Entrepreneurial leaders do not have a mindset that adapts to
failure. Things go wrong, of course, but
entrepreneurs don’t call them “failures” they call them “glitches, mistakes,
bungles, setbacks” – but not failing.
When one such entrepreneur was asked about the hardest
decision he ever had to make, he answered that he didn’t know what a hard
decision was. An entrepreneur will
approach decision-making with the idea that there’s a strong likelihood that
he/she will be wrong. This doesn’t
dissuade them – to the contrary they just do the best they can and worry about
handling obstacles as they arise.
Another way of looking at it is to realize that you will
make mistakes, so make them as quickly as you can in order to learn from them. A good leader doesn’t view making mistakes as
negative or irrevocable, he/she feels free to press on and try something new.
There is the belief that something useful has been learned, and hopefully not
at a high cost.
Let’s face it; if you’re going to live this life you’re
going to make mistakes. Make use of them
as learning tools and don’t make the same ones twice.
Entrepreneurs also know the value of “intuition”. While you shouldn’t act on the results of
tossing a coin, there is something to be said about your “gut” feeling about
the situation. Very often business
people become so involved with systems and checks-and-balances that they forget
about that “gut” instinct they had when they started.
While not strictly logical, intuition does draw on a
combination of experience, knowledge, and analysis as well as a lot of “gut”
information you may have forgotten that you have.
You become a strong leader in your business by “practicing” being
a leader. It’s not a course you can take
at a business college; it’s learned in the school of life as you’re doing
business.
As a leader, you have to set standards and higher standards
for your own behavior. You must do this
because appearances are sometimes more important that facts.
Consider for a moment that as an entrepreneur with a small
business you’re planning on approaching a bank for a loan. You know that you must present a well
thought out and concise Business Plan, with all the projections for the use of
the capital you’ll borrow and the repayment of the same. You learned that from all those seminars you
attended when considering becoming an entrepreneur, but is there something that
you weren’t taught in seminars? What
about “presentation”?
I don’t mean the presentation of the Business Plan, we all
know that must be well done and attractive.
What I’m talking about is YOU! Do
you maintain the appearance of leadership?
Do you project a confident appearance of a successful entrepreneur? You may not have the faintest idea today how
you’re going to pay for that advertising bill coming due on the 15th,
but you’re not going to give that banker that information.
Presenting yourself as a confident entrepreneur, filled with
the excitement of your business idea, and a strong leader of your team (whether
it’s 1 or 10 employees) is what will make you a winner and add untold weight to
your Business Plan. After all, you are
your business to that banker so you’d better look good and confident.
To protect that faith that your people and your customers
have in your organization, always ask yourself these two questions:
- Could
this be interpreted by anyone in a way that would shake their faith in my
leadership?
- Could
this be misinterpreted and held against me or the company?
Strong leaders know that leadership is a lifelong learning
experience, and when they make a mistake they simply continue to move
forward. The ability to bounce back is a
quality that every entrepreneur I’ve ever known has in abundance.
When you blunder, get up and try again quickly. As one high-tech executive I knew put it,
“Our strategy is to fail forward fast.”
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