entrepreneur skills


Tuesday, December 15th, 2009

Entrepreneur Skills a Tool For Navigating Risk

entrepreneur skillsAccording to Ram Charan, a highly acclaimed business advisor, speaker, and author who has coached some of the world’s most successful CEOs, you should work to anticipate the consequences of your risk. Pretty standard advice on the surface, but scratching deeper, you need to have a clear understanding of your situation and be able to identify the risks, whilst being able to think through the potential consequences of any decision you make. Ask yourself what could go wrong under various scenarios, both internally and externally, and then evaluate the potential effects and magnitude of the reaction to your decisions and analyse how to put your entrepreneur skills to work to minimize the risk.

Every time you take a risk, there are untested assumptions at play. When Henry Ford decided, in the early 20th century, to pay his workers $5 per day, it was more than double the industry standard. He based his decision on the simple belief that if his workers were paid a decent wage, they would become his customers. Had his judgment been wrong, the decision could have backfired and done irreparable damage to Ford’s finances.

Before you put your assumptions into action, think about what will happen if they prove incorrect. What if a key project leader leaves the organization, for instance, or if the engineers can’t make the technological breakthrough you’re counting on? Can your entrepreneur skills get you out of trouble or will you have to rely on help from others?

On the external side, consider what would happen if interest rates rise. What if there’s political unrest, a natural disaster, or a shortage of essential raw materials? What will your competitors most likely do? The more broadly you think, the fewer surprises you’ll encounter, and you will find out quickly that the more prepared you are, the luckier you will be. Your entrepreneur skills need to encompass an understanding of all of the possible consequences of your decisions and actions and the more you can take responsibility for them the more you will be able to take control of your future.

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Thursday, December 10th, 2009

Entrepreneur Skills: Learning from the Success of Others

entrepreneurReading about business is essential to your growth as an entrepreneur.  A good mindset to cultivate is one of being able to learn new things as quickly as possible, and adapt to as many different situations as fast and intelligently as possible. Entrepreneur skills are acquired and then need to be honed.

Studying up on other business successes is essential to grow one’s knowledge of life and recognize possibilities and opportunities. Ram Charan is a highly acclaimed business advisor, speaker, and author who has coached some of the world’s most successful CEOs. For 35 years, he’s worked behind the scenes at companies like GE, Bank of America, DuPont, Home Depot, 3M, and Verizon.

Charan started his business career as a teenager working in his family’s shoe shop in India. He went on to earn an engineering degree and then an MBA and doctorate in corporate governance from Harvard Business School. His impressive academic career spanned 30 years and he didn’t stop there. He wrote several books and is a successful entrepreneur in his own right.

Not surprisingly, he gets bombarded with questions regarding approaches to business. Some people argue that taking great risks is essential to the growth of their business, and that venture capitalists love aggressive ideas. His opinion is that although successful businesses have been built by business owners taking great risks, truly smart business minds use their entrepreneur skills to accurately measure the risk versus the potential benefit in order to make a balanced decision. Henry Ford, Richard Branson, or Rupert Murdoch, all made bold decisions with uncertain outcomes, but they made a sharp distinction between risk-taking and gambling.

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Monday, October 26th, 2009

Social Entrepreneurial education in Australia Gets a Boost

Entrepreneurial educationWithout entrepreneurial education a country’s financial future is in jeopardy and without social entrepreneurs our world would be a darker place.

Australia’s next generation have just been offered the key to a brighter future.

Social entrepreneurs are people who recognise social problems and use entrepreneur skills to organise, create, and manage a venture to affect social change. Their creative vision is channelled into making the world a better place.

The School for Social Entrepreneurs (SSE) Australia is a new non-profit venture based on the highly successful SSE in the UK which has been operating for 10 years. Their impressive team of trainers and support, including Social Ventures Australia, the SSE UK, and Steve Lawrence (a social entrepreneur and Chief Executive of the Australian Social Innovation Exchange) are all dedicated to entrepreneurial education. They specialise in identifying, developing and supporting social entrepreneurs and raising awareness and understanding of social entrepreneurship.

So now, year-long programs to support entrepreneurial education aimed at establishing effective, sustainable community projects and initiatives that meet social and community needs are available and the world will be changing for the better starting right here in Australia.

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Thursday, October 22nd, 2009

Tips to Increase Your Entrepreneur Skills

Entrepreneur skillsMany successful business owners work on their entrepreneur skills constantly. They examine how people get things done and they are both natural thinkers and problem solvers.

Scott Halford, an internationally known speaker and writer on brain-based success behaviours, believes we get so busy running our businesses that all of our learning is either on the job or in life. However, there are ways to keep your mind in tip-top shape so that you are always engaged in the learning process.

His advice is to read one article a day written by someone with an opposing opinion. Studies show that your brain chemistry switches when you are met with competing knowledge or an opinion that flies in the face of your own experience.

Even if you become frustrated, push through, as it will help you when you have to make difficult decisions in your entrepreneur business. You will be able to hear other viewpoints and take an overall look at the problem at hand.

Also, teach someone something that you’re passionate about. The teaching process reveals new learning for you since people have different questions about what you’re teaching. It forces you to rethink your subject in new and challenging ways.

Surrounding yourself with people who don’t think just like you do is sometimes scary but be brave enough to have dissention and you just may learn entrepreneur skills you would never have dreamed of.

Shane Krider- Polaris Media Group

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Saturday, October 10th, 2009

Photojournalists Forced To Learn Entrepreneur Skills

Entrepreneurs skillsThe changing face of media, combined with the pressure of the recession and the demise of the traditional newspaper, has given rise to a new breed of journalist. The fast-growing popularity of the concept of the MoJo: the mobile journalist, whose kit includes a convertible stills/video camera, a laptop for writing and editing and a high-quality sound recorder for interviews and podcasts. A journalist/photographer with entrepreneur skills.

According to Dare Parker the main reason a lot of journalists are staying freelance is that it gives them the opportunity to go out and do independent stories.  The journalists pick their own stories and sell them to various press organisations or publications, but in Australia particularly, since Time magazine closed its Australian office and The Bulletin folded, there are less places that will buy their work, prompting a need for entrepreneur skills.

A massive seismic shift in thinking was needed to redefine what journalists would have to do if they wanted to make a living from the business.

Reports now feature a stills gallery, video interviews and text. A MoJo can put a report package together in one day after receiving just five days’ training.

So what is the future of the modern journalist?

Perhaps they’ll be a bit of both photographer and journalist with a large dose of small businessperson thrown in – possessing not just multimedia skills and marketing savvy, but innovative entrepreneur skills and the financial acumen of an accountant.

Shane Krider- Polaris Media Group

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