Feb 06 2009
“TGIF” THE ENTREPRENEUR RALLY CRY?
“Opportunityville” . . .
every entrepreneur’s weekend!
Prowling America’s corporate halls on Fridays still produces an eerie aura of management abandonment and employee lethargy. Given that weekends in this country now seem to start on Thursdays, the fact is that Fridays have become a sharp thorn in the side (poke in the eye?) to 9-5’ers who can’t sprint from their offices to their weekend festivities fast enough!
“HA!” you exclaim, “Good riddence to bad garbage!” you rudely proclaim. Why? Because YOU are an entrepreneur!
You started, or are in the process of starting (or probably both), your own business and you are TGIFing all over the place because now (FRIDAY!) starts the best time of the week to get some productive work done.
For the first time since last Sunday night, you have wrangled your way through 50 or 60 hours of sweat equity without financial disaster or customer base collapse, and have now earned the blessed arrival of 5pm Friday when –like living a dream– you can finally work for two whole days more with no interruptions.
It’s time to followup, catchup and plan (sounds like a law firm!). Weekends, to you, are Opportunityville!
At last there’s no one around to bother you. It’s your chance to think through how you’re going to shoot your business out of the cannon Monday morning . . . or how you’re going to open your 27th business while you keep juggling businesses 21 through 26. (1-20 are either running on their own or –more likely– folded or sold or squandered or lost, but big-time learned from).
That’s okay. It is, you know, what entrepreneurs do best is learn from their mistakes, get up and dust themselves off, and plunge back into things from a different direction.
Imagine what a solid strong economy we’d have today if corporate and government executives who are floundering around in their vast sea of incompetency could do what entrepreneurs do!
But asking them to learn is really asking too much. It would after all fly in the face of their instincts to believe that they need only repeat what failed, again and again, until it eventually succeeds, which of course it doesn’t.
If you just clicked on this post and are reading this because you were perhaps thinking about igniting those deep-seated entrepreneurial fuses that you think you have because you had a lemonade stand as a kid, and you were thinking that this whole life pursuit direction seems glamourous, think again.
Being an entrepreneur means being committed. It means your business will be your spouse. It means you may be living for your business more than your family. Always? No, but neither does it always rain (unless you’re in Ireland, where you carry your raincoat as often as your wallet!).
As an entrepreneur, you must be prepared to think, then act (vs. corporate tendencies to think, then think, and think again) every day . . . and especially on weekends!
TGFE = Thank God For Entrepreneurs! Without them, we’d have zero jobs and no economy whatsoever! Now, if we could just get government decision makers to make some decisions that assist small business in creating real and meaningful job growth . . . halalpiar
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