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3 Simple Ways to Gain an Unfair Advantage in Your Business How to think about the work that lies ahead so you can ignore the shiny distractions that could derail you.

By Jon Nastor Edited by Dan Bova

Opinions expressed by Entrepreneur contributors are their own.

Do you know how many businesses fail within their first two years?

If you ask any entrepreneur, we're all able to tell you the grim statistics: nine out of 10 new ventures will never make it. Now, if you line up 10 entrepreneurs who are all starting new businesses, how many of them would say that their business will be one of the nine unlucky ones?

People like us have a tendency to put blinders on, keep our heads down and push forward into our new ventures, regardless of the odds we face. This is exactly what makes us the creators, makers and builders that our economies depend on.

Regardless of the stats, here are three ways to stack the odds in our favor and give ourselves and our businesses an unfair advantage.

Related: Mastermind James Altucher Reveals His Secret to Success

1. Stop looking for all the answers

In our constantly connected lives, we're often overwhelmed with ideas, thoughts and advice on how to make ourselves and our businesses better, more efficient and productive. While this advice may not be intentionally misleading, it can misdirect your attention and, therefore, damage your progress.

In order to gain your unfair advantage, you need to gain confidence in thinking, acting and working differently than anyone else. Know that -- as long as it works for you -- it's the right thing for you to do.

Successful entrepreneurs have confidence in themselves, their decisions and actions. This mindset enables them to know and accept that they don't have to be productive all the time. This allows them to work when they're ready to work and rest when they need to rest. It allows them to take breaks when required and work on weekends if there's work to be done. Above all else, it allows them to listen to themselves.

The most important distinction is that when you start to act confidently, you'll stop looking at other people to solve your problems -- you'll become the person that others go to for advice.

2. Good to bored to great

Large funding rounds, record sales months and flying across the country to network with brilliant business minds -- that's what we think of when we think of business.

What about bookkeeping, hiring (and firing), endless meetings, mind-numbing spreadsheets, copywriting, contracts, lawyers, accountants and auditors? These aren't the exciting parts of business, but they're essential to any successful enterprise.

This is where the boredom sets in -- and where the one succeeds and the nine others fail.

Related: How Your Daily Caffeine Fix Is a Silent Killer of Success

In a great article, entrepreneur and author James Clear says, "The difference between the best athletes in the world and everyone else is the ability to deal with boredom better than the others. When everyone else gets bored of doing the same exercises and drills, the ones who don't become the experts in their field."

Running your business is the same. The entrepreneurs who succeed are those who can work through this boredom and get the things done that need to be done.

3. Work in months

You want to build something big that has the potential to change your life. Yet you jump around from one idea to the next, without getting any closer to your goals.

You come up with a great idea for a new business, excitement and emotion take over, and you jump headfirst into your new project -- only to lose excitement and momentum after a few days or a week.

Anything that is worth your time and that will change your life is going to take you months to accomplish, whether you think so or not. Building a business is not a lottery -- you can't buy a ticket and suddenly hit success. Yes, people will try to sell you tickets to this lottery, but know it's a losing game.

When you plan in advance to work in months, you remove the expectation of instant gratification. At the same time, you've prepared yourself to settle in and get to work.

It's time to settle into the work that lies ahead and ignore the shiny objects that distracted the nine entrepreneurs who failed.

Only then can you be the one out of 10 who succeeds.

Related: This 90-Minute Morning Routine Will Make Your Workday More Productive

Jon Nastor

Host of the podcast Hack the Entrepreneur

Jon Nastor is the host of Hack the Entrepreneur on Copyblogger’s Rainmaker.FM podcast network, and co-founder at VelocityPage.

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