15 Reasons Why Startups Are Hard
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Building a team of “A-team players” is difficult when you don’t have the financial resources to attract/retain them and when Google/Facebook are knocking on their door every day offering them 2x what you can offer
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Everyone is motivated by different things and you need to cater to everyone’s (employees/investors/customers) unique and constantly evolving needs. Not everyone is driven by money. Some people may love recognition , but others value humbleness.
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Investors want to see a product and traction before they invest, but sometimes you need their money before you can create the aforementioned product and traction … say what? (this is especially relevant for Non-Technical Co-Founders)
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Starting a company means you should know everything about operating a business (accounting, HR, legal, finance, operations, strategy, marketing…the list goes on). I also love to buy a business and recently saw a brilliant business for sale in Naples FL and have opened negotiations so hoping that goes well. [Full Disclosure: I am horrible at accounting, so I let my co-founder take care of that – best decision ever]
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Although this isn’t always necessarily the case, starting a company often consumes your life. This might mean sometimes living like a hobbit for quite some time. This takes a toll on all relationships (friends, family, romantic). You need relationships to be happy, and you need to be happy to succeed. You need to find balance.
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When you raise financing, you should only raise just the right amount – this often means that your company will have enough money to survive for only 12-16 months. Entrepreneurs should be in the business of creating something awesome – NOT in the business of constantly pitching to investors.
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The thought of knowing that you only have $X left in the bank, and that this amount is depleting every…single…day
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Waking up and finding out that Google or Facebook decided to replicate your whole business overnight…as a FEATURE for one of their products (didn’t happen to us, but to many companies I’ve met). See Snapchat (company)
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Keeping calm, happy and optimistic even when you probably just had the shittiest day of your life because someone quit, your biggest customer left, your servers blew up, etc.
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Keeping your spirits up when everyone is saying NO to you
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Trying to convince a customer who has no money to spend money on your product. Consumers are taught to not spend money; businesses are taught to spend.
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Making the right business decisions when you don’t have any data to back it up and basing everything on your “gut”.
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Many entrepreneurs will raise many rounds of venture capital. Every round, they are giving away more and more (20-40% on average per round) of their company. It’s bloody hard sometimes to maintain your motivation when you’re giving away your baby. That’s why it’s very important to properly setup the capital structure of your company from the get-go.
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Waking up and remembering the stat that 90%+ of startups will fail and that you will probably be one of them and constantly telling yourself that you will not be part of that statistic
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Reciting the two infamous quotes “the most successful entrepreneurs never give up” and “if you’re going to fail, then fail fast” and trying to figure out which one comes first