- Failing to spend enough time researching the business idea to see if it's viable.
- Miscalculating market size. Entrepreneurs say, 'The market size is 50 million people. If I only sell to 2 percent, I'd be selling a million.' But most products sell less than 1 percent.
- Making a commitment on sales projections that were wrong. Created costs that require those projections to be met. Run out of money.
- Overprojecting sales prospects.
- Making cost projections that are too low.
- Hiring too many people and spending too much.
- Lacking a contingency plans.
- Bringing in unnecessary partners.
- Hiring for convenience rather than skill requirements.
- Spending half their time doing something that represents 5 percent of their business.
- Accepting that it's "not possible" too easily.
- Focusing too much on volume and company size rather than profit.
- Looking for somebody to tell you you're right.
- Lacking simplicity.
- Lacking clarity of your long-term aim and business purpose.
- Going after too many targets at once.
- Lacking an exit strategy.
Tuesday, June 24, 2008
17 mistakes startups make -- the 100-word version
In 1999 John Osher started Dr. John's SpinBrush to sell a $5 electric toothbrush. In 2001, he sold the company to Procter & Gamble for $475 million. Here are his "17 mistakes start-ups make" in 100 words.
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