People have
told me no more times than I can count. No, that idea won’t work. No, I don’t
want to buy your product. No, I don’t want to invest in your company.
1. No fuels
your entrepreneurial fire. I became an entrepreneur simply because someone had
the nerve to tell me I couldn’t sell pest control door to door during a summer
in college. After calling repeatedly to convince the owner to hire me, he told
me I simply wasn’t cut out to be a salesman. I decided to assemble my own team
and made $80,000 in a few months selling for his competitor. I won’t deny
taking a little satisfaction when I later bought his office furniture after his
business went under. In the moment, rejection stings. Someone is sizing you up
and saying you don’t have what it takes. Don’t feed the pain. Channel the
frustration and let it fuel your fire. Go show them why they just made one of
the biggest mistakes of their life.
2. No
sharpens your focus. As CEO, my role requires that I also dish out my fair
share of no's. Three years after
starting my business, I was offered $1 million to sell it. I passed -- a pretty
bold move considering I was paying my way through college. It wasn’t the right
time and I had bigger dreams for the business. Nearly two decades later, I said
yes when my company, Vivint, was acquired for more than $2 billion. One of the
most important skills an entrepreneur can develop is to learn when to say no,
whether to a buyer or even to a good idea. Apple’s Tim Cook once said, “We say
no to good ideas every day. We say no to great ideas in order to keep the
amount of things we focus on very small in number so that we can put enormous
energy behind the ones we do choose.” One of the biggest things that can crush
a business is getting spread too thin. Saying no helps your team prioritize and
maintain a hyper-focus on creating nothing but the best.
3. No never
stops coming. Given the success of Vivint and our one million smart home
customers, some might think I’m done hearing the word no. They’re wrong. In
2011, we were preparing to launch our residential solar company, Vivint Solar.
Not only did the “smartest” venture capitalists pass on the opportunity to
invest, but even our current backers at the time passed as well. Although our
own partners witnessed first-hand that we could build an enormously successful
company -- and put a whole lot more money than they invested back in their
pockets -- they didn’t think we could do it again in an adjacent market. We did
it anyway after finding backing from firms who actually wanted a surefire
return on their investment. Vivint Solar went public three years later with a
$1.6 billion initial public offering. When we rang the opening bell at the New
York Stock Exchange, I wore a T-shirt with a collage of headshots of everyone
who said we couldn’t do it. While I got a lot of satisfaction from making those
VCs regret their decision not to invest, the fact is that you will always be
challenged and face naysayers, no matter your track record. That’s when it’s
time to get all hands on deck and prove the haters wrong. The reason we as
entrepreneurs hear no so often is because people don’t believe we’re capable of
making our dreams a reality. You can’t control how people respond to your
ideas, but you can control how you face rejection. When you get rejected (and
you will), remember that "no" isn’t the end of the road. It’s
just more wood on the fire.
Πηγή: entrepreneur.com
Δεν υπάρχουν σχόλια:
Δημοσίευση σχολίου