it doesn’t look like anything is going to change anytime soon.

The greatest challenge my business ever faced is the one that it’s still facing, and that’s the incredibly enviable position of having more work than we can comfortably handle. It is a challenge, but someone has to rise to face it head-on, and that someone may as well be me.

Tequila Cousa
Tequila Cousa

Tequila Cousar

The greatest and unexpected challenge that I have come against as entrepreneur in business was creating content on a consistent basis that converts. Warming: in the beginning you will be fired up and may be finding customers or clients, but you need to create a long-term strategy for growth.

The best thing you can do now is to start creating content that converts. How? There are 3 fundamentals of creating content that converts into 1-3 clients.

The 3 keys are: results, pain points, and invitation to work with you. It really is that simple. You want to highlight the results in the headline of your content. Touch on the pain point of what they may be struggling with to receive results. Invite them to engage on your post or reach out to you.

Jim Rennert
Jim Rennert

Jim Rennert

There are so many challenges when you go to work for yourself. First and foremost, as an artist, you not only have to create the work, but you also have to find those who are interested enough to purchase it.

While most artists can create, not all artists can sell. And without sales, you can’t continue to create the work. So it’s important to find a gallery and build a loyal collector base so you have those consistent sales to continue creating more work.

In addition to that, the financial aspect is huge for most artists and was a challenge when I wanted to become an artist full time.

Typically, when a piece of artwork is sold, there are three people that get paid – the gallery that makes the sale, the foundry that produced it, and the artist that created it. Back in those days, the breakdown of payment was 1/3 for each of these people. Now, if a piece of my work sold for $3,000, the gallery would make $1,000, the foundry would make $1,000 and I would make $1,000.

The problem was, I then had to pay the foundry another $1,000 to make the next piece, so I couldn’t figure out how I was supposed to make any money. So, I had a decision to make. I could either open a gallery to receive 2/3 of that payment, or I could learn the casting process and receive 2/3 of the payment.

When opening up a gallery, you need a brick and mortar, a lease, employees and other aspects I didn’t want to take on. I’m a worker, and have always been a worker, so I knew I would be able to figure out the casting process. And that’s what I did. Learning the process allowed me to create my own work, have the independence to cast it myself and make my money go twice as far. To this day I still cast my own work and haven’t looked back.

My advice to everyone is to believe in yourself and keep going. It can be tough at times, but if it’s something you truly enjoy, go for it. And most importantly, don’t let those who can’t do what you can do determine your future.

Howard Birnbaum
Howard Birnbaum

Howard Birnbaum

Uncertainty is one of the biggest challenges that my business faced during the pandemic. Uncertainty in business can arise at any time, sometimes because of the global debt or sometimes due to the economic crisis. Due to uncertainty, many businesses tend to shy away from long-term planning and so did I.

A failure to plan your next 5-10 years can destroy the value of your business. Always plan for more reactive long term policies.

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The post How Businesses Reacted and Adapted To The Covid -19 Pandemic first appeared on Tekrati and is written by Jed Morley

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Entrepreneurs Discuss the Top Unexpected Business Challenges They Have Faced https://www.tekrati.com/unexpected-business-challenges-during-the-pandemic/ Fri, 18 Mar 2022 10:43:24 +0000 https://www.tekrati.com/?p=25433 Entrepreneurs Discuss the Top Unexpected Business Challenges They Have Faced

Entrepreneurs Discuss the Top Unexpected Business Challenges They Have Faced

Many firms were prompted to pivot and adapt to changing market conditions as a result of the pandemic. We spoke with a number of business owners in the United States to learn how some of the country’s most successful entrepreneurs altered their firms and added new product lines or services. INTERVIEW HOST   The host [...]

The post Entrepreneurs Discuss the Top Unexpected Business Challenges They Have Faced first appeared on Tekrati and is written by Jed Morley

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Entrepreneurs Discuss the Top Unexpected Business Challenges They Have Faced

Entrepreneurs Discuss the Top Unexpected Business Challenges They Have Faced

Many firms were prompted to pivot and adapt to changing market conditions as a result of the pandemic. We spoke with a number of business owners in the United States to learn how some of the country’s most successful entrepreneurs altered their firms and added new product lines or services.

INTERVIEW HOST

The host of this interview was Jed Morley. Jed Morley is the CEO of a leading payment processing service provider called PlatPay.


Jed Morley

Table of Contents

The question we asked:

What is the greatest, unexpected challenge you faced with your business, that you’d like to warn new entrepreneurs about? Please share your advice on how to overcome it.?

Wiliam Scott Goldman
Wiliam Scott Goldman

Wiliam Scott Goldman

Having pioneered the field of Branding Law and working primarily with startups/entrepreneurs for the past thirty years, here are three very common but easily avoidable mistakes:

1. Using a brand name with the mistaken belief that filing as a corp. or LLC with the Secretary of State confers trademark protection.

2. Applying for a trademark and/or using a brand name without properly clearing it first with a thorough database search, including all possible variations, checking for similarities in sound, appearance and meaning.

3. Choosing a trademark that’s generic or descriptive rather than coined, arbitrary or even suggestive as generic marks are unregistrable and descriptive marks are considered ‘weak’ and difficult to enforce. BONUS: Mistakenly believing that hiring an independent contractor confers copyright ownership as a work made for hire.

Instead, the contractor automatically owns copyright unless otherwise assigned by written agreement. 

Chris Kille
Chris Kille

Chris Kille

The greatest unexpected challenges I have faced in my businesses over the years have always been people-related. Daily challenges will occur in day-to-day operations, and usually, those can be anticipated and corrected without much damage.

Employees and talent, however, are a completely different story. Employees can be like the ocean: ever-changing, unpredictable, and even hostile at times. On the other hand, they can also be gentle, warm, and calming. Both perspectives can change without notice.

The past 2 years have been extremely challenging because of what has been going on in the world. People have been laid off and started their own hustle. Some have decided they do not want to go back to work altogether. Some have risen to the top and made the best out of a bad situation.

Now that things appear to be calming down, there are another set of challenges. Who’s coming back? Do we need as big of an office as before? Can people continue to work from home indefinitely? These challenges can be frustrating, but are also some of the most rewarding because building and maintaining a business is one of the most satisfying experiences an entrepreneur can have.

Chris Kille is the Founder and CEO of Payment Pilot- a financial technology company, and Elevate Outsourcing- a global outsourcing agency. He has been an entrepreneur since 2005 and has built and sold multiple businesses for a profit. He currently resides in Charlotte, NC with his wife, Kristen, and their 3 dogs.

Leandro Sandmann
Leandro Sandmann

Leandro Sandmann

The most unexpected challenge we faced was scaling quickly enough to meet the demand. Since ExitLag was originally created for ourselves and a few friends, we were not prepared for a lot of users to be using the software but word quickly spread and more and more people were interested in signing up for the software.

From payment approval to granting access to the software, everything was done manually. One day, there were suddenly hundreds of clients waiting for their payments to be processed and their accesses to be granted.

I had to spend the entire day grating access to the new clients and processing their payments manually. I learned that business can grow a lot quicker than you anticipate and you need to be ready for that growth.

Christina Russo
Christina Russo

Christina Russo

Too Much Content – The Right People For The Right Job When my friend Cassie and I started our business, we thought it would be a humble little site that maybe twenty or so thousand people visited a month and we never expected it to grow into the behemoth that it has.

Instead of twenty thousand visitors, our business now attracts more than three million, and as the site grew faster and faster, we had to research and create more and more content, and before we knew it, we were overwhelmed and had to face the truth.

If we were going to stay in business and satiate the appetite of our community, we needed to hire researchers and writers and we need to do it fast. So we reached out to the people who mattered most to us, our community of faces and readers, and within a month we’d recruited a team that knew exactly what kind of content we needed, as they were part of the community that we were trying to appease.

I never imagined that runaway success would ever be an unexpected problem that I’d have to deal with, but it was and I’m eternally grateful that the universe saw fit to throw that problem at us.

Paul Sherman
Paul Sherman

Paul Sherman

I never thought that hiring the right team members would be so incredibly difficult. This is especially difficult when you’re small because small businesses often need employees that can wear many different hats as they grow and figure things out.

I would warn entrepreneurs to be very careful about hiring people that are qualified but a poor cultural fit. This is hugely important when you’re a small business because if you have one bad apple in a company of 500, it’s not so bad; if you have one bad apple in a company of three, it’s a real problem.

We overcame this issue by focusing on word-of-mouth hiring and less on traditional hiring boards. At the time, and still very much today, I felt more comfortable getting a referral from someone I trust because that person knows me and what I’m looking for in an employee. This made it easier to hire people that were cultural fits for the company.

Annie Singer
Annie Singer

Annie Singer

The biggest surprise to me in launching my own business was the sheer patience it takes to be successful. After launching, it is incredibly common to enter a phase that my business mentor refers to as the “trough of sorrows”. During this phase, your business is growing… one user at a time.

It makes you question everything you know to be true about your business and your product. It might take weeks to get out of this trough — or it might take many months! The best way to persist through this challenging phase of business is to have a strong network of support, including your family, friends, and business mentors.

Anthony Martin
Anthony Martin

Anthony Martin

Insurance companies pool money to pay claims. They have a ballpark of the premiums they will receive and the payout they will have to make. The pandemic resulted in a increase in the number of payouts in the form of business interruption claims, travel, cyber liability and trade credit.

This means that payouts have seen a massive spike in a very short period of time. Even though certain insurance companies factor in unexpected events, pandemics are difficult to gauge as they occur rarely and lack historical data. Since we are directly in touch with insurance companies in our line of business, this has affected us as well.

Yuvi Alpert
Yuvi Alpert

Yuvi Alpert

Our industry typically relies on an in-person experience, as consumers often wish to have a tangible feel for the types of products we offer, so recreating that in a virtual environment was our biggest challenge.

Whenever a business, especially those in the fashion and accessories industry, utilize an ecommerce platform, finding the best ways to instill confidence in the consumer can be a difficult hurdle.

I never anticipated the amount of platforms and programs, content, and service outlets we would need to utilize in order to find that perfect combination. Definitely, recreating the consumer experience in virtual space was the biggest challenge I faced in my business.

Adelle Archer
Adelle Archer

Adelle Archer

When we started our business, we knew that our product was unique and rare, and although it touched upon several different market spaces, the greatest challenge was identifying the best ways to communicate that to the public.

The vast majority of startups are entering a well defined market space, where expectations are already set on what is required of a product and service. Ours was a completely new and different concept, and deciding how to promote what we did, both to stakeholders and the public, was more difficult than I had anticipated and presented great challenges. After much work, and some trial and error, we were able to overcome these difficulties and carve out our space.

Joel Jackson
Joel Jackson

Joel Jackson

It’s a challenge to find the kinds of people willing to listen. In the entrepreneurial space, you have a lot of talkers, a lot of aggressive salespeople – but not a lot of listeners. I started early at Honest, and no one noticed what we were doing, but we didn’t let that deter us. In the end, the entire diaper industry changed its practices because of what we did.

You can’t let discouragement creep into your head. You have to be willing to put yourself out there. The key is to get your ideas in front of as many people as you can find. If you’re persistent enough and strategic enough, you will find those people who are receptive to your ideas. You never know which conversation will lead to success, so keep finding ways to put your product in front of people.

Gene Caballero
Gene Caballero

Gene Caballero

The thing I didn’t expect when starting my business was how lonely the journey would be. Immediate family and a few friends will always be supportive….sharing on social media, writing reviews, actually using your product, bringing food to the office at midnight, etc. Second-tier friends, like your bar buddies and old co-workers, just don’t understand the work it takes to build something from scratch.

They can’t fathom why you are not able to grab a happy hour or grab dinner on a Tuesday because you have to work. Slowly but surely, these friends will eventually quit asking and become mere acquaintances. There are 3 8-hour workdays in 24 hours…pick which two you want to work and you will be successful.

Nakia Whittaker-Woody
Nakia Whittaker-Woody

Nakia Whittaker-Woody

I am an entrepreneur, small business for 4 years now, my greatest and most unexpected challenge was Imposter Syndrome. I have been an Administrative Professional for 24 years and I am a ROCK STAR! But when translating those years and skillset to being a business owner, I cowered like it was day 1 of my career.

I would hyperventilate on camera, studied everything I could get my hands on, and still felt incompetent. I had never had any business experience or knew how to be an entrepreneur, so I learned to align myself with like-minded individuals who encouraged and supported me. I invested in some courses, because coming from Corporate, education equaled authority, thus helping my confidence.

I also invested in Mindset Coaching. It was an investment in myself, I was lucky to be associated with a great coach who was growing and testing her program using a Pay What You Can process. It was so instrumental in me learning to celebrate small things in my business, understand the reason for my pricing, and gave me the courage to increase my pricing to my expertise level.

David Jacobs
David Jacobs

David Jacobs

The greatest, unexpected challenge most successful business owners will face in the lifecycle of their company is successfully exiting from the business. With the success rate of finding a buyer and negotiating a transaction which closes close to 20%, most business owners will be unable to successfully from their companies after years and years of hard work and effort.

It is typically for successful business owners to receive unsolicited offers from time to time. While it is possible for a cold inquiry to result in a sale and a lucrative exit, most end up as wasted weeks or months spent supplying highly confidential materials for a due diligence process to a buyer who ultimately walks away. This happens because buyers reach out to hundreds of potential business owners per year but only make 1-2 acquisitions. After a few of these failed deals, many buyers conclude their business can’t be sold.

The most reliable path to a successful business exit is to find an advisor who understands your industry and can create a competitive auction between the potential buyers. The competition not only pushes up the transaction value, it also keeps deal structures and terms reasonable. A good intermediary will be able to properly package up your business for sale and then attract a large number of potential buyers quickly in order to create the needed competition.

Shaunak Amin
Shaunak Amin

Shaunak Amin

SnackMagic launched in 2019 and scaled rapidly. Our team now consists of in-house, hybrid, and remote employees across the globe. While flexible schedules offer a better work/life balance, we quickly discovered that good team collaboration doesn’t come down to workers being available at all hours.

Round-the-clock communications can put a significant amount of pressure on your team and lead to lower productivity and higher staff turnover. Fostering a good work/life balance for hybrid and remote employees across time zones comes down to managers and team members being mindful of everyone’s designated hours.

As projects require a significant amount of interaction, workers must be conscientious of when and how they contact their teammates to avoid a constant sense of urgency. We find that being considerate of time zones keeps the stress levels of our employees lower and reduces the chances of human error.

Becky Brown
Becky Brown

Becky Brown

One of the greatest business challenges that I had to face was learning how to set up, organize, and manage a remote workforce. As an executive, working remotely comes down to so much more than “work-from-home using a computer.”

First, it was the technology — I had to research, develop, optimize, and manage all of the technology necessary to run an efficient remote business. After all of that, I had to learn how remote management and leadership so that my whole team was up and running efficiently. If you are considering working remotely, you should be ready and prepared to do your research and optimization to make it all work. I hope that helps!

Zach Letter
Zach Letter

Zach Letter

Taking a passion and converting it to a business requires viewing that market differently, and making the transition from enthusiastic participant to a business creator represented my greatest challenge. It is very simple to critique a business from afar, passing judgement while not fully understanding the complexities they face.

]When taking my passion into a business model, I began to realize some of my unrealistic expectations, forcing me to make adjustments and thinking about modifications I never considered. Being able to merge my vision with the reality of business, and picking and choosing where I could realistically meet my goals was my biggest challenge.

Omer Reiner
Omer Reiner

Omer Reiner

The greatest challenge we experienced with our business was cash flow. We underestimated the importance of keeping healthy cash reserves in the bank to cover months where cash was not flowing in steadily, but the expenses, on the other hand, did not stop flowing out.

So we learned the hard way, and now we try to keep at least 3-4 months of operating expenses in a separate savings account just in case we have slow revenue months.

Jaclyn Strauss
Jaclyn Strauss

Jaclyn Strauss

Be aware that you don’t know what you don’t know. As entrepreneurs, we plan to launch our new company and feel quite confident that we have dotted every “I” and crossed every “T.” However, the truth is that you will have no way of knowing what the market desires until you launch your product or service.

Every entrepreneur should have completed numerous potential customer interviews, received feedback from a BETA version, or had a fresh set of eyes and ears on the concept and/or the product pre-launch. Before launch, these are all must-do items; however, the real valuable stuff comes in after the service or product is on the market. Be ready and willing to change paths, incorporate new ideas, change your target market, adjust your product/service for better market fit.

Do NOT resist what the market is telling you, or you will fail. We must be willing to listen, take the feedback as a gift and continue moving forward. Thinking that I had all of the answers and not quickly releasing this belief would not have been a recipe for my company’s success since the launch of my company. I am solving a real problem, but the way I am solving it looks different and feels different from what I initially thought it would be.

Overcoming the hurdle by being flexible and receptive to embracing the feedback has been the most valuable shift I have made on my entrepreneurial journey.

Nikhil Arun
Nikhil Arun

Nikhil Arun

Developing testing and vaccination products for governments, corporations, and communities in need during a pandemic was the hardest challenge we’ve faced. We were able to accomplish this by spending a lot of time understanding our customers and the intricacies of the issues in the pandemic to understand exactly what would help our customers.

When you do that, you recognize patterns and build solutions that address many problems at one. Doing this, we were able to deliver the first at-home saliva test, a way for organizations to launch their own tests, and a simple way for organizations to track and report vaccinations.

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The post Entrepreneurs Discuss the Top Unexpected Business Challenges They Have Faced first appeared on Tekrati and is written by Jed Morley

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How 20 entrepreneurs in the United States Adapted To Changing Market Conditions During The Pandemic https://www.tekrati.com/changing-market-conditions-during-the-pandemic/ Fri, 18 Mar 2022 08:53:59 +0000 https://www.tekrati.com/?p=25417 How 20 entrepreneurs in the United States Adapted To Changing Market Conditions During The Pandemic

How 20 entrepreneurs in the United States Adapted To Changing Market Conditions During The Pandemic

The Covid-19 outbreak wreaked havoc on the commercial sector, forcing several enterprises to close or file for bankruptcy. Thankfully, some people made it out alive and even stronger. Many business owners quickly adapted to the pandemic situation by converting to a digital office. Some pivot only to improve the corporate culture and flexible working paradigm, [...]

The post How 20 entrepreneurs in the United States Adapted To Changing Market Conditions During The Pandemic first appeared on Tekrati and is written by Jed Morley

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How 20 entrepreneurs in the United States Adapted To Changing Market Conditions During The Pandemic

How 20 entrepreneurs in the United States Adapted To Changing Market Conditions During The Pandemic

The Covid-19 outbreak wreaked havoc on the commercial sector, forcing several enterprises to close or file for bankruptcy. Thankfully, some people made it out alive and even stronger. Many business owners quickly adapted to the pandemic situation by converting to a digital office. Some pivot only to improve the corporate culture and flexible working paradigm, while others offer any new product line.

In this series of interviews, we spoke with 20 business owners and leaders in the United States to see how the epidemic prompted them to pivot and adapt to new market conditions.

INTERVIEW HOST

The host of this interview was Jed Morley. Jed Morley is the CEO of a leading payment processing service provider called PlatPay.


Jed Morley

Table of Contents

The question we asked:

The pandemic encouraged many businesses to pivot and adapt to changing market conditions. How did you adapt? Did you introduce additional product lines or services?

Paul Moody
Paul Moody

Paul Moody

We amplified our content strategy to educate customers about the nuances and different aspects of moving. This included helpful tips, analysis, and informative guides. It’s fair to say that we pivoted in this direction to serve our audience better. We had to adapt because the last two years have been pretty tough for us.
 
As a company that reviews moving companies across the country, we noticed reduced traction because people were less interested in moving. In response to this, we decided to create better content in a bid to keep the audience engaged and fill them with a sense that we care for their needs.
Logan Mallory
Logan Mallory

Logan Mallory

The biggest challenge we faced was ensuring that we retained employees during times of change and uncertainty.

The way that we did this was by doubling down on the employee experience and employee engagement. With the Great Resignation looming, ensuring employees are happy and engaged is the secret to helping a business thrive by keeping turnover rates low and morale high.

A company’s performance overall can be tied back to one factor – and that’s employee engagement, for better or for worse. Increased employee engagement leads to happier employees, which in turn leads to a better customer experience, which means that we have happier customers as well, and happy customers remain loyal and become long-term clients.

Mark Pierce
Mark Pierce

Mark Pierce

The biggest challenge we faced was constantly evolving market conditions. We pivoted to adapt to the changing market conditions by re-focusing our efforts on services geared towards entrepreneurs.

We’ve seen an increase in entrepreneurship driven by the Great Resignation, so we’re more actively promoting our business formation services, and added a more robust offering geared towards entrepreneurs.

Tom Schaefer
Tom Schaefer

Tom Schaefer

I would say the greatest unexpected challenge is exactly that: dealing with the unexpected. In business, you can very easily fall into a mode of doing business as usual, where you expect the jobs and orders to come in just as they always have.

You get comfortable to the point that you can’t imagine the work not being there. It seems like a safe assumption until something like COVID comes along to disrupt that. The warning to new entrepreneurs would be to avoid being one-dimensional. Be able to work in multiple business sectors and keep a good variety of companies or products that you do business with.

If a certain area or sector has a lull or even completely disappears, have a contingency plan where you can swing your efforts into other areas.

Thomas Samuels
Thomas Samuels

Thomas Samuels

As a full-service trade show and exhibition company, we provide exhibit rentals and management services to a large number of clients all over the country. When the pandemic began, we had to quickly adapt to protect our clients, their customers, and their livelihoods by offering high-quality personal protective equipment (PPE) for our display booths and demo stations.

With venues having to adjust their events and safety precautions—sometimes without much notice—it was also important for us to ensure fast turnaround times for these new products in small and large quantities alike. We began to offer protective additions such as sanitizing stations, sneeze guards, and clear barriers, all of which help to keep our clients (and their employees) safe. Additionally, we began to print custom face masks and floor decals, incorporating our clients’ logos and branding into their public health protocols.

To account for the uptick in open air trade shows, we began to offer new outdoor curbside signs and flags, hanging banners, and weather-resistant tents, ensuring that our clients’ outdoor exhibits are just as impressive as their indoor booths. These new signs, displays, and safety products encourage social distance and physical separation, keeping customers protected and ensuring that trade shows can continue safely.

Brian Nagele
Brian Nagele

Brian Nagele

One of the most challenging tasks I faced as an upcoming digital marketer was staying relevant. Technology has infiltrated nearly every industry, and it’s accelerated the fluidity of customer behavior.

Print ads worked well for specific demographics, but they were no longer a leading tactic for marketers by the 2020s. Being an entrepreneur pushes you to be creative and always think one step ahead of your competitors.

Ultimately, my team spent countless hours not only strategizing for existing marketing clients but looking for new ways to keep scouting prospects for our startups in such a face-paced landscape.

That dry spell taught me that if I wanted to expand my client base, I’d have to meet people at their level and develop the agility to maintain their attention. Through humanized marketing – curating a social media presence and engaging within niche consumer groups – I was able to scale multiple businesses to multi-figure brands that sold for their value. If you’re looking to be a successful marketer, you have to run at the pace of your audience (or faster).

Stephen Light
Stephen Light

Stephen Light

A mission statement is why you start a business in the first place and is what keeps you energized and passionate. What I didn’t expect was how easily the myriad of moving parts involved in starting and running a business can get in the way of that initial spark, and how much work goes into continually recommitting and reminding yourself of why you began.

Entrepreneurs wear a million different hats and make a thousand decisions a day, and it can really bog you down. Continually recommitting to your mission is difficult but necessary, and entirely worth it. Schedule a specific time with your team to regularly reassess your mission statement and to take stock of anything that doesn’t align.

Scott Spivack
Scott Spivack

Scott Spivack

For instance, we’ve added an ‘Accessibility Adjustments’ feature on our website that adjusts the interface as per the user preferences. As a medical financing company, we get customers facing all kinds of health problems and physical disabilities.

With this feature, we were able to smoothen their experience. Here’s how it works: If a particular user selects ‘Seizure Safe Profile’, our website automatically eliminates flashes and reduces color. Similarly, if someone selects ‘Cognitive Disability Profile’, our website assists with reading and focusing. This has helped us earn the trust of users and build loyalty during the challenging times of the pandemic.

Marliis Reinkort
Marliis Reinkort

Marliis Reinkort

The greatest challenge that has faced my business so far, was definitely Covid-19, and as we know now, changed the world for everyone. I’m the CEO of Code Galaxy, which offers online coding courses to kids of all ages.

We teach kids coding, design and other technology subjects and skills in a virtual classroom. However, before the pandemic started in March 2020, we were a fully in-person coding school, about to open up a new location in Austin, Texas. Once the pandemic started, we were forced to close our in-person locations for an unknown amount of time, so we decided to make a pivot and transfer our business from in person to fully online.

Since our curriculum was already online and we had a good amount of courses available for kids, the transition ended up being easier than we initially expected. We had to create online scheduling systems, find a virtual classroom platform to run the classes, retrain our teachers and completely change our marketing strategy.

It was definitely a challenge but now that we have fully made the switch, we are actually very grateful that we were forced to pivot the business model, since now we get to work with students all over the world as well as with schools across the U.S. to provide their coding electives and after school programs. It’s a more accessible, flexible and financially viable business model.

Learning from this experience, what I would like to warn all entrepreneurs about is that never get too comfortable with your current business model and always look for new trends and options to diversify your business. And once the change has to be made, in a situation like the pandemic was, even if you’re not ready, be open-minded and try to find solutions that can turn around your business quickly. Don’t wait and just start testing and experimenting to find out what works. The more you try, the higher your chances of success. 

Ryan Reed
Ryan Reed

Ryan Reed

CHALLENGE 1
The home improvement sector is currently experiencing the most severe labor shortage in its history. Failure to break the labor code will stifle growth, profit, and cash flow. Some businesses can perish due to their incapacity to deal with the issue.

The second option is to “survive” rather than “thrive,” with an insufficient profit to compensate for the risk and work necessary to produce a little net pre-tax profit. As a result, many businesses are sacrificing potential earnings to develop and strengthen their businesses while also providing stability for themselves and their families.

CHALLENGE 2
Advertising, the web, exhibitions, events, and self-developed leads, such as canvassing, have all seen an increase in lead development costs. This, along with backlog and cash flow issues, reduces profitability and restricts expansion.

It’s vital to have a well-thought-out strategy for dealing with these challenges. It also needs to be consistent with a plan to make your company stable and capable of weathering unanticipated changes, which can come from a variety of sources: a lack of financing, changes in the current economy, high turnover, the cost or effectiveness of the lead generation sources you use, and so on.

CHALLENGE 3
The expense of acquiring, training, and sustaining employees rises for small businesses. The ease of finding a job due to Great Resignation, especially for persons with mediocre talents or bad experience, results in high turnover, borderline mediocrity, and increased personnel expenditures.

These three challenges can become quicksand for small, closely-held businesses. This nation’s expanding economy, consumer confidence, and disposable income produce a two-edged sword: the sparkle of higher revenue clouds judgment and lessens the caution required in concerns such as staffing shortages, mis-hires, and mishandled staff.

OVERCOMING CHALLENGE 1
To overcome challenge 1, you need to train your labor. You need a highly efficient training mechanism to train your workforce effectively. You may have to cut back on potential profit in order to retain your skilled workforce as it will be beneficial for you in long run.

OVERCOMING CHALLENGE 2
As the advertising cost has skyrocketed, you need to set aside a specific budget that should be solely used for marketing purposes. I know this will cut down significant portions of the profit but it will effectively generate many leads for your business and it’s a necessity for eventual growth and expansion of your business.

OVERCOMING CHALLENGE 3
Every business is suffering from a wave of great resignation. Coupled with challenge 1 you need to effectively manage your employees or it will put an end to your business. To tackle this provide your employees with good remuneration packages. Provide them with effective perks and benefits that are actually beneficial and provide value to your employees.

Sherrie High
Sherrie High

Sherrie High

One of the challenges about running a business is that you need to expect the unexpected! There will be unexpected expenses that you did not plan on for your business, slow periods where you may not get as much business as you thought you would, payment delays even supply increases.

Whatever it may be make sure you have the financial resources to keep your business afloat, a good budget plan which includes extra capital for these unexpected events.

Carolyn Barbarite
Carolyn Barbarite

Carolyn Barbarite

In business nothing ever goes exactly the way you had planned and as entrepreneurs you must be open-minded to change.

The most unexpected challenge that I faced with Javamelts Flavored Sugar is having to completely rebrand, reformulate and reintroduce Javamelts to the marketplace as a direct result of losing not only one manufacturing facility (co-packer) but the second one we had found.

This challenge, by far, was my most difficult because my original product was very labor-intensive to manufacture. I had to figure out a way, as fast as possible, to create a seamless, more efficient, better-for-you and packaged more conveniently product all at once. The trick for me was to PIVOT and not fight the situation. It was very important that I evaluate all of the pros and cons and go down the path of least resistance.

I simplified the ingredients, packaging and formulation to allow Javamelts to stay in the game. My advice to anyone who is faced with a tremendous problem or hurdle is not to resist the change that is inevitable. Gather the information, consult with a team of experts in that field as best as possible, ask for help and then make a sound, informative decision.

Most often than not the problem that you are having is meant for you so that you can learn so don’t be afraid to switch gears and prevail. The problems I had led me to creating better products, packaging and process overall.

Shira Truitt
Shira Truitt

Shira Truitt

Work/Life balance was my greatest, unexpected challenge with my business. After the newness of business wore off, no one wanted to hear about the business as much as I wanted to talk about it.

Moreover, I was spending extraordinary time working, but I was making extraordinary progress– and it was great! I was enjoying myself, my work, and my accomplishments.

I didn’t miss any of the big things, but my quality of life was diminished by the amount of work I was doing–even though I enjoyed it. I managed to overcome that by determining what, specifically, I would do if my business went as planned so that time and resources were not an issue. Then, I selected all the ideas that did not have a financial basis and that did not serve a dual purpose of helping me AND helping my business.

In that way, no change would be financially incentivized. Additionally, the changes that I choose to make would only impact me–not the business. I worked to implement those ideas by scheduling everything that was important to me and committed to keeping that schedule. That made time for things like a more meaningful prayer life, journaling, and exercise. I scheduled one night a month were work ends no later than 5:00 p.m. and I must do something I enjoy.

That lead to crafting, binge watching tv, and planning new opportunities. Additionally, I took classes at the local community college on everything from cooking to jewelry making and, even if I weren’t successful, I’d had a positive experience and raised the quality of my life for just those few hours.

That lead to meeting people with similar interests but from a different walk in life. I scheduled a monthly review of my activities so that I am intentional about maintaining this balance. The regimented nature of this decision took some time to get used to, but it has allowed me to be relevant in my community, meaningful time to reflect, a healthy lifestyle, and time to do the things I enjoy while my business continues to grow. As an entrepreneur, I could not ask for more.

Steve Silberberg
Steve Silberberg

Steve Silberberg

Marketing is a loathsome, never-ending Sisyphian task that not only drains my company’s finances at an unprecedented rate, but also drains my spirit and the amount of time I can devote to any and all other aspects of running my business.

It forces me to permanently assume the role of a repugnant, self-aggrandizing, narcissistic shyster in a desperate attempt at getting the fleeting attention of prospective clients through a dense fog of sales messages incessantly generated by unimaginably wealthy, over-capitalized business interests.

Devin Schumacher
Devin Schumacher

Devin Schumacher

The pandemic changes globally brought a new reality for the business and its own set of challenges. Pivoting during the pandemic is not just a concept for me but a reality we live with in the new normal of businesses.

Since our service is in digital marketing and transformation, I pivoted in this pandemic by onboarding new types of clients. I began developing campaigns for traditional companies that are new to digital marketing and diversifying our client base.

Alexa Allamano
Alexa Allamano

Alexa Allamano

Before the pandemic my answer would have been split between overcoming a store burglary and partnering with a flash-sale website that was a flop and left me with thousands of pieces of unsold inventory. However, the pandemic caused unexpected disruptions to my main sales channels – in-store retail, wholesale partnerships, and pop-up events.

My online sales had been the smallest growth area since establishing a storefront in 2014, but everything shifted to DTC during 2020. I shuttered my previous storefront and ended an unpleasant relationship with the lessor during covid lockdown, re-establishing in a new tiny storefront later that year.

Due to the size limit of the new space, I innovated Scan to Shop window shopping by merchandising my window display to be shoppable 24/7 with QR codes. Now my storefront drives business online and I am in-store by appointment (I also teach other store owners how to implement Scan to Shop).

Overcoming the disruption of a global pandemic requires flexibility, creative problem solving, and making hard choices on what best aligns with your business goals and values. Making those tough decisions centered around my ethics led my business to prosper in a way I couldn’t imagine before the pandemic. I gave up my dream store and created my dream life.

Kathleen Ahmmed
Kathleen Ahmmed

Kathleen Ahmmed

Speaking from personal experience, one of the biggest challenges that I faced at the start was overcoming the need to hire fast in order to fill empty positions in my business operations. This is because when you are first launching a business it can often feel like you are in a race with yourself to get things done and solve problems quickly.

However, when it comes to recruitment, this is a process that usually requires a lot of time and patience, because one wrong hire can often damage the reputation of your company by having a negative impact on employee morale, productivity, and collaboration, which ultimately leads to a toxic work culture.

And in my case, I was only able to see the effects of my hiring decisions much later in the startup process, as it was apparent that I failed to take into account other important factors like soft skills and cultural fit, with some of them either not meshing well with others, some lacking the necessary skills needed to communicate effectively with customers and others failing to collaborate with their team members in the field.

As such, I learned the importance of taking your time to do your due diligence and always hiring for intelligence, skills, and cultural fit first, because while it is easy to recruit people who are “good enough”, they can often end up being “detrimental” to your business progress down the road.

Ouriel Lemmel
Ouriel Lemmel

Ouriel Lemmel

The biggest challenge I faced when I started was that there was no model for my particular business. It was a new idea, and no one had really tried anything like an app to connect drivers with lawyers to help fight traffic tickets. So I did my research. I studied my market well and ensured my product is something people want and need.

Don’t stay in your own bubble. My partner is a very good check on that as we come from different backgrounds. I’m also fortunate to have great mentors, advisors, and friends that are super helpful. Most successful entrepreneurs I know didn’t wake up one morning and decide to become one, they’ve always had an entrepreneurial mindset. If you have a business idea or project, don’t be shy—try it.

Sam Cohen
Sam Cohen

Sam Cohen

The greatest, unexpected challenge was staying focused on business development. Sometimes the distractions are too heavy to resist. So I had to learn to manage my time properly. I will share how I did it and you can do the same too.

The solution is to reserve some time in your calendar for business development, and don’t let anything disturb you during those times. Also, you should try not to get too attached to any project because you will have to let go of all of them eventually.

Glen Bhimani
Glen Bhimani

Glen Bhimani

Marketing was my greatest initial and unexpected challenge.

Ultimately, it came down to an assumption I made. After spending years in the security industry as a guard, I realized most guards don’t care about the clients because they aren’t being taken care of by their employers.

That was when I started BPS Security. My company’s purpose is to provide a better security option at a lower price, so I developed an operations system that allows us to provide highly qualified guards who are well-paid so that they put their best effort into taking care of the customer. My assumption was that clients would find me because I had a website and was offering a better service at a lower price. That was a big mistake.

Because of that assumption, we spent several years without any clients at all: it’s a miracle we’re still standing. But when I finally realized we needed to work on our marketing and sales to actively let people know we are here, the business exploded! Even though it wasn’t all at once, it still exploded and today we’re one of the fastest growing security firms in the United States because of it.

I would love for new entrepreneurs to avoid my mistake: don’t assume people will come to you just because you’ve started your business. You need to find ways to actively attract clients.

Also, allow time for your marketing to kick in and begin working.
Our sales improved our clients drastically, but I had a business partner who would constantly argue for the first month that our marketing needed to be cut because it wasn’t bringing in new clients. I reminded him of exactly what I would tell new entrepreneurs: marketing isn’t a magic pill that works overnight.

Most of the time it doesn’t even begin to show serious results after two to four weeks. But marketing is a crucial part of building out your company’s reputation and improving your client base, and needs to be an essential part of your company at all times! Especially during difficult times.

These are a few of the very important things I learned and implemented that helped me overcome my marketing challenges:

Continue adjusting
The market is constantly changing, so you have to continually adjust as you go. One marketing campaign might not work super well, but another one might be incredibly effective. So keep trying different things and give them a few weeks to work before you cut them.

One of the ways we’ve developed such strong marketing is that we’ve continually revamped what we’re doing. Our website has changed multiple times in the last two years, and it has resulted in much higher leads and client acquisition every time we’ve changed it. So continually adjust your marketing and pursue what seems to work best after you’ve given it a few weeks to work.

Don’t expect immediate results
I know I mentioned this already, but understanding this is crucial. There are going to be marketing companies that tell you they can bring in hundreds of leads a month right from the start. They are frauds. Not because they can’t get leads, but because their leads are bad leads.

Good marketing requires time and effort, and as one of my mentors says, “great marketing has exponential growth.” Which means you might not see much right now, but it will grow and expand on itself if you keep at it diligently. Ours did, and now we’re getting regular news features and sometimes have more client requests than we have capacity to take on.

Be consistent
Marketing is a huge part of your reputation, so you need to make sure you have the same reputation everywhere. Your brand needs to be consistent, from your brochures, to your social media, to your website, to even how you answer the phone!

Building a consistent feel across every aspect of your company is a great way to work on your marketing, because it creates a more solid relationship between the company and the clients. If you look at your marketing assets and realize that your facebook page is completely different from your website, that’s a sign your marketing isn’t consistent and that your potential clients may not even know they’re looking at the same company.

Get feedback
Finally, getting feedback is one of the most important parts of marketing. Speak with your current clients to find out why they work with you and build that into your marketing. If you compete in the market on service or price alone, you’ll run yourself into the ground and won’t be able to compete with bigger companies. Find out what makes you unique and why your clients like working with you, then build your marketing on that feedback. When we began to do this, our marketing took a huge turn and began to show serious results.

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The post How 20 entrepreneurs in the United States Adapted To Changing Market Conditions During The Pandemic first appeared on Tekrati and is written by Jed Morley

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20 Entrepreneurs From Europe & North America Interviewed On The Challenges They Encountered During The Pandemic https://www.tekrati.com/challenges-they-encountered-during-the-pandemic/ Fri, 18 Mar 2022 06:55:05 +0000 https://www.tekrati.com/?p=25388 20 Entrepreneurs From Europe & North America Interviewed On The Challenges They Encountered During The Pandemic

20 Entrepreneurs From Europe & North America Interviewed On The Challenges They Encountered During The Pandemic

As a result of the outbreak, many businesses were forced to pivot and adjust to changing market conditions. Some were able to make the necessary adjustments, while others were forced to shut down. We spoke with 20 business owners and leaders to learn how they made changes to their companies and all the challenges they [...]

The post 20 Entrepreneurs From Europe & North America Interviewed On The Challenges They Encountered During The Pandemic first appeared on Tekrati and is written by Jerome Knyszewski

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20 Entrepreneurs From Europe & North America Interviewed On The Challenges They Encountered During The Pandemic

20 Entrepreneurs From Europe & North America Interviewed On The Challenges They Encountered During The Pandemic

As a result of the outbreak, many businesses were forced to pivot and adjust to changing market conditions. Some were able to make the necessary adjustments, while others were forced to shut down. We spoke with 20 business owners and leaders to learn how they made changes to their companies and all the challenges they encountered during the pandemic.
We’ll also go over some strategies you can use to overcome any obstacles that come your way.

INTERVIEW HOST

Hello, my name is Jerome Knyszewski, I’ll be the host of your interview today. I am the CEO of HeavyShift. My specialties are online reputation marketing and SEO. Looking forward to reading your insightful answers and publishing your featured interview.

Jerome Knyszewski

Table of Contents

The question we asked:

What is the greatest, unexpected challenge you faced with your business, that you’d like to warn new entrepreneurs about? Please share your advice on how to overcome it.?

David Ciccarelli
David Ciccarelli

David Ciccarelli

You’re going to hear no a lot. “But that’s not unexpected.” Sure, you probably expect to hear no. But you likely aren’t expecting to hear no quite as often as it actually happens, and it can be a devastating blow to morale to new entrepreneurs after hearing it over and over and over (and over) again.

Here you are, a new entrepreneur with a fantastic new idea or improved way to do something, and you just know it’s going to be revolutionary—or, at the very least, successful enough to become a profitable business. You’ve done your research, you’re ready to pitch to investors, you’re ready to find business opportunities and partners, and you’re ready to take on the world, bolstered by hope and excitement.

And then the NOs start rolling in. “It’s not a good time.” “We don’t typically take on projects like this.” “This isn’t a good fit.” “You just don’t have the data to back this up.” “Do you really think this will work?” “Is there even a market for this?” These statements keep piling up, most often accompanied by a resounding “no.”

Be ready for this. Be ready to hear no 50 times for every yes. And, perhaps most importantly, don’t take no for an answer so readily. As a young, green entrepreneur, hearing “no” can be disheartening and is often easily accepted, because who are you to be questioning established business folks on their “no”?

Sometimes, no means no and the door is closed, but in business, “no” can actually mean “not right now” or “there’s no room in the budget this year.” Hearing “no” can actually be an invitation to get creative and find ways that your proposition will be of benefit to your intended business partner or investor without breaking the bank or creating additional work on their end.

Rejection can also be an opportunity for you to re-evaluate your position and the information you’re putting forth. Are you missing something? Does something need to change in order to better resonate with your intended audience? Analyzing the potential shortcomings in your planning will help you to better approach it next time.

Better yet, don’t be afraid to ask for genuine and transparent feedback from those who said “no” in the first place. Ask for clarity and an explanation as to what exactly made them reject your proposal so you can take that away, fix it (if possible), and come back stronger. In short, seek ways to turn “no” into “yes” and don’t accept defeat so easily.

Samantha Odo
Samantha Odo

Samantha Odo

I am Samantha Odo, a licensed real estate expert at Precondo. We take pride in adhering to high-quality journalistic ethical guidelines, and we retain journalistic integrity to assist in making the best decision per necessities.

With the pandemic and the following restrictions, entrepreneurs and business owners faced several challenges. I, as a realtor, was one among many others who stuck at home, not able to mark my presence in the industry. As a realtor, it was challenging for me to meet both sellers & buyers.

However, technologies stepped in as a big help. Meeting my clients online and giving them a virtual tour of properties they are interested in was convenient for me. It resolved many problems I was facing.

Loren Howard
Loren Howard

Loren Howard

When I first started as an entrepreneur I did not understand the importance of marketing your business. You can do everything ‘technically’ but without the proper marketing and sales funnel in place your business will never take off. Invest time and money upfront into marketing your business for a successful launch!

Alex Gastle
Alex Gastle

Alex Gastle

As entrepreneurs we are excited about our business and what it can do for paying customers. This excitement and the potential we see is often what drives us in the early days to work harder and persevere through the tough times getting started.

In my experience, the side effect of this excitement is that entrepreneurs struggle to remove themselves from their own excitement and view their business from their eyes of their target customer or user persona. Tech entrepreneurs love to focus on the fancy features of their new app in everything they do without having a crystal clear understanding of the problem their product solves and how their target users are solving that problem now, without their new app.

This doesn’t mean researching your competitors, that’s different because you’re all trying to solve the problem in a new way. Speak with as many people as you can to discover what they are using now to solve the problem and then apply that back to your own business.

Your perspective will change on things like what features are most important, often the features that an entrepreneur is most excited about aren’t the features that target users will gravitate to. If you can get a handle on this, your product development time, sales and marketing will all become much easier.

Adam Millman
Adam Millman

Adam Millman

As an entrepreneur, being able to be nimble is key. You quickly learn that you can’t get too attached to certain ideas, and being able to pivot accordingly is an incredible strength for any business.

More often than not, the first iteration of any product/business may not be the best — it takes countless versions, tests, and ideas to get to the end product. Down the line, you realize how necessary every step was in order to get to your final product/business.

My advice on how to pivot with the most ease is to build a strong team. A cohesive team that compliments each other’s strengths is a perfect recipe for a nimble, quick-thinking business. You need several voices trained onto one razor-sharp vision, bringing perspective and ideas to the table without clouding the end goal.

Lisa Richards
Lisa Richards

Lisa Richards

Constant fatigue was perhaps the most unexpected challenge I encountered when starting my business. The crazy hours, the intense work involved, and the pressure to make sure the business succeeded really took a toll on me, physically, emotionally, and mentally.

However, as the business grew, I was able to find a pace that allowed me to keep the business thriving while still managing to protect my wellbeing. I also learnt how to delegate more effectively, which enabled me to rest more, and to focus on the areas in my business where I could make the biggest impact.

Lillian Brummet
Lillian Brummet

Lillian Brummet

I’m not sure how far you want the story to go back but here is a brief overview of my life: My mom married 5 times; 2 of those were abusive… and so I was on my own at 13.5 years old. My 2 older brothers were on their own before I was, both left at 16.

I supported myself, paid rent, worked hard labour jobs to get by and partied hard – often sheltering young people who needed to get away from their home life, giving them a place to stay until they figured things out.

At 20, I put myself through a university level of grade 12, meaning I took the extra hard, more advanced courses in math, biology and science, etc. so that I could qualify for university. At the time I was thinking of becoming a biologist. Met and married my husband Dave around this same time, and started a business providing home maintenance services for upper-class clients.

Ran that successfully for 6 years before being in the middle of a 3-car pileup that had me in full-time physio (5 days week, 4-5 hours per day) for over a year. I had to close my business – and fell into chronic depression, something I struggled with most of my life, and developed an anxiety disorder (which I struggle with today). At that point I changed directions – began studying the world of writing as a profession, and haven’t looked back yet.

I chose this career because I needed to feel like my life had value, that I was leaving a positive legacy and using every moment I was given to the best of my ability. I entered this field in 1999 as a freelance writer, later becoming a staff writer, columnist and assignment writer.

My greatest adversity early on in the career was having the confidence that my voice had value in the clammer that already existed. I overcame this by ensuring what I wrote was unique – researching recent writings about the topic to find out what was missing, what wasn’t addressed, what I did or did not like about the published materials, and then I would find an angle that I could write about filling a negative gap.

Both my parents (mom & step dad) committed suicide in 2009, forcing us to reconsider the direction of our lives and reminding us of the tragedy in waiting for a tomorrow that may never happen. Instead of buying a home in the big city, we moved to a smaller city about 3 hours drive from our home town.

Since then I have worn many hats; at one time I wrote book reviews professionally; donating over 700 books to our local literacy organization because of this task. I also wrote product reviews professionally, and still offer this service on our blog.

I ran a popular talk radio show for about 7 years or so; it ran 3 x per week, 1 hour per episode, called Conscious Discussions Talk Radio. Around this same time period I also ran the Author’s Read podcast for a few years. About mid-point in our career we had another crisis.

Dave had been working shift work while we both worked ourselves thin refurbishing our first home and running the business. Both of us were exhausted, diminished by the weight of heavy grief after the suicide of my parents and the cancer diagnosis of his biological father (the last of the parents).

The stress was beginning to affect our marriage. We all decided, the dad included, to move to our dream location before it was too late. Life is just too short to wait for tomorrow to live your joy.

So after a year of looking at properties we sold everything, packed up, bought a house (another fixer upper), and began our new lives here as of 2012. This also meant revamping the business so that it better represented our current projects, including a few book updates or publishing new editions. That was 10 years ago.

Since moving to our dream location (in the Kootenay Region of BC, Canada), and caregiving for the dad who passed 4-5 years ago; we have been methodically converting the abused lot over to the little park it has become – and in doing so have gained certification with bee, pollinator and wildlife organizations. Our home, too, has become energy efficient via the many upgrades we have done.

Our business donates 10% of the profits to wildlife, bee and pollinator, pet rescue and seed saving organizations. Our business includes Dave’s music studio, percussion accessory products and services, as well as numerous award-winning non-fiction books and 2 popular blogs.

In 2020 we relaunched the business with a new look, logo, colours, design, new bio’s and profiles and updated everything from social networking sites to our main website. We also launched Dave’s Drum It With Brummet blog. We realized we needed to learn better skills to deal with changing business needs.

Starting in 2020 I began taking a number of online courses to better understand SEO, Keyword Management, E-commerce and online advertising (Facebook & Amazon Ads).

In ’21 we released 2 books and due to all of the marketing and other efforts I am proud to say that we appeared in the media more than 125 times that year and our main blog, Brummet’s Conscious Blog, has had a huge increase of visits as of late.

In December (a 31-day month) we saw #143,000 visits, in January (also a 31-day month) this increased to #346,788, and so far in the past 9 days of February, we saw #134,547 visits. The blog has helped us solidify long term networking relationships and discover new ones, because of kinds of submissions and interviews that we accept.

For instance, just last month I put in a few weeks of work following up with the 940 connections we made last year. For those we had a positive interaction with, our message simply stated our gratitude and interest in continuing to network and offered a few ways we might be able to support feature them on the blog. For those who did not reply, we were able to reach out again with a slightly different approach.

I find I get about an 8% additional return on investment using last year’s work. Four years after the dad’s passing we are finally in a place where we can face the emotional journey of publishing his work. We are currently working on what we hope to be a trilogy, celebrating Dave’s late-father’s lifetime collection of poetry, short stories, family memoirs and photos.

I speculate that the first 2 books will be published late-spring ’22. This is our way of honouring his dad, and doing our part for future generations of this family. Bio: Lillian and her husband Dave are the team behind Brummet Media Group, high-fiving cheerfully as they pass each other on the way from checking off one item or other from their long to-do list.

Their business includes Dave’s music studio and percussion accessory products and graphic design work as well as numerous award-winning non-fiction books and 2 popular blogs. Find them online here: https://linktr.ee/LillianBrummet

Danny Neeson
Danny Neeson

Danny Neeson

What I’ve learned through each entrepreneurial venture is that the biggest challenge can oftentimes be yourself. When you face obstacles or challenges, your determination and work ethic are what will either make or break you. Business owners need to dig deep and face the battles within themselves to transcend beyond their self-made limitations and see the potential that others might miss.

Confidence isn’t always a natural thing; it takes strength and courage to show up every day and believe in what others won’t. Know what you bring to the table every day!

Ravi Davda
Ravi Davda

Ravi Davda

“I was young when I left my corporate job to start my first business. I was earning a great salary in a banking role, and I left it to start with nothing. If there’s one challenge entrepreneurs should know about, it’s getting through those first months or even years without taking a proper salary.

Even if/when you do make money, it’s likely that you’ll be reinvesting some, if not all, of it back into your business. This is tough, especially for people who have never been there or have always had a stable salary. It takes a lot of sleepless nights and a lot of determination. Don’t underestimate this if you’re starting a new business.”

Alessio Lorusso
Alessio Lorusso

Alessio Lorusso

My name is Alessio Lorusso (Forbes 30 Under 30) and I am the founder and CEO of Roboze (roboze.com), the most accurate 3D printing technology in the world for high-performance super polymers. Roboze is a startup based in Houston, TX, and Italy.

As an entrepreneur who has built a successful company starting in a region of the world where there are few investors (Southern Italy), attracting initial outside investors was the most unexpected challenge, and I can share some lessons learned.

Looking back, I realize that one of the reasons for my success was because I had confidence in myself and the strengths of my innovation which I built when I was 17 years old, by developing the world’s first 3D printer without belts.

This innovation, de facto eliminated the issues linked to the rubber belts regularly used in desktop 3D printers: distortion, wear, inaccurate repeatability, and the need for frequent calibrations. It was thanks to this invention that I then founded Roboze, which now employs over 100 employees, has facilities in Italy, Texas, and Germany, and has attracted numerous investors and key strategic partners.

For startups like mine that are not located in the more traditional hubs, it is a greater challenge, and it often takes longer to attract initial investors, than for startups located in Silicon Valley, Israel, or the UK. That is why, in order to start growing relying just on initial funds from my savings, I needed to outline a growth path that had very little margin for error. This can be accomplished by learning in-depth about the market you are in, having a clear vision of your goals and what it takes to get there.

Typically, especially in early stages, there are fewer people who support you, believe in you, and help you when you want to create a new innovative company with the intention to disrupt a segment of the market. So, you must be focused enough to know when to take risks, believe in yourself, have the courage to do things differently, and not be afraid of failure.

Failure must always be taken into account, it’s part of doing business. However, staying focused and having a direction that you pursue consistently (avoid the “shiny ball syndrome” at all cost) without ever losing motivation despite obstacles will allow you to grow sufficiently to become attractive to investors, wherever they may be.

Humza Khan
Humza Khan

Humza Khan

All of us, and especially business leaders find discomfort in uncertainty. Because of the pandemic, supply chain struggles, and labor shortages, uncertainty is more pronounced today.

Those unknowns lead to short-term myopia. Many people shy away from long-term planning in favor of immediate concerns. Uncertainty drives business owners and executives to hunker down, and customers to stop spending.

While this might feel right, failure to strategically plan and stay focused 10, 5 or even 3 years into the future can end up eroding tremendous value. The world is simply not going to end. Plan well. Be agile. Yet don’t lose sight of the milestones and goals you intelligently set in the first place.

Taylor Ryan
Taylor Ryan

Taylor Ryan

A risk management plan! When you run a business, be prepared for more significant losses than you initially anticipate so that the company can survive in the event of a crisis.

This was certainly one of the hardest parts of starting and running my own business. Life is full of surprises, especially in business. There’s almost certainly going to be a few expenses that you did not anticipate – tax changes, changes in the financial market, new competitors, a global pandemic.

Small businesses often generate relatively low income. Therefore, even small financial turbulences can lead to their complete collapse. It’s crucial to factor risk management into your financial plan: Be prepared for the worst, and a crisis will cost you much less. This is the best advice I can give anyone who is planning to start a business.

Ellenor McIntosh
Ellenor McIntosh

Ellenor McIntosh

One of the greatest challenges I’ve had to learn is effective time management. More often than not, new entrepreneurs can find all their time being consumed by the new business venture they’re pursuing. You work tirelessly to make sure this becomes a success, that you forget about everything else.

All your energy and time go into your business that can ultimately end up working against you. Pouring all of your energy into work, you forget to take time for yourself, and you realise that other important aspects of your life will eventually take the backseat.

Over the years, I have come to appreciate that less can be more, and apply this to certain aspects of my business. Overworking yourself is not adding benefit to your business’ success, but rather you’ll find yourself feeling stressed and overwrought. Learning how and when to ‘switch off’ has been such an indispensable lesson and is something I have come a appreciate more and more as my business continues to grow. Switching off can mean different things for everyone.

For me, that means taking time away from work to do a completely unrelated activity. Whether that was going out with friends, starting up a new hobby or just taking time to myself to decompress at home – carving out the time to focus on just you are something I firmly encourage all entrepreneurs to do.

I find by doing this, it can significantly affect your mental and physical wellbeing for the better. When you’re in a good mental space it reflects in the work you do. You are taking the time to ensure that you are in the best shape possible to successfully run your new business venture. Some of the methods I’ve found that has greatly helped me overcome this has been setting feasible deadlines with certain tasks and projects, and effective time allotment on tasks set for myself and others under my management.

I realised that while setting deadlines is a great start in managing my time more effectively, I also had to learn to discipline myself in sticking to them. It can be so easy to find yourself doing a little extra on that one project or working a little later than the time you set for yourself, but once you fall into the habit of constantly working overtime, it can be extremely difficult to come out of.

This is why it’s so important to implement these ‘guidelines’ for yourself near the beginning and act in accordance with them. Once you learn how to stick to the guidelines you’ve set, whether it’s to do with time management or something else you struggle with, you’ll notice how much smoother and more efficiently your business venture operates. Ellenors Bio: Just to introduce her, Ellenor McIntosh, is one of the few young, black female entrepreneurs in the UK, and is paving the way for others to follow.

Having graduated from the University of Bedfordshire with a Bachelor of Science (BSc), Biological and Biomedical Sciences, Elle has used her science background to create the formula for her innovative creation – Twipes. Twipes is the world’s first truly flushable and biodegradable wet wipe, that’s 100% plastic-free! When flushed, Twipes are completely dispersed in just 3 hours, and will fully biodegrade within 7 days. Co-founded with her long-time college friend, Al Borz, they boldly set out to start their own business.

And after 5 years of much research and development, their resilience paid off with the success of Twipes. Elle has been the recipient of multiple prestigious awards, namely the Princess Diana Award in 2017, awarded the Forbes 30 under 30 in 2020. She has even been recognised by the Mayor of London and featured in Time-out Magazine in 2021 for her (and her co-founder’s) innovative product. She is not only making strides in the entrepreneurial world as a successful young, black woman but also in the world of single-use items, with her cutting edge and ingenious creation of Twipes!

Cliff Auerswald
Cliff Auerswald

Cliff Auerswald

My name is Cliff Auerswald, President at All Reverse Mortgage, a top-rated financing and mortgage company.

The greatest challenge new business owners are going to face is when they hit the bottom of the J-Curve. At that point, business owners find out that most of their initial assumptions about their product and market are wrong, so they don’t see much return for their effort. And then the money and morale start to dry up.

In order to escape the bottom of the J-curve to enter the periods of steep growth and traction, new business owners need to be open to changing their ideas. They might need to change their ideas about the product, market, or strategy (sometimes, all three) in order to keep the company alive.

Rachel McMichael
Rachel McMichael

Rachel McMichael

When first starting out and trying to build an audience, it’s easy to believe that any visibility means your business is doing well, when getting in front of the right audience (those who need your product, program, or service the most) is actually the true goal.

So many beginner entrepreneurs try to create content that attracts the most people (quantity), rather than creating content that attracts their ideal customer (quality). But a popular business does not necessarily equate to a profitable business. A larger group of followers might get your business plenty of “likes”, but a group of qualified ideal customers is what will give you the sales and conversion you’re looking for.

Christiaan Huynen
Christiaan Huynen

Christiaan Huynen

Shift in people’s buying habits. The next level of online shopping has taken over the ecommerce industry. More engrossing digital experience is now the trend in selling.

Consumers are shifting into an “experience economy” wherein they want not only the item itself but also the act of the digital purchase. Products are big because of their curated content and with the influence of social media, the fear of missing out is fostered in the e-commerce business.

This trend changed the way our company designs logos, websites, brand identity and many more. An appealing graphic design is not enough to increase lead generation nowadays.

Alexej Pikovsky
Alexej Pikovsky

Alexej Pikovsky

“The greatest and unexpected challenge was the lack of paid traffic opportunities on platforms such as Google, Facebook, and Tiktok. Our initial business idea was to build a CBD marketplace with a diverse growth channel mix including pay per click.

Not having the ability to pass through Google and Facebook algorithms was an unexpected challenge and prevented us from growing as fast as we wanted to. The way we overcame it was by doing a lot of search engine optimization and influencer marketing. We have invested a lot into content and technical optimization, as well as building up a database of influencers.

In addition to that, we scaled up revenue from adding a services business providing value add to brands on our marketplace, as well as acquiring non-CBD brands under our alphagreengroup.com banner.”

Ryan Walton
Ryan Walton

Ryan Walton

“The most unexpected challenge for me, which applies today and when I started the business, is how obsessive you become with working and how hard it is to switch your brain off.

It’s really prevalent in my life – that addiction to work is a really big challenge because you’re suppose to live a life of balance which encompasses and embraces relationships and friendships outside of work. You can easily find, without knowing it, that your business can take over your life. My advice to new entrepreneurs would be to try and create a balanced life ahead of time before starting the business, form those positive habits and not experience burnout as a result.”

Alice Ojeda
Alice Ojeda

Alice Ojeda

“One of the big challenges we faced as we grew was scaling our systems. By systems I mean, how we built our website, where we hosted our subscriptions platform and our email marketing provider. When you start, it’s easy to go for the free trials and cheap start-up offers on digital providers.

It’s worth bearing in mind though the cost of switching as you grow and whether the platform you’re about to choose is the one you really want to lock your business into for the long-term. For example, we’ve migrated our subscription platform twice now and it was a real headache. To save this, do your research and choose carefully – start as you mean to go on.”

Pavel Stepanov
Pavel Stepanov

Pavel Stepanov

In the last 4 years of operation, some of the major unexpected challenges we have faced are finding and retaining good talent and leadership. It can be hard to find people who think similarly to you and want to see the company go in the right direction.

Finding employees who understand the company’s mission, and have the company’s interests in mind has been a struggle. It’s also been a challenge to find good leaders who can lead by example, be good trainers and mentors, and build up team morale and productivity.

Hiring someone can be scary, as you are taking the chance to trust them with part of your company. That’s why in the beginning, it was hard for us to let employees go, as you do invest and put faith in them that they will do well. When you let someone go, you’re letting them and yourself down, at least that’s how it felt in the beginning.

I ended up finding out that when you hire people who don’t think similarly to you, it can be harder to take on new projects together. Again, hiring was fast and easy – even fun and exciting. However, there have been times when people proved they didn’t have what it took, and it took a long time for us to decide to let them go.

For aspiring entrepreneurs that will hire someone for the first time, please keep in mind that they should not be qualified on paper only. Assess whether or not they were a good fit for the company. Make sure that the people you will hire always have the best interest of the company in mind. Bring on hard-working people who have a vision for your company and want to grow with you.

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The post 20 Entrepreneurs From Europe & North America Interviewed On The Challenges They Encountered During The Pandemic first appeared on Tekrati and is written by Jerome Knyszewski

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