Entrepreneurship 101 – How I handle my business.

20 September 2008 - By Ahson Rafiq - Filled in My Projects & Startups, News, Webmaster

I’ve wrote way too much on blogging and making money online, as I’m making my transition into real life marketing wtih Gurilla, I’m using alot of tactics I picked up through the last 2 or so years I’ve been making money online. To be honest an entreprenuer is someone who can establish him/herself on their own and how I explain entrepreneurs is someone who has earned their right to be called a certain someone in their own industry without it being handed to them.

This is Entrepreneurship 101 – The very basics (Kinda like my handbook)

Confidence in what you do.

If you’re not confident in what you’re doing theres no way anyone will take you seriously, to be a leader you’ll need to follow your own passion.

No bullshit

I’ve seen alot of people lie to themselves about the “potential” of their project, that’s where it gets ugly, if you start anything with a lie it won’t end pretty, know the pros but believe in the cons of your project, that’s what you need to focus on.

Do it yourself. Help is your last option

If you do everything with help from someone, then you’re not really an independent entity of your business, I know for a fact that you need to be resourceful and to know people in places where you can call for favours or whatever but that doesn’t mean you should depend on them. 

In my opinion (this is how I judge my self), If I get help from someone, that’s a sign of weakness, I’d rather learn it my damn self then go around asking for help and be seen as some helpless kid. So far, I earned whatever I have and who I am today, I’ve never asked for help from anyone and I pretty much never will, as far as I know at least.

While I’m at this point, I’d like to say that so called “partners” are just another way to say

“Hey, let’s work together, it’s much more better! How about you work today I got something to do, yea, we’ll still split the money and fame over the project, see ya”

No sucking up to sponsors or advertisers.

I’ve been on btoh sides of the marketing busniess, an advertiser and a publisher and I know suck ups when I see them.

If you want to get sponsored, that’s great, one of the easiest ways to come up too but if you suck up to the first sponsor that comes your way, you’ll never get anywhere. I’ve been approached atleast 10 times for sponsorships for alot of my projects and I’m not talking about just advertising, this is some real money that they’ll be providing me with to take my projects to another level in return for whatever they ask for, that’s where it goes wrong, usually sponsors want alot more from you then they are willing to give you, that’s where I state a plain NO, with a valid reason that I’m being ripped off in this deal and that I can do better on my own.

Don’t take a no or never leave with a bullshit reason.

If you are approaching a client or a company to work out a deal to work with them and they just keep bringing out new reasons not to work with you then you definitely deserve the right to say “What’s going on here?“ 

If you want it really bad then do not leave with a no, persuade them with your strategies/tactics and if you still can’t do it, never ever leave with a bullshit reason that would make you feel better, like I said, there is no room for lies when you want to make it on your own, go ahead and ask them as bluntly as you can, why wouldn’t they work with you, what’s going on there?

Unless you know your flaws you’ll never get ahead.

Money should not be hurdle.

I’ve learned to work my way around hurdles that require me investing alot of money, whenever I start a project I have atleast 30 free solutions with 2-4 paid solutions as a backup and yes, I do use the same tactic with every project, usually people end up blaming there failures on money, that really gets annoying,I know I can do 100x more things if I had a xxx,xxx budget but I don’t so I’m working my way around it on the other hand if I had that kinda budget I wouldn’t blow it all away just because I’m too lazy to work out a strategy.

Giving up is not an option.

If you want to be an entrepreneur, then giving up is not an option on your list, it shouldn’t be there in any case anyway..

I flip alot of sites and yes, I do call them my projects but the sole purpose for those sites is just to fuel my own expenses and personal financial status in the first place so when they get sold I consider it mission accomplished.

If you give up way too easily then maybe you’re not meant to be an entreprenuer.

No dead end jobs. No employment. No excuse.

If people have jobs and a project on their hand their excuse is : I don’t have enough time or I’m too tired after work or whatever.

The way I see it, I don’t work for anyone, I work for my self, I’ve always been a service provider with my own business model providing whatever services that are being considered at hand, I’m dedicated to what I do but theres no one looking over my shoulder, that gives me alot of creative freedom and it always has been like that since I started out online.

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15 Responses to “Entrepreneurship 101 – How I handle my business.”

  1. Tom - StandOutBlogger.com Says:

    What a great article! the points you have hit on are a lot of the excuses I give myself. So hopefully I can take what you have said and start building!

  2. Wei Liang Says:

    Great thoughts on entrepreneurship. And one more point to add that is don’t be lazy. Don’t slacken down when you see that there are abit of results coming. Instead work harder and achieve your goals and visions.

  3. Nicole Price Says:

    Man, I have not seem such straight shooting in a long time. Good post.

    I would however lay more emphasis on the service part of it.

  4. entrepreneuringyouth Says:

    This is my first visit to this blog and I’m pleasantly surprised by your frankness. This is is very good post. The part with “Giving up is not an option” was especially motivating.

  5. BlogRiffic.com » Blog Archive » Sunday Link Love - September 21st 2008 Says:

    [...] How I Handle My Business – BlueVerse.com [...]

  6. Eva White Says:

    That’s really telling it like it is!
    Great post!

  7. kouji Says:

    fair enough. i like the idea of doing everything myself at first so that i can learn the ropes. if i do elicit help later on from others, at least i’ll be in a better position to judge the quality of the work, since i’ve already tried doing it as well.

  8. Copywriters Needed/ No Experience Required- Make $200/hr Says:

    Yeah. Asking help from others can really be a drag because unfortunately, people don’t like competition so they will try to sabotage you and your work. Coming up with new marketing strategies is a must as well. When people play follow the leader, the same market gets saturated, making an entrepreneur success rate very low. Good tips though

  9. online money buzz Says:

    Another great post. You really explained this one well. I know what an entrepreneur is like now.

  10. Zurpit Says:

    Those are great tips and telling it like it is. Thanks for the post

  11. Julian Hooks Says:

    The giving up parts stands out to me… As a blogger I come across tons of abandoned blogs littering the blogosphere… Then again, I guess that’s less competition for me ;) “Never give up, never surrender!”– Tim Allen (Galaxy Quest)

  12. poems Says:

    The way you handle your business impresses me day by day. Appreciate sharing some of your secrets with us.

  13. Armen Shirvanian Says:

    That point about doing it yourself is quite large as asking for help might not be as helpful as expected. The returns of a procedure should be thought through before it occurs.

  14. Costa Del Sol Says:

    As an enterpreneur you have all the skills to handle to your business. I like this post.

  15. Digital Trail Camera Says:

    I like your attitude. I've worked as a slave for someone else for 13 years, I'm done with that, it sucks. I like being on my own, even though its less money right now.

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