Startup Founders, Focus! (Yeah, but on what?)
Paul O'Brien
Economic Development for Entrepreneurs and Innovation; publisher of Startup Economist. I help governments build ecosystems where entrepreneurs thrive, and venture capital wants to pay attention.
Focus.?We hear that word and advice bantered about A LOT in the #startup?community but rarely is that mentorship capably followed up with WHAT to focus on and why.?
This is what contributes to #founders?wasting time and failing. You think the advice is helpful; it's not, it's distracting.
Most of the advice I hear given is misleading.?
Focus on the wrong thing in this regard (As a startup founder mind you, this doesn't apply to business owners or working professionals), causes waste that will burn you out and cause failure.
Focus On What?
Focus on the PROBLEM. Be fixated on the problem. Nurture an addiction to the problem so great you need to snort it.
Not, the solution, Paul?
The mistake most make, and where many, particularly many investors in being horrible at advising, is that "focus" does NOT mean focus on making your solution work! You get misled by the notion that you need to prove the solution can work because of requests for traction as evidence but you can't ever prove anything will work as a company, because the solution alone isn't a company. What you can do, all you can do, is incessantly focus on creating value by serving the challenges inherent in problem.
* Odds are ridiculously high that that solution won't work, and the startup will fail *
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So, what do you do? Focus on the problem so that all of your efforts, distractions, pivots, and executions contribute to creating value serving the challenges inherent in the problem.
Two things tend to happen when you focus on the solution (or something other than the problem):
Operating Businesses (which aren't startups!) focus on the solutions: delivering the solution to customers, serving customers with that, and profiting (and yes, I mean profiting, not making money, because an operating business can focus on reducing costs and earning revenue = profit).
Startups must focus on the problem because you can't yet depend on the reliability or opportunity in whatever solution you're providing at the moment.
Distracting yourself from solving the problem, to sell what you're doing now to any customers or to chase a new opportunity that's exciting but unrelated, is a COST - a distraction from adding experience, data, market share, or revenue, from within the same focus as the problem.
Stay focused such that everything you are doing is aligned to continuing to overcome the problem, whatever that takes, and as a result, all of your effort, even if/when not specifically what you want to be doing, supports your mission of solving the problem and building a sustainable, competitive, valuable company?
Next time ANYONE advises you to simply "focus," ask them:
Make sure you ask them ALL THREE questions and not just, "on what?" because, if they can't answer those 3 questions in a way that is actually helpful toward you creating value from working the problem, then their advice is distracting (and likely wrong).
Christ Follower | Men's Ministry Advocate | Encourager
1 年This may be my favorite post of yours, Paul, from a long collection of good guidance. It aligns beautifully with Sinek's directive to start with WHY by encouraging startups to remain focused on WHY even after they've successfully launched.
Chief Executive Officer at Who's On LLC
1 年Exactly what I needed to hear. Thank you
Early-Stage Startup Advisor | Author | Strategic Execution & Ecosystem Building | Princeton University Office of Innovation
1 年Love this, Paul O'Brien! So well said, as usual. Chase the problem. How do you know it’s a problem? Think through the “Who, what, when, where, why, how?” approach. Yes, storytelling. Apply to problem. Who experiences the problem? How do you know? What is the problem? How do you know? When is it a problem? How do you know? Etc etc etc. Don’t try to boil the ocean. Chase the problem. Fall in love with solving the problem. Let that vision—a world without the problem—pull you. Thank you for coming to my TED Talk! ????
Realtor Associate @ Next Trend Realty LLC | HAR REALTOR, IRS Tax Preparer
1 年Thanks for sharing.
2nd Generational Heir to Nikola Tesla, 1st to Drazen, World's leading authority on CTP Energy Science, C-domain Communication?, CTP (anti)gravitic & FTL propulsion. Architect of the Nth Industrial Revolution?
1 年So many of these startup "coaches" and "I help founders" types I see on LinkedIn think EXACTLY opposite of this, post their bs, and ramble on about their worldview, blah blah blah blah blah - and repeat the same tired phrases and ideas - which is WHY I never work with most of them. Or even worse - some of these "founders groups". All about corralling founders, than actually helping them. "I help founders" What - get investors? Get over humps? "How" will these "I help founders" types actually directly help said founder(s)? I have yet to see it. This is GREAT Paul! "Most of the advice I hear given is misleading.? "Focus on customers," okay, but which ones?? "Focus on fundraising," sure... but that take a lot of time and attention. What happens if it doesn't manifest, and we spent our focus trying? "Focus on the product," well that's just dumb, if I'm being blunt. What if no one wants it or it's flawed?" Exactly. There's a lot of misleading and crap advice out there. Loved your article.