Get Off Your Asterisk and Do Something

Get Off Your Asterisk and Do Something

Have you started something recently? Do you have an idea you’ve been noodling on for a few years? Pull it out of the cedar chest, dust it off, and prepare to showcase. It’s startup week.

Twin Cities Startup Week gives entrepreneurs the opportunity to present their ideas to investors, collaborators, potential customers, and future employees. Coordinated by local companies, universities, and state agencies, this showcase of business ideas unites Minnesotans in a common interest of fueling our economy—local, regional, national, and global. Startups are the seedlings that will grow into mighty blue spruce trees. We need to offer support, resources, and praise to those willing to take the risk to plant something new.

As a supporter of startups since we started Capsule, our little Minneapolis based branding venture, here are some practical and philosophical bits for those just starting something up.

Write down what you think will happen with your new venture.?Fill a few pages of the wooden notebook you bought from Woodchuck answering these questions: Why are you doing this? (And it better not be “To get rich.”) Who are you doing this for? What do you hope will happen? What do you fear will happen? What is your philosophy of life? Where do you see your venture in one, five, and 10 years? (Be as specific as possible.) Show your answers to your mom. Listen carefully to her feedback. Then store this notebook in a safe place and get to work.

List your own strengths and weaknesses, then fill your gaps with the right people.The more honest you are with yourself, the faster you’ll fill the gaps and achieve your goals. Pick people who are driven, able to do the work, and enjoyable to be around; people who have a point of view, and can push you. Your early hires set the culture. What do you want your culture to be like?

Grit is an infinitely valuable attribute.?

There will be times in any new venture when things go sideways or backward, and you and your team will need the resolve to find a way through it. Why do most startups fail? The founders give up. Have the grit to get through.

But if you do decide to give up, do it today.?Not tomorrow. Have the humility to know that giving up is the right answer.

List your tangible and intangible assets, then add future potential intangibles.The tangibles—copyrights, patents, furniture, products—take work, so be organized. In the end, though, the value of your venture will primarily be intangible assets, so start building them from day one. That includes a great name and visual language. Your branding grows from there. Take the time to get it right or they become liabilities not assets. Your reputation is the largest intangible to start with; if it isn’t good or lacks reach (under 500 connections on LinkedIn), then get to a coffee shop immediately and start networking.

Starting something keeps you honest.?

You may be a bit too optimistic about your financial projections (everyone knows they’re all fairy-dust numbers). You may find yourself boasting about how things are going, to put a good public face on things and perhaps make yourself feel better about your future. But when everyone goes home, you need to face the real numbers—the ones you’ll have to present to bankers, investors, and others who do the math.

Fear is good, worry is worthless.?Know the difference. The fear of failure will take away at least one full night of sleep; count on it. Fear motivates more than pleasure, so when you know what you fear, walk back from that hypothetical scenario. You might find it easier to use your fear to avoid the worst-case scenario—bankruptcy. But it doesn’t mean prison time, at least not in this country. Worry, on the other hand, is a prison you build for yourself. If you can’t do something about it, why worry? If you can do something, get to work.

We’re willing to pull out lawn chairs at the drop of a parade announcement; the least we can do is cheer on those who face their fears and start something new.

For everyone else: Support those who do start something.?Attend events, offer advice based on your experiences, make connections, or just give praise. We’re willing to pull out lawn chairs at the drop of a parade announcement; the least we can do is cheer on those who face their fears and start something new. Or perhaps startup week needs a parade down Nicollet this year.

First published in Twin Cities Business Magazine, October 02, 2018.



Kimberly Johnson

MN Mobile Program Manager at 3M Cogent

3 年

This is a great posting. We should line you up to present it for the Innovation Practice Area of Global PMI. Connect with me if you are interested. My email is [email protected] Creative regards, Kim

Tammy Mann

Creative Director @ Finch Brands | Brand Strategist

3 年

As a founder of a Climate-friendly food brand, I can honestly say that the support from our Minnesota community was the catalyst I needed to get over many of the hurdles it takes to take an idea all the way through to a reality. For over 25 years my role was a Creative Director. The job to be done; learn as much as you can about your client, their brand, their competition - what makes them unique? How can you tell that brand story in a way that will resonate with their consumer and make them shine brighter than all the other options out there?! When I began my journey to create not only a climate-friendly brand, but a brand with a mission to change Americans’ perception of insects as food, I started with the brand in mind. It’s one thing to promote climate, but asking people to consider trying cricket protein is quite a big ask! I knew very little about how to test my MVP, COGS, Food science, getting licensed, supply chain… etc. Needless to say there is a LOT more to building a food brand than one might imagine. Twin City Startup is a perfect place to share your vision. Take a leap of faith and dive into the unknown. My advice to all of you with that burning idea: GO FOR IT!!!

要查看或添加评论,请登录

Aaron Keller的更多文章

  • Think & Link; Portia Hart

    Think & Link; Portia Hart

    We have, as humans, amazing opportunities to intersect with people doing inspired things in the world. We can choose to…

  • For Creative Meetings, Try Nordic Style Sparring

    For Creative Meetings, Try Nordic Style Sparring

    The brightness of my monitor jolts me awake, reflecting my groggy morning look. It’s 8 a.

    2 条评论
  • Welcome to the season of experiences.

    Welcome to the season of experiences.

    We have long wondered what would eventually cause the decline of Black Friday and all the inconspicuous consumption. It…

    1 条评论
  • Expo West, Observations and Approaches

    Expo West, Observations and Approaches

    This is for the one or two person marketing team carrying the entire load alone, we are here for you and can be your…

    10 条评论
  • Heading West for Expo

    Heading West for Expo

    Our work takes us all over the world, where we can identify opportunities for our clients to further their…

    2 条评论
  • Purpose: Think & Link

    Purpose: Think & Link

    Our purpose remains unwavering, even as our format evolves and the prominence of our guest speakers continues to grow…

    3 条评论
  • Our New Home

    Our New Home

    The spaces you occupy create the views you enjoy and the views inspire the creative work you produce. Capsule has had…

    39 条评论
  • Where we find inspiration.

    Where we find inspiration.

    In a recent conversation with a client the question came up, "where do you find all your inspiration and creativity?"…

  • A Big "If"

    A Big "If"

    Minnesotans have an opportunity of Silicon Valley proportions. But we’re not going to capitalize on it.

    9 条评论
  • Feeding the Startup Addiction

    Feeding the Startup Addiction

    Let’s go way back to the founding of Capsule in the year Prince made famous. We had a pair of investors when we first…

    9 条评论

社区洞察

其他会员也浏览了