The Secret to Starting a Business Is Managing the Changes
Going in a new direction requires adjustments. The key is doing what needs to be done at your pace.
Starting something, whether it's a new business, product or service,
exercise or morning routine is exciting, motivating and comes with a
healthy dose of vision, too. These are the things that get us through
the first week, the first two weeks, the first month and so on.
But
things can get hard. We face challenges that run the risk of derailing
us. I've certainly experienced that in my own business, especially
considering that my entire marketing structure is based on content.
Getting derailed is easy when you see fluctuations in traffic or
receive negative comments, for example. And sometimes, we simply lose
focus because we feel like the challenge that we set ourselves is simply
too much. We realize maybe we bit off more than we can chew. Everyone
has expected these feelings at some point.
When it comes to starting your own business, creating a new product
or trying to diversify your product range, these kinds of feelings can
have a serious, tangible effect on your actual, real-life cash flow too.
The
great thing is there are so many tactics and strategies that you can
use to stay on track, but when we consider the notion of "starting"
something, we're often viewing that from the perspective of stopping or
certainly winding down, something else.
Let's use the example of
starting your first business. Typically that business started out as a
side project, or something happened that forced you out of your previous
job and caused you to decide to start something for yourself instead of
finding another similar position elsewhere. The bottom line is,
starting your first business is a different rhythm to what you've been
doing, usually.
It's an entirely different draw on your time,
requires you to be focused and motivated, self-initiated and accountable
to yourself. And this is where problems can start. This is when the
overwhelming feelings can set in.
The secret to starting: Finding your pace of change.
Change
is something that we should all embrace. But the truth is that we can't
all embrace change in the same way, with the same processes and
outcomes. Change can be hard. When considering a switch into
self-employment, change can be even tougher. You have a myriad of things
to worry about:
- Covering your bills
- Finding out exactly what it is you want to do
- For whom you will do it
- Logistics of delivering it
- Where to work from
- How to attract customers
The list is endless.
Change
is a great thing, but it brings with it a whole range of new
challenges, challenges that you simply may not appreciate or be ready
for. The secret to progressing through a period of change -- namely
starting your own business -- when things appear insurmountable is to
identify your own "pace of change."
What is "pace of change?"
Sadly, many new business owners
give up too soon because the level of change that they experience during
those first few weeks and months simply becomes too much for them.
Just
like diving back into a gym routine and expecting to lift the same
amount of weight as you did when you were at your peak will feel
impossible to start with, expecting to begin a new business, create your
own personal routine within your business, and identify the tasks you
need to accomplish every single day to keep that business moving forward
will feel uncomfortable.
But discomfort is to be embraced,
learned from and worked through. The real issue isn't the discomfort at
all. The real issue is that we easily compare ourselves to those around
us, those we see online and anyone else, frankly, who we feel are
"better" than us. As so, we become frustrated by the progress that we
are, or aren't, making. But rather than assess progress against our own
previous milestones, we assess it against the perceived success of
everyone else. The result of this is that we force ourselves into a pace
of change that can be too fast for us.
Everyone approaches change
at their own pace. The secret to maintaining some early stage sanity
and focus is to realize what your pace of change is. How much can you
embrace before you feel overwhelmed? Where is your line? How much change
can you take before you start to revert back to your default,
"employed" behavior?
Habits are hard to break and equally, new
habits take a time to form. Don't forget that when you start your first
business. You simply haven't done this before and thus, you're
experiencing not only a financial change, but a cultural one too. Be
mindful of your body, and listen to what your mind is telling you. Trust
your gut instinct, and allow yourself to accept the change gradually.
The
key lies in prioritizing what needs doing versus what you can actually
accept as part of your new routine. Your responsibility is to carry out
tasks, every single day, that move the needle in your business. Those
tasks should come before anything else.
If you're too focused on
being the ultimate entrepreneur and emulating the success that you see
online from people who have been doing it for years, then you will
create a pace of change that is simply too fast for you. Likewise, if
you try to accelerate towards your vision too quickly, you could again
force a pace of change that you're not comfortable with.
There's a difference between being motivated, driven and results
oriented and trying to do too much, too soon. Your pace of change is the
speed at which you can embrace your new routines, new approaches and
processes while still being focused on creating and measuring results.
This
balancing act is key in the early days of your first business, and
without it, one side will take over. You will focus fully on results and
realize that you let the backend of your business slip, only to watch
it push you into burnout, or you will focus entirely on the "feel good"
work on the backend of your business, not separating what you need to do
from what you like doing. You'll find yourself left with no cash in the bank, really quickly.
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The Secret to Starting a Business Is Managing the Changes
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