Mind Your Mentors
If you're looking for great advice on starting a business, ask those who've "been there, done that."
URL:
http://www.entrepreneur.com/magazine/entrepreneur/2001/december/46386.html
Ever wanted to ask the great and powerful Oz your business
start-up questions? You could get answers to your most pressing
quandaries: How can I distribute my product? What are the biggest
challenges of being in this industry? Where can I get a good
bologna sandwich?
Well, maybe not that last question, but every entrepreneur could
use some advice from above. In the case of entrepreneurship,
"above" can mean a megasuccessful entrepreneur in your
field who's gone before you. In the case of Jeff Snow and
Darrell Jochum, founders of Thepollgame LLC in Bellevue,
Washington, it meant getting advice from Pictionary inventors Rob
Angel and Terry Langston.
The object of Thepollgame is to predict how other players will
answer questions such as: Have you ever played spin the bottle?
Have you ever driven more than 100 miles per hour? The object for
Jochum and Snow, both 41, was to get the game onto coffee tables
everywhere. In 1999, armed only with their idea, Jochum searched
out Angel and Langston through a Seattle-area country club
connection. (Angel and Langston were members, and Jochum had been
the director of membership years before.) It wasn't easy to get
a meeting with the Pictionary inventors-their schedules were
jam-packed. "[Angel] never told me he wouldn't meet with
us, only that it was difficult," says Jochum. "So I kept
calling every week or two." It took about five tries to land a
meeting.
Playing the game over lunch convinced the two veteran gamers
that Thepollgame had great potential. "They wanted to let us
know that [getting a game to market] was a difficult process,"
says Jochum. The experts also provided some general information
about the gaming industry, made some constructive comments about
the game, and suggested Jochum and Snow get as many "average
Joe" opinions of Thepollgame as possible-a bit of grass-roots
market research.
Using the advice in their game and company, Jochum and Snow
expect sales to hit $600,000 this year. If you plan to achieve that
kind of success that quickly, asking experts about issues specific
to your industry can be invaluable. Says Ellen A. Rudnick,
executive director of the entrepreneurship program at the
University of Chicago's Graduate School of Business, "Many
[entrepreneurs] who have gone through it will have [stories] of how
they got their name out, how they got awareness of the product, how
they got distributors and so forth."
| | By the book | |
| When you're
about to start a business, it seems that everyone in the world has
advice to offer. Whom do you trust?
And where can you get reliable, up-to-date information? We came
across a groovy start-up e-book that melds the online and
brick-and-mortar worlds pretty successfully, while providing sound
start-up advice. The Live
Start-Up Business Guide can be found at www.connexx.org/startupebook. For a one-time
purchase price of $25, aspiring entrepreneurs can learn about
online and offline marketing, public relations, funding, technology
and business pitfalls to avoid. The e-book
format also allows for links to helpful Web sites such as
the SBA and the U.S. Patent and Trademark Office. One plus: Co-publisher John E.D. Coffey
and his passel of experts are available, via e-mail, to answer your
most pressing start-up questions. "We call it the Live
Start-Up Business Guide because it will change, adapt and be
constantly renewed," says Coffey. "And people who read it
can contact us directly-live." Now, when's the last time
John Grisham promised that to his readers? |
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