Getting Started

The hardest part of doing anything is getting started. That's probably why most of us never get around to starting our own business until life kicks us in the butt. Freedom's just another word for nothing left to lose, after all. For those who are thinking of striking out on their own, but can't quite get the motivation, there's Guy Kawasaki's The Art Of The Start: The Time-Tested, Battle-Hardened Guide For Anyone Starting Anything. Kawasaki, a former Macintosh evangelist (that's market-speak for salesperson, I think) is no stranger to the techno-geeks among us. Now, he's a venture capitalist, author, and motivational speaker. And evidently, someone who is very adept at landing on his feet.

Although the book is written in the typical motivational, "how-to" style of short, punchy chapters, and peppered with vague motivational platitudes, it also has it's share of practical, useful information - whether your dream is to start a tech firm or a medical practice or a cleaning service. (You can "test drive" it here.) Chapters on refining a sales pitch (keep it short and to the point), writing a business plan (ditto), giving a presentation (down to the ideal number of slides and text size) how to talk to potential investors, creating a partnership (very good advice on when to bring in the lawyers), and how to "boot-strap" (live on nearly nothing until the money starts coming in) cover all the essential bases of any start-up.

I was skeptical at first, but the more I read the book, the more I wished I had it when I started my medical practice. (Instead, I had The Complete Idiot's Guide to Starting Your Own Business and a manual from the American Academy of Family Practice.) And, although those two sources had a lot of the nuts and bolts information I needed, such as how to get a tax ID, and how to decide between an S Corporation or an LLC, they lacked the motivational inspiration and people-skill advice that Kawasaki's has. I never had to worry about explaining to the bank exactly what it is my business does since everyone knows what a doctor's job description is, nor did I have to worry about marketing myself since I already had an established patient base. But I certainly could have used the tips for interviewing potential employees and for interpreting today's vague words of recommendation from former employers. And the chapter on solidfying the details of a partnership, is alone worth the price of the book. (She said as she recalled the ruins of a failed partnership.)

But perhaps the best part of the book is the reminder that even though you may have never had any prior experience running a business, the world is full of corporate masters who had similarly barren backgrounds. Think Oprah Winfrey.

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  • 1 - Bryce Eddings

    Dec 13, 2004 at 12:51 pm

    Listed at Advance

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