With a Little Help From My Friends
A strong support system will see you through the start-up phase and beyond.
URL:
http://www.entrepreneur.com/magazine/entrepreneur/2003/june/61952.html
Starting a business can be one of the most exciting--and yet
scary--times of your life. To get through the tough start-up phase,
every entrepreneur needs a great support system. Just ask Terri
Levine, a business coach and founder of Comprehensive Coaching U in North Wales, Pennsylvania.
"Think about creating your own network from day one,"
says Levine.
For instance, find other businesspeople in your industry through
your local chamber of commerce or Young Entrepreneurs'
Organization (YEO) chapter. You don't have to actually join
these organizations-just meet people through open mixers and
similar events. This worked well for Jeff Behrens, founder of
The Telluride
Group Inc., a technology management company in Newton,
Massachusetts. When he incorporated his company in 1995, he
networked every way he could-through YEO, with a local group of
CEOs . . . everywhere. "The more people I talk to, the more I
learn," says Behrens, 35. "Invite them out for lunch or
coffee--it's remarkably rewarding and surprisingly easy to
do." He found people were more than willing to advise a young
start-up. All he had to do was ask. Even now, Behrens says he
discusses both his business and personal life with his trusted
support network.
Ideally, your support system should include mentors and advisors
as well as business peers. Even people you don't know in the
flesh can be a support, says Levine. You don't have to
physically know a person; you just need to keep their words in your
mental arsenal for when the voices in your head shout you down. The
essays of an entrepreneurial guru, perhaps, or even a cartoon
character can help. One of Levine's clients put Mickey Mouse on
his team--to serve as a supportive mind-set to return to when the
entrepreneur needed to remember to have more fun in his venture. He
would just ask himself: What would Mickey Mouse do in this
situation? Says Levine, "I really invite people to get
creative."
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