promote yourself an entrepreneur

10 Insights To Move You From Idea To Action In 2013

Whether you are just about to launch your first blog, ebook or webinar or you are seasoned entrepreneur; I think you’ll benefit from these quotes taken from the Unstoppable Entrepreneur interviews I did this past year.

On Getting Started and Making It Happen

Thinking and doing are two different things. Until you actually put it out there..it’s just an idea! Do the work. Watch the complete interview with Natalie Sisson, the Suitcase Entrepreneur, where she shares her stellar product launch tips.

launching your first product entrepreneur

Hope will only get you so far! Watch my interview with Benny Hsu  of Get Busy Living, where he shares how he went from hoping to doing and launched an awesome app that netted him $30K in the first month. If that’s not taking action..I don’t know what is!

The lovely Natalie MacNeil of She Takes On The World shares her advice for getting started and moving from dreaming to doing. It’s all about committing to take action and shipping!

 Being Agile & Learning As You Go

Caroline Ceniza-Levine of Six Figure Start, talks about the importance of starting and adjusting as you go. Put the shortest path between you and earning your first dollars and get out there and talk to people. Figure out what you can do on your own in the beginning and be prepared to learn!

In our interview, Shelia Butler of Successful Women Talk, discusses the importance of putting systems in place FROM THE GET-GO! Because you are going to grow, right? And this helps you move from working in your business to on it.

On finding your WHY

Too often we get caught in all the glamorous stuff in our business..you know what I’m talking about: branding, biz cards and we kinda overlook the ‘under the hood’ stuff..like, what is this business all about? Find your why! Watch the complete interview with Nailah Blades of Polka Dot Coaching.

On a similar note, you need to find the balance between loving what you do and getting paid for it..If it’s all love and no cashola, then there may be a slight problem. Check out my interview with rad Kickstart Kitchen girls where we talked about kickstarting your business with a solid plan and accountability and lotsa other fun stuff.

On Staying Creative and Incorporating New Habits

entrepreneur digital sabbatical

Taking a break to detach and reconnect to our creative selves is so crucial. Watch my interview with Angela Horn of Balance and Life, where we discuss the importance of finding balance as an entrepreneur.

Click to Tweet: Unleash your creativity with a #digital #sabbatical @angelagayehorn http://bit.ly/UWEXKE via @SandySidhu

daily practice to integrate new skills and habits entrepreneur

Too often when we are starting something new, we tend to think we have to ‘do it all’. Go big or go home? Not so fast! Claire Kerslake of Loving Life With Diabetes, shares the importance of actually starting small and working on integrating that new habit on a daily basis to actually cement the habit and stick to it.

Putting Yourself Out There 

 promote yourself an entrepreneur

 I absolutely loved what Cindy Gallop shared when I met her earlier this year as it is sooo true and necessary!

And there you have it!

Click to Tweet: 10 Insights To Move You From Idea to Action http://bit.ly/UWEXKE  via @SandySidhu feat. @suitcasepreneur @cindygallop @kickstartkitchn

Click to Tweet: Stop dreaming and take action to reach your goals http://bit.ly/UWEXKE via @SandySidhu @benny_hsu @nailahblades @sixfigurestart

Your turn:

  1. I’d love to hear in the comments which insight resonated with you the most and how you plan on incorporating it in your biz (and life!) in 2013.
  2. Know someone who could benefit from these insights? Please share this post with them! Greatly appreciated 🙂

 

Episode 17: How To Find Balance As An Entrepreneur with Angela Horn

An important part of being an entrepreneur is learning from your peers. “Unstoppable Entrepreneur” profiles entrepreneurs who have taken the leap to follow their passion and create their own work & lifestyle. They share their expertise: tips for success, tools they use and valuable insights they have learned along the way.

This week I had the pleasure of speaking to Angela Horn of Balance and Life. Angela shares how she adopted a minimalist lifestyle and how we as entrepreneurs can learn from this lifestyle and apply it our busy lives.

Watch/Listen to the video below and share your feedback below!

Key Takeaways

  • Take a digital sabbatical at least once a week: Take small steps and start with an hour
  • Be mindful of who you friend on Facebook (or follow on Twitter) so you don’t get sucked in to their drama
  • Detach to get creative: it’s too easy to edit yourself on your laptop. Go old school and grab a pen and paper and let the ideas flow!
  • Social media can be a time-suck if you are not mindful. Focus on what you hope to achieve and set limits to how much time you spend

Resources Mentioned

  • Rescue Time: see where you are spending your time and remove any in-efficiences from your day
  • Anti-Social: don’t have the willpower to logout of social media? Anti-social will do it for you.

 

About Angela

Angela Horn is a Cape Town-based freelance writer, lifestyle blogger and public speaker. Feel free to stalk her on Twitter or harass her via email. Alternatively you can just head over to Mostly Mindful and sign up for her bi-monthly minimalist missives..

creating a launch plan

7 Lessons Learned From My First “Failed” “Business”

So the first thing you’re probably wondering is why the words “failed” and “business” are in quotes. And no, I don’t have a second and third failed business 😛

We’ll get to that but first, a back-story.

My first business, in retrospect, wasn’t so much a business but a hobby.

Some background

A bit more about the business: it started out of the idea that once we leave school it becomes harder to meet people our age, not just relationship-wise but friends who share common interests, as well.

My friend and I started this venture together, after voicing similar concerns and seeing that existing groups that we were part of weren’t serving our exact needs as well as through discussion with other people.

What we did right:

1-  Identify A Need

We didn’t do everything wrong- we saw a need and for a large part, were ‘scratching our own itch’.

We began by identifying what was missing from the existing groups that we were a part of and started listing out our requirements.

2-  Don’t Reinvent The Wheel

We  found a relatively low-cost web platform that we could use to host our eventual site and the network we were going to build. Win! We weren’t reinventing the wheel (my first semester programming prof would be so proud).

Identifying existing resources you can use is really important, rather than having to build everything from the ground up and helps keep costs low. In our case, we used Ning, which lets you create a white-label social network/group.

But we were (and are) getting ahead of ourselves.

We started creating a product before we had:

3-  A  clear vision/problem statement

While we did identify that we were creating a local social network for women we didn’t get very specific about the exact need we were solving beyond socializing and making friends.  Would we focus solely on social activities or would we also do educational/business events?

4-  A clear target market

What age and phase of life were they in? Were they single, married?  Were they willing to pay for events?

We ended up having a mash-up of interests and age groups because we didn’t focus. Consequently, we had people asking for many different things and a range of age groups to satisfy.

5-  A plan for money (this is HUGE!)

Now, don’ get me wrong, this site wasn’t a complete dud.

In its time of glory, we had gotten over 2000 members to join the site, all using “free” methods like social media (but we all know social media isn’t free, right?)

We had many active members, and friendships blossomed.

The site did serve its purpose however what was our bigger purpose with the site?

I was proud of creating something useful for my local community and knowing that on some level I was having a positive impact on people’s lives (finding a BFF is huge!)

We had some ideas of how we could make money but it all depending on certain things:

  • Would we charge members?
  • Would we ask venues for sponsorship?
  • Would we seek advertising?

These were some of the hard questions we should have asked ourselves in the beginning if we were serious about turning this into a real business and not just keeping it as a side-hustle that earned money on occasion.

The “Business”

In retrospect, it wasn’t really a business because if your business isn’t making any money, is it really a business?

It sure can’t stay in business for long!  (Unless you have plans to seek outside investment).

And as for “failed”

I don’t see it as failure at all but a really good learning experience that helped me do things much differently this time around. Not to mention, everything in our past shapes who we are today: both the successes and failures!

6- A plan

This was more of a side-thing while I was in a regular 9-5 job, though I did have the occasional vision of grandeur but the problem was not having a clear plan on how to get there. If this was going to turn into something I could use to supplement my income (and maybe even one day replace it), how much did I need to make every week, every month? How many sponsorships would I have to get?

In your case, this may be signing on more clients which means getting more exposure to your target market. This may come in the form of doing more outreach, regular guest posting and so on. It all boils down to having a plan and then working that plan!

7-  Knowing when to ‘exit’

Looking back things are always clearer and the could’ve and should haves are glaringly obvious.

But when things are no longer working and you have invested time and effort in it you have to decide whether to keep it as a hobby or move on.

As my friend Benny Hsu put so well, “hope is not a strategy”.

You can’t rely on hope alone to make your business a success but have to take active steps to make it a reality.

If that product launch didn’t go so well, don’t abandon it but learn from it and see what can be improved for the next time.

Back in my software developer days, at the end of every project or software release, we would get the key stakeholders in the room and go over our ‘lessons learned’. What did we learn from the outcome? It was an opportunity to highlight both the positives and negatives in an attempt to capture them and incorporate them into the next project.

Lessons Learned

While you can’t know everything before you start, it’s important to have an idea of where you are hoping to go and how you plan on getting there.

Figure out what problem you will solve, who you’re solving the problem for and then start building the product and the supporting infrastructure.

Whether it’s your teleclass, ebook or program- don’t just create it and hope that “they” (the money, the peeps, whatever your “they” is) will come.

Your turn

1-      Did any of these lessons resonate with you? Leave me a comment below!

2-      Know someone who could benefit from this post? I would appreciate if you would forward it to one person. Thanks!

Need help brainstorming your next product idea or figuring out your ideal customer? Schedule a complimentary 30 minute coaching session and we’ll get you moving from idea to action!

Episode 16: Differentiating Yourself In Business With Jennifer Donogh Of Young Female Entrepreneurs

An important part of being an entrepreneur is learning from your peers. “Unstoppable Entrepreneur” profiles entrepreneurs who have taken the leap to follow their passion and create their own work & lifestyle. They share their expertise: tips for success, tools they use and valuable insights they have learned along the way.

This week I had the pleasure of speaking to Jennifer Donogh, Director of Young Female Entrepreneurs and Owner of Ovaleye. Jennifer discusses how when she first started working in the family business, Ovaleye, she was often one of the only females at various tech conferences which prompted her to eventually start Young Female Entrepreneurs. She also shares how Ovaleye got started with using video and how it helped them differentiate themselves.

Watch/Listen to the video below and share your feedback!

Key Takeaways

  • You can use video as a differentiator for your business and use it to complement your existing content strategy
  • Getting started with video doesn’t have to be hard! Grab your iphone and get started!
  • Advice to new entrepreneurs: read as much as you can!! There are tons of valuable resources available that won’t cost you a fortune.
  • Finding your ‘Business Bestie’

Your turn:

  1. Have you started using video in your business ? Share a link in the comments below! If not, grab your iphone or your webcam and give it a go! Let me know how it goes!
  2. Do you have  a friend or colleague who could benefit from this post? Email and share it! Thanks 🙂

Resources Mentioned

The Pumpkin Plan by Mike Michalowicz

The Bootstrap Bookclub

About Jennifer Donogh

Jennifer Donogh is the Director of Young Female Entrepreneurs, whose mission is to help young women on their path to profitable businesses while building a collective reputation that is philanthropic, successful, multi-faceted, and collaborative.

 

 

Webinar: Join me on November 29th 2-3pm EST where I will share a 3 step system to take the overwhelm out of creating your first product. Spaces are limited!

 

 

How Do You Manage Your To-Do List?

Last week I posted this question on my Facebook page as I was curious to see what other people use to manage their to-do list on a daily basis as well as when it comes to a product launch.

The responses varied and included several which I am currently using and others that I plan on checking out.

Erica Lee from EngineerYourLife uses TeuxDeux to manage her to-do list. Teux-Deux is a no-nonsense web-based browser app that lets you create and manage your to-do list. There is also an iPhone app so you can sync your updates.

Luz Garcia-Pennock of LovelyGalPosh uses her Google Calendar to track and manage her daily to-do items. I use this method as well and like blocking off specific times to work on things.

Angela Horn from Balance and Life has gone back to using the good old-fashoned paper and pen method and finds crossing items off very gratifiying. I totally get that and sometimes have found myself adding items to the list that weren’t there just so I could cross them off 😛

What do I use?

I started using Action Method recently and like the fact that I can organize tasks by project and have a visual overview of what needs to get done. I also use a paper to do list and post-it notes because there is something about the tangible-ness that I can’t seem to shake. I have a wall in my office where I post the projects and their respective to-dos because it’s always in front of me where I can see it.

Clearly there is no one-size fits all method but the key is to find what works for you that allows you to get things done!

Whether we’re in the middle of a product launch or just keeping up with the day-to-day, we need a way to keep track of everything that needs to get done. Let me know in the comments what you use to stay organized and on top of the always growing to-do list!