• Innovative Strategies That Create More Profits

Contents Leadership/Execution

START HERE>  This Post is the table of contents for the Execution module. Please review the articles you want to look at and click on the article. It will take you to that article. You can then click back to this page and select another article you want to read or re-read, You also have the option to simply read all of the articles as they were posted on this module.

If you have questions, you can email us from the contact.  Also, if you have a suggestion for an article you or you think others would like information about, email us and we will look into it. You can email us at https://https://harborcapitalgroupinc.com/wp-content/uploads/2024/07/Braintopview-1.jpg.com/contact-us

 

 

 

Contents: Execution

Execution

Management

Productivity

Raising Funds

Business Plan

Regulations

Top CEOs make good decisions just over half the time. You can do better.

 Based on research conducted by McKinsey and Company, about 52% of decisions made by senior CEOs end up being good decisions. I would have guessed that number to be much higher. These are some of the most intelligent people in business, yet this is only slightly better than flipping a coin.  

We can all remember some of the spectacularly wrong decisions. Remember, “New Coke” lasted 79 days before being taken off the market. Or how about Ford’s Edsel car, which cost them 350 million dollars, was researched by many focus groups and then was shut down after 24 months.

As a business leader, you have to make many decisions under pressure and often without much time to think about them. So, how do you become a decision-maker that makes good decisions?.

You can read many books and articles that offer reasons why people make bad decisions and other books and articles on advice and models of making good decisions. Here are some examples from Jack Zenger in a Harvard Business Review article.  

Laziness; failure to gather input or check facts

Not anticipating unexpected results

Indecisiveness (little information or changing information)

Remaining locked in the past and using old data that may not be true today

Having no strategy alignment, meaning not being connected to the problem or strategy

Over-dependence on other people’s decisions

Isolation by not drawing in other’s opinions

Lack of technical depth

Others offer advice on setting up a model for decision-making. For example:

Define the problem (with clarity)

Identify the decision criteria

Develop the alternatives

Evaluate alternatives

Select the best alternatives

Here are a few thoughts from people we know are excellent decision-makers:

Colin Powel said never make a decision with less than 40% of the information you need, and never delay a decision once you have 70 percent of the information you think you need,

Steve Jobs would talk to his employees about a problem or opportunity and make an intuitive decision.   

Daniel Kahneman (author and professor) wrote a book on how we use our brains to think. In his excellent book, “Thinking Fast and Slow,” he talks about our fast brain, which gives us an immediate answer (there is a tiger in the bushes), and our slow brain, which provides us with an in-depth explanation based on all the information our brain has stored over time. 

But in the past few years, there is another way to think about decision-making based on our perceptions.

 Decision Making Based On Preceptions

We can look at decision-making from two perspectives: processing and perceptions. 

Processing is like putting all the ingredients together to make a meal. When we have the information, we have developed excellent methods for processing that information, including the following:

Mathematics

Statistics and probabilities

Computers and data processing

The production of the ingredients– for information processing– is the role of perception. 

It is a perception that organizes the world into Xs and Ys and then processes it with mathematics.

It is a perception that gives us the observations for propositions that we then handle with logic.

It is a perception that provides us with the words which we use to think about anything.

We have developed great processing systems, but we have done very little about perception because we have not understood perception.

It’s only recently that we have begun to understand the behavior of self–organizing information systems and self-organizing neural networks of our brains. This gave us the model to understand perception, humor, and creativity.

Creativity takes place in the perceptual phase of thinking, where we form perceptions and concepts. According to author Edward De Bono, Most of the mistakes in thinking are inadequacies of perception rather than mistakes of logic. Our emphasis has been on logic or truth rather than perception. With perception, we do not see the world as it is but as we perceive it and process this information over time. 

An example of perception vs. processing  

A group of young boys decided to pick on Johnny, one of the younger boys. They offered him two coins, a large coin worth two dollars and a smaller coin worth one dollar. Johnny picked the smaller coin, and the boys all laughed and teased him. They repeated this “trick” on Johnny several times. 

One day, an older man saw this and asked Johnny why he chose the smaller coin worth a dollar vs. the larger coin worth two dollars. Johnny’s response was. “how often would I have been offered more coins if I had taken the two-dollar coin initially?”

A computer programmed for value would have taken the two-dollar coin the first time. But it was Johnny’s human perception that allowed him to take a broader view and consider the possibility of repeat business.

This example was a complex example of clear perception; Johnny had to assess how often his friends would want to tease him, how many one-dollar coins they would be willing to lose, and how long before they realized what he was up to? There was also the risk factor involved here.

This example shows the difference between a computer and a human. The computer is given its perceptions and then processes the information. The human mind forms its perceptions by choosing to look at the world in a particular way.

,

However, we end up in our perception bubble — our own bias.

The logic bubble is that personal bubble of perceptions within which each person acts logically. The logic is correct, but if the perceptions are limited or faulty, the resulting action may be inappropriate.

Here is one way to broaden your perspective 

  1. Scan the plus points. 
  2. Then, the minus points. 
  3. And finally, the interesting facts.

Here is another story from Edward DeBono to illustrate this process. A class of 30 boys was offered the option of getting 5 dollars a week to attend school, and 29 of the 30 boys opted in. Then, in step two, the boys asked if the 5 dollars would have to be returned if their school work was unsatisfactory. The answer was yes. So, in step three, they all changed their minds.

 

 The comfort of logic vs. perception

We have always felt uncertain with perception and preferred processing logic. However, to make better decisions, we need to expand our view to see additional options. In the end, however, we have to come back to the world of logic to present ideas that are solid, workable, and of testable value.

But, our perception is also biased because we live in our own bubble. Therefore, we have to broaden our bubble to include, as much as possible, the perceptions of other people in our life, industry, market, and competitors to get the broadest possible perception of “what could be” before we make that decision. 

Broadening your worldview is critical to making great decisions. Ask yourself, What other perceptions are out there that we could use to our advantage?  

To make impactful, lasting decisions that move your company forward, you have to look at a broader picture than simply accepting information and processing it. 

 

Avoidable Mistakes Made Preparing Business Plans For Investors: Part Three 

Financial Model Mistakes

Only cash is cash  

Suppose you sell something this month for $100, and it cost you $60 to make it. But you have to pay your suppliers within 30 days. But the buyer probably won’t pay you for at least 60 days.

In this case, your revenue for the month was $100, your profit for the month was $40, and your cash flow for the month is zero. Next month your cash flow will be -$600 when you pay your suppliers.

Although this example may seem trivial, very slight changes in the timing difference between cash receipt and disbursement of just a couple of weeks can bankrupt your business.

When you build your financial model, make sure that your assumptions are realistic.  

Lack of detail

Your finances should be constructed from the bottom up and then validated from the top down. The bottom of the model starts with details such as when you expect to make specific sales or hire more employees.

Top-down validation means that you examine your overall market potential and compare that to the bottom of revenue projections.

Round numbers like 1 million in R&D expenses in your two, and 2 million in your three, are you sure sign that you do not have a bottom-up more. 

Unrealistic financials

Only a small handful of companies achieve 100 million or more in sales only five years after founding. Projecting much more than that will not be credible and will get your business plan canned faster than almost anything else. On the other hand, a business with only 25 million in revenues after five years will be too small to interest serious investors. Financial forecast or a litmus test of your understanding of how venture capitalists think.

If you have a realistic basis for projecting 50 to 100,000,000 in five years, you probably a good candidate for venture financing; otherwise, you should probably look elsewhere.

Insufficient financial projections

Basic financial projections consist of three fundamental elements: income statements, balance sheets, and cash flow statements. All of these must conform to generally excepted accounting principles or GAAP.

Investors generally expect to see five years of projections. Of course, nobody can see five years into the future. Investors primarily want to see the thought process you employ to create long-term projections.

A good financial model will also include sensitivity analysis, showing how your projected results will change if your assumptions turn out to be incorrect. This allows both you and the investor to identify the assumptions that can have a material effect on your future performance to focus your energies and validate those assumptions.

It should also include benchmark comparisons to other companies in your industry, things like revenues per employee, gross margin per employee, gross margin as a percent of revenues, and various expense ratios (general and administrative, sales and marketing, research and development, and operations as a percent of total operating expenses.

Conservative assumptions

Nobody ever believes that assumptions are conservative, even if they truly are. Develop realistic assumptions that you can support, refrain from using words “conservative “or aggressive “in your plan, and leave it at that.

Offering a valuation

Mini business plans here, stating that their company is worth a certain amount. How do you know? The value of a company is determined by the market, by what others are willing to pay. Unless you are in the business of buying, selling, or investing in companies, you probably don’t have an accurate sense of what the market will bear.

If you name a price, one of two things will happen to tell you that your price is too high, and investors will toss your plan, or thar5 your price is too low, and investors will take advantage of you. Both are bad. The purpose of the business plan is to tell your story in the most compelling manner possible so that investors will want to go to the next step. You can always negotiate the price later.

Stylistic mistakes

Poor spelling and grammar

If you make silly mistakes in your business plan, what does that say about how you run your business? Use your spelling and grammar checkers, get other people to edit the plan, do whatever it takes to purge embarrassing errors.

Too repetitive

All too often, a plan covers the same points over and over. A well-written plan should cover key points only twice, once briefly and then the executive summary, and again in greater detail, in the plan’s body.

Appearance matters

At any point in time, an investor has dozens, if not hundreds of plants waiting to be read. Get to the top of the pile and making sure that the cover is attractive, the binding is professional, the pages are well laid out, and the fonts are large enough to be easily read.

Execution mistakes

Waiting until too late. The capital formation process takes a long time. In general, count on six months to a year from when you start writing the plan until the money is in the bank. Don’t put off your management team should be prepared to invest about 500 hours into the plan. If you are too busy building your product, company, or customers (which is probably a better use of your time. Consider outsourcing the development of the business plan.

Failing to seek outside review

Make sure that you have at least a few people review your plan before you send it out. Preferably people who understand your market, sales, and distribution strategies, the DC market, etc.

Your plan may look perfect to you and your team, but that’s because you’ve been staring in for months. Good objective reviews from outsiders with fresh perspectives can save you from myopia.

Over tweaking

You could spend countless hours tweaking your plan in the pursuit of perfection. A lot of this time would be better spent working on your product, company, and customers. At some point, you need to pull the trigger and get the plan out in front of a few investors. If the reaction is positive, and they want to move forward, great.

If the reaction is adverse, assuming that the investor was a good fit to begin with, and you may have been heading down the wrong path. Get feedback from a couple of investors, and if a consensus emerges, go back and refine your plan.

Conclusion

It’s a tough investment climate, but good ideas backed by good teams and good business plans are still getting funded.  Give yourself the best chance by avoiding these simple mistakes.

Avoidable Mistakes Made Preparing Business Plans For Investors (part two)

 

Do not be too technical. 

People with technical backgrounds or specialized products often fill the document with jargon and concepts with no meaning for the non-technical person. Investors are interested in how the product works, but only in reference to how it solves the problem. 

For example, when Steve Jobs introduced the iPod, it had 5 gigabits of storage. No one other than engineers knew what 5 gigabits were, so the way he explained it was to say with the iPod, you could put 1,000 songs in your pocket.

If investors are interested in your opportunity, they will have engineers look at the technology in depth. You can also detail the technology in a separate document. 

No risk analysis

Investors are in the business of balancing risks versus rewards. Some of the first things investors want to know are the risks inherent in your business and what has been done to mitigate the risks.

The key risks of entrepreneurial ventures

Market risks: Where people actually buy what you have to say, will you need to create a major change in consumer behavior?

Technology risks: Can you actually deliver what you say you can? On a budget and on time?

Operational risk: What can go wrong in the day-to-day operations of the company? What can go wrong with manufacturing and customer support?

Management risks: Can you attract and retain the right team? Can your team pull this off? Are you prepared to step aside and let somebody else take over if necessary?

Legal risks: Is your intellectual property truly protected? Are you infringing on another companies patterns? If your solution does not work, can you limit your liability?

These risks are, of course, just a partial list of risks.

Even though you may feel that the risks are negligible, potential investors will feel otherwise unless you demonstrate that you have given a lot of thought to what can go wrong and can take prudent steps to mitigate these risks.

Poorly organized

Your plan should flow in an excellent organized fashion. Each section should build logically on the previous section, without requiring the reader to know something presented later in the plan.

Although there is no single correct business plan structure, one successful design is as follows:

Cover page: This is the first thing the reader will see, so keep it simple and professional, and be sure to include your contact information so the reader can reach you easily.

Executive summary: This is a brief, 1 to 3 page summary of everything that follows in the plan. It should be a standalone document as many readers will make their initial decision based on the executive summary alone.

Background: If you are in a highly specialized field, you should provide some knowledge in layman terms since most investors will not have advanced degrees in your area.

Market opportunity: Describe how businesses and consumers are suffering and how much they are willing to pay for a solution.

Products or services: Describe what you do and how your solution fits into the marketing opportunity.

Market traction: Describe how you have succeeded in attracting customers, marketing and distribution partnerships, and other alliances that demonstrate that experts in your market are betting on your solution.

Competitive analysis: Identify your direct and indirect competitors, and describe how your solution is better.

Distribution and marketing strategy: Describe how you will get to market, how are you will price your products etc.

Risk analysis: Identify primary sources of risks, and describe how you are mitigating them.

Milestones: Showcase a strong past track record and describe key checkpoints for the future.

Company and management: Provide the basic facts about your company – where and when you, Inc., where are you are located, and give a brief biography of your core team.

Financials: Provide summaries of your P&L and cash flows and the assumptions used to come up with this. Also, describe your funding needs, how are you are using the proceeds and possible exit strategies for investors.

As stated earlier, there is no right structure; you will need to experiment to find the one that best suits your business.

This article completes part two. The third and final article deals with the financial aspect of the business plan.

 

 

Avoidable Mistakes Made Preparing Business Plans For Investors (part one)

 Your business plan is often the first impression you make on investors, and it could also be the last impression the inverter gets if you make the kinds of mistakes illustrated here. If you don’t get a referral, your business plan is how the investor will judge whether or not to invite you to the office for an in-person meeting.

With the hundreds of “opportunities” investors get every month, they are looking for ways to say no. Therefore, you mustn’t make a lot of mistakes. Every mistake will hurt your chances.

 .The following list of examples is from Cayenne Consulting.

 Content mistakes

 

Failing to identify a real pain

Identifying and solving real pain that customers are willing to pay to get solved is not necessarily easy. Check out these posts: https://https://harborcapitalgroupinc.com/wp-content/uploads/2024/07/Braintopview-1.jpg.com/the-critical-first-step-toward-new-product-success/ and https://https://harborcapitalgroupinc.com/wp-content/uploads/2024/07/Braintopview-1.jpg.com/part-two-how-to-get-product-validation-and-commitment/

 On the other hand, pain is synonymous with market opportunity. And the more widespread the problem is, the greater your potential market. Businesses and consumers pay good money to make pains go away. Your business plan is how you tell this opportunity story.

Overstating the impact your company will have  

Phrases like unparalleled in the industry or unique and limited opportunity or superb returns with a limited capital investment are only hype. Investors will determine your company’s impact based on their specific criteria.

You should simply lay out the facts: the problem, your solution, the market size, how you will sell the product, and how you have a competitive advantage and will keep it.  

Stretching the potential uses of your product  

To impress investors, entrepreneurs often try to show that their product can be applied to multiple, very different markets or explain they can have a complex suite of products to bring to the market.

They don’t realize that most investors prefer to see a focused strategy, especially for a very early-stage company. Investors want a single, superior product that solves a big problem in a  large market sold through a proven distribution strategy.

Additional products, applications, markets, and distribution channels don’t have to be left out;  they can be used to enhance and support a highly focused core-strategy. Tell your core-story and let everything else play a minor role.  

No, go to market strategy. 

Business plans that fail to explain the sales, marketing, and distribution strategy are doomed. Be sure to answer these questions: Who will buy it, why, and most importantly, how will you get it to them?

Also,  explain how you have already generated customer interest, obtained pre-orders, or better yet, need actual sales. And describe how you will leverage this experience through a cost-effective go to market strategy.

We have no competition.

No matter what you think, you have competitors. Maybe not a direct competitor who offers an identical solution but at least a substitute. First-class mail is a substitute for email.  

Competitors, simply stated, consist of everybody pursuing the same customer dollars.

To say that you have no competition is one of the fastest ways you can get your plan tossed. Investors will conclude that you do not have a full understanding of your market. The competition section of your business plan is also your opportunity to showcase your relative strength against direct competitors, indirect competitors, and substitutes. Besides, having competitors is a good thing; it shows investors that a real market exists.

Your business plan is too long.

Investors are very busy and did not have the time to read long business plans. They also favor entrepreneurs who demonstrate the ability to convey a complex idea’s critical elements with an economy of words. 

An excellent executive summary is no more than 1 to 3 pages. An ideal business plan is 20 to 30 pages, and most investors prefer the lower end of this range. Remember, the primary purpose of a fundraising business plan is to motivate the investor to pick up the phone and invite you to an in-person meeting. It’s not intended to describe every last detail.

Document the details elsewhere in your operating plan, R&D plan, marketing plan, white papers, etc. 

The end of part one. This information is a lot to contemplate. That’s why we divided this vital block of data into three parts. Be sure to read part two, which covers more things to avoid doing, and part three covering financial information.

 

The Elements Of Your Business Plan

 

Your business plan is the primary document you will use to convince investors and others to work with you or invest in your startup. This business plan is not a one size fits all. You will want to tailor your material to what the audience wants. For example, if it is a venture capital company with recently raised funds, they will be looking for a longer-term view. If it is a venture capital company that has been investing for a while, they may be interested in more of shorter-term outlook and faster exit, 

Following is the typical format for a business plan. It is intended as a guide because different kinds of companies will have different requirements. 

1 Executive Summary

Describe (summary only) what your company is, what it does, and why it will be successful. Include your story, products and services, goals, company leadership and team, growth plans, financial information, and why and use of the funds you need.  

2 Company Description

This section goes into more detail about your company. What are the problems you are solving, how you solve them, and the benefits to the buyer from buying your product or service? You can go into detail here with a list of specific customers, markets, organizations you serve, and any partnerships you have established.

Explain the competitive advantages your product has over the competition and if that advantage is long term—for example, Intellectual property, Patents, Trademarks, .etc.

Describe the strengths of your company, including product, market, or industry expertise.

3 Market Analysis

What are your target industries and markets?  What is the outlook for size and growth in each target market?  Who are your competitors, and how do you compare to them. Do any of them have a significant advantage (market share, business model, IP, etc.) over the others in the market? What about pricing and market share?

Why is your solution to the problem better, faster, cheaper, etc.?  Are there any barriers to entry?

 4 Organization and Management

Start with your legal structure (incorporation or Limite Liability Company), which be essential depending on the type of investor you seek. Mostly, angel investors are with LLCs, but venture capital companies want companies that are incorporated.

Explain your company’s structure and who will head up each department. Use an organizational chart, if possible, to talk about how each department head is qualified to run that department.

5 Service or Product Group

Explain your line of products or services in some detail, including their features, functions, and benefits. Describe how each of these products benefits the customer. What is the product life cycle? How long will you be in Beta?

Do you have any plans for future patents, trademarks, or other product designs that will protect the uniqueness of your products or services?

6 Marketing and Sales

What is your sales story? Describe how you plan to get, keep, and expand sales to your target audience. What marketing methods will you use? Will you be using outside agencies or inhouse personnel for marketing and sales. What kind of experience do these marketing and salespeople have? 

 How long is the sales cycle? What kind of funnels will help develop prospects? Will you be using any distributors or wholesalers. If so, who are they, and what procedures and compensation are involved?

7 Funding Request

Describe your funding requirements in as much detail you can. If it is for one year, five years, or are you planning to fund by milestones? What type of funding are you looking for: debt, equity, loans, or some combination. Are you looking for a strategic partner or multiple investors?

How do you plan to use this funding: product development, sales, marketing, equipment, facilities, salaries, etc.

8 Financial Projections

Sone of the documents that will be requested includes the capitalization table, income statements, balance sheets, cash flow statements, capital expenditures, and budgets. Also, you will need to prepare a Pro Forma which uses assumptions and hypothetical events that occurred in the past and may occur in the future. This comprehensive financial overview gives outsiders a good look at your business from an economic viewpoint going into the next five years.

 9 Appendix 

Thie appendix includes documents that support your business plan like resumes, licenses, patents, legal documents, permits, any contract documents, etc.

 

Do You Know When To Scale?

The goal of every founder is that moment when you have product-market fit

and you are ready to scale the business, But understanding when that moment has arrived is difficult.

Many startups jump the gun and begin to scale too quickly and end up just burning cash.

Net; getting the timing right is critical. If you have discovered a pathway to repeatable revenues,

you are beginning to get organic revenues (proving product-market fit) and are convinced you are ready to scale.

In general, you are correct about product-market fit,

But these early sales are most likely from early adopters.

You still have one or two obstacles to get over. According to Steve Blank, if you are introducing

a new product in a new market, you don’t have a market. You have to create the market.

So, as you run out of early adopters, about 16 percent of the market, you will have to educate

buyers who are unfamiliar with you, your product, and its benefits. That will take some time and money to accomplish.

Therefore, after that early revenue peak, your new revenues are likely to begin slowing down rather

than speeding up until you have the mainstream market educated.

So timing is critical because marketing costs from scaling up are rising, and revenues are not.

A lot of companies have been caught in this trap.

If you are introducing a new product into an existing market, your goal is

to take sales away from your competitors. The market is there.

Therefore, you should be able to keep revenues growing with your better product.

However, you still have to cross the chasm from early adopters to mainstream customers,

and they are more skeptical than the early adopters, and it takes time to convince them to switch over to your product.

Therefore, your Scaling should be more in sync with your revenue growth.  Unless, of course, money is no object.

For startups, timing is an essential element that you must always be conscious of.

 On the other hand, Scaling isn’t the same as increasing sales.

Scaling also means enhancing and improving your capacity and capability; scaling requires a well-thought-out plan

(written down) that includes all of your sales and marketing, operational systems,

the technology that will help with both revenue generation and operations,

financial requirements necessary to scale, and potential risks.

At the same time, Scaling also requires that you continue to focus on your customers.

It would be best if you thought like Amazon, which puts billions into infrastructure

and operations to take care of its customers. Is your goal to have your startup scale?

If yes, do you have the profit margins and market size to scale?

If not, you can still have a great business, but it will be hard to attract investors.

Prepare To Deal With New Regulations On Privacy Protection

Starting on January 1, Americans – or at least 40 millions of them living in California – now have a comprehensive online privacy protection law in place called CCPA (California Consumer Privacy Act). Just like it’s European General Data Protection Regulation (GDPR) counterpart, which was passed in 2018. CCPA will eventually extend far beyond the State of California and reach the entire nation. 

Professionals and experts believe the odds are pretty strong that CCPA will be the foundation of privacy regulations in many other states or even U.S. federal online privacy law.

CCPA has established much stronger rights for Californians concerning their online data. For example, California residents now have the power to order any company NOT to SELL their data to any third-party for any purpose without their consent. Californian consumers can also ask just about every company that has collected their data and anybody else with which the company has shared it, to delete the information from the company’s record.

What Can a Business Do?

Under the newly enforced regulation, Californian consumers are entitled to know the categories of information that companies have collected and able to see any specific bits of the data, such as postal address and browsing history. Although CCPA is meant for consumers residing in the state of California, most companies will find it difficult to pinpoint the exact location of every single consumer. It is just the nature of the Internet that no one knows where a user is. Some businesses will have to apply CCPA across the board simply because they cannot effectively distinguish between Californian consumers and those from other states.

Another thing to consider is that Californian consumers have the right to take legal action for unlawful use of their online data in any form, so failure to comply may lead to disastrous consequences on companies’ part. CCPA applies to any for-profit entity which does business in California, collects consumers’ data, and meets any of the following thresholds:

  • Generates an annual gross revenue of more than $25 million
  • Trades (buys or sells) personal information of at least 50,000 consumers or households, or
  • Earns more than 50% of annual revenue from selling consumers’ data

The thresholds may appear to target medium-to-large-sized companies, but many small businesses and even startups can quickly meet one or more of the limits. But then again, this is not the end of the world. Online data privacy regulation has always been a hot topic over the years, and CCPA is the logical first step into the culmination of the discussion. There are several things businesses can do to ensure compliance without sacrificing profitability.

Read the fine print

Unless you have an executive team to do it for you, it is always best to try and understand CCPA yourself. This way, you can make notes of the things you don’t fully comprehend so that you can ask the more experienced legal professional for help later. While you’re at it, pay attention to the following rights granted to Californian consumers:

  •  the rights to know what personal information is collected about them
  •  the rights to know whether the personal information is being sold or disclosed to any third-party and who the party third is
  • the rights to decline the sale of personal information
  • the rights to access the personal information
  • the rights to receive equal price and services, regardless of how they exercise their privacy rights

And in the case of loss of personal information due to theft or other causes, California consumers have the right to seek damages.

Understand what personal information your business collects

As obvious as it may seem, many companies are not fully aware of the kinds of personal data their own businesses collect from consumers. Some probably don’t know that their businesses collect data at all. This is most often seen in startups where the focus is mainly on growing the business. Privacy regulation is likely considered an obstacle in growth, but now they cannot just ignore CCPA for the consequences can be severe.

Have your business partners read the law too

If you run a reasonably sized company, chances are you have multiple employees (or departments) to handle various tasks from bookkeeping to marketing, from networking to customer service. To properly implement CCPA and ensure compliance, make sure everyone in the company also reads the bill. Your officers, executives, and legal teams should understand the law better than anybody. Know the potential risk and craft a plan to avoid penalties.

You can read the full text here.

Privacy policy and regulation have the reputation of being the dark sides of business conduct. The reality is that many companies most likely takes advantage of personal consumer data for marketing or downright additional revenue by selling the information to third-party entities such as advertisers. CCPA is trying to get rid of the murkiness and provide a clear path for both companies and consumers to play it fair and square.

 

 

Recognize And Adapt To Your Stage Of Business

Recognizing the growth patterns of small businesses and the peculiar set of challenges presented by every stage of development are indispensable for every budding entrepreneur who often seems to get lost in the process of penetrating the market. Businesses, especially small-scale ones, are in constant growth. They start with just a few employees and a very limited range of objectives, but they all have the potential to embark on major expansion with properly crafted and well-executed action plans. While all small businesses are unique in terms of organizational structure, strategy, and managerial style, they have one thing in common: they experience or follow the same set of growth patterns.

A business does not simply come into existence and become profitable overnight. Businesses have to go through a sequence of developmental steps and overcome all the challenges that every step creates. Believe it or not, the same pattern applies to every company including startup with just a handful of employees to the multi-million dollar software developers. 

The similarity of the growth pattern makes it easier for startup founders to understand the opportunity and obstacles ahead of time, and create an effective plan in accordance with market conditions, so they can survive and thrive in the long run. 

Such an understanding is the foundation for business owners to devise a creative plan that ensures the efficient use of available resources.

Growth Pattern

Various studies have attempted to come up with a definitive model to examine the growth of a small business, but the most commonly used pattern is as follows.

 Planning

At this very early stage, the business to be established must answer these questions:

  •  Does the idea (of goods or services) fill a need in the market? 
  • Will the company make a profit?
  • How will people react to the product idea?
  • What is the right business model for this business?

The “initial” plan is just that: initial. You cannot stick to that same plan over the years and expect steady growth. The key to a successful startup is adaptability, meaning the business plan must change in accordance with current market conditions and consumers’ demands. Every single part of the action plan must be under constant review and ready for quick adjustment. Many times the plan also includes a requirement for outside investment.

 Establishment

The next growth stage is Establishment, in which the business is starting to take shape, and therefore a change of plan is most likely necessary. A small business undergoes a massive difference at this stage because the initial plan can no longer sustain growth. Some of the most common challenges include:

  •  Seeking outside investment because the actual budget exceeds the allocated amount
  • Hiring more employees to support day-to-day operation, which also adds more expense
  • Establishing market presence and customer base
  • Ensuring a balance between cash reserves, expenditures, and sales
  • Determining more appropriate management styles due to market demands

In the establishment stage, the most important thing to achieve is sustainable operating procedures with risk management.

Early Growth

A significant milestone in building a business is the ability to gain steady cash flow from the customer base. It is a sign that the production and delivery of goods and services are well-managed. At this point, small businesses have overcome all the difficulties endured during the earlier stages of growth and are in the process of generating revenue. As profit starts to come through the door; however, competition is catching up and bringing some new challenges:

  •  Fulfilling the demands of an increasing number of customers
  • Streamlining company operation to minimize operational cost
  • Keeping up with competitors
  • Increasing the volume of cash reserves

During the Early Growth stage, the deciding factor is whether the company can recognize the key profit driver and optimize its impact on the business itself.

 Profitability

With more reliable distribution channels and effective marketing strategy in place, small business has earned its place in the market despite fierce competition and makes money. Being profitable is a sign that the business is moving toward the expansion process. Naturally, the company is seeking to:

  •  Stay ahead of competitors
  • Acquire competitors whenever possible
  • Expand the business sectors
  • Increase the volume of production

 Many small business owners think that Profitability is the final stage, and they are not entirely wrong. After all, the purpose of building a business is to earn a profit. However,  complacency at this stage often leads to a decline, mostly because the competitors can afford to stay creative. There is always room for improvement, for example, employee engagement, customer satisfaction, brand image, and collaborations with partners.

 Revitalization

 Also often referred to as the maturity stage, Revitalization is the beginning of a process where the business must think about new and improved products or services or an effective exit strategy. As you know, the market is always changing; your goods and services need to stay relevant if you want to stay in business. Go back to the drawing board and craft a new plan to support and encourage innovations. But this time it will be easier because you have reliable financial resources to get the job done.

Considerations When Launching A Startup

 

Launching a startup business from scratch is a massive undertaking. It is as if you have to manage somehow an engine in which there are many moving parts,  all moving at the same time. Every small business owner understands how complicated this process can be, mainly because the company is in an early stage and unable to afford a lot of professionals’ to help.

In most cases, a one-person owner serves multiple roles as manager, bookkeeper, marketer, and customer service. There are fun parts such as brainstorming business, a name or drawing a product design. And then you have to deal with the stressful parts, for example, registering with the government, filing the taxes, and making financial decisions.

 The entrepreneurial world is full of stories of success and failures. With careful planning, however, you can avoid the latter and lean toward the former. A business plan exists to help you launch and run the business using the methods you prefer; every action listed in the document allows you to take a step back and review your strategy.

A useful approach to getting the business off the ground as smoothly as possible is to consider all possibilities and think through every aspect which may affect the company as it grows. In short, you have to consider the legal side of the business, marketability, organizational structure, and of course, investment.

Key considerations

 There are at least ten significant considerations to think through, even before the business officially exists.

 1 Legal setup

 Here is one thing to put in mind: venture capitalist or any other investor will not want to pour money into a startup that doesn’t have a reliable legal structure. If the legality of your business is in question, outside investment is hard to come by. Do not make rookie mistakes such as failure to register with the local authority, registering incorrect business forms, having poor contract agreement with co-founder, poor employment documentation, or using a weak contract. It can be a headache to have proper legal setup from the start, especially if you have no help, but you cannot ignore the importance of this matter.

 2 The market

 Startup owners are naturally excellent problem-solvers. They have ideas on how to create products that will solve existing problems consumers have. But in reality, everybody can have ideas; the most significant difference between business owners and everybody else is the ability to transform ideas into a profitable venture. Market research is the key. You need to conduct research continuously to see how consumers at large (or those in your target market) respond to the solution you propose. Document your research, for example, the problems your products solve, who the customers are, what the competitors do, and how big the demand is. In short, you need practical knowledge of the market before you launch.

3 From ideas to reality

 All business ventures have challenges. One of the first obstacles is bringing your idea into reality. Chances are you don’t have a factory capable of mass-production or a team of professionals to provide services. YOu will need to develop collaboration with other businesses to help you execute the ideas, run production, and bring the products to market.

 4 Organizational system

 It would help if you had constant report updates to know how the business is doing on a day-to-day basis. Critical financial information of the company must be accessible and current at all times. Otherwise, you cannot devise an effective plan to keep the venture going.

 5 You need advice from professionals.

 Admit that you don’t always have the right answer to every question that arises during the launching process. There can be all sorts of legal issues and organizational problems for which you need advice from more knowledgeable people. It costs money to consult professionals, but it would be money well-spent. Investors will also take you more seriously if you make the right decisions based on suggestions from the experienced.

 6 Fundraising

 Unless you have a lot of money at your disposal, you cannot stay away from investors. Just like with everything else, do your research regarding potential investors, for example, their track records in your industry/niche and how to get in touch with them. Investors have the money, and sometimes you have to devote serious effort and time to meet them. 

7 Not every investor you meet will be interested

 Your startup is not worth a billion-dollars; you are not a Unicorn. It only makes sense if some investors turn down an offer to invest. Improve your ideas or look for other investors. Sometimes an investor wants to wait a little longer until a startup shows signs of development, and only by then, the decision to fund the company comes to the surface.

 8 Startup ownership

 Every investor has share ownership of your startup company. Be careful with what you give away. Otherwise, you may lose the company entirely. Remember that you can always seek advice from professionals to avoid this mistake. Investors will appreciate your decision not to give away too much.

9 Vesting

 Most investors want you to stay active in the company, at least for the first several years of development. You understand the idea better than anybody, and therefore you are the best person to oversee how the plan transforms into profits.

 10 Have a legal counsel

A lot of startup owners rely on their investors’ legal teams for documentation and advice. Although it is not always a bad idea, you’ll feel more confident with a legal counsel who works for you and your best interests. In every negotiation and tough financial decision, the legal counsel will help you understand all the risks involved, including when you have to deal with your investors.