Entrepreneurship culture in America is all messed up and it’s a shame.

DC_Dude

Rising Star
BGOL Investor


Entrepreneurship culture in America is all messed up and it’s a shame.

TechCrunch. Product Hunt. Shark Tank.

It’s all about new ideas. Changing the world. Innovation. 0 to 1. Blue ocean. Venture capital and exits and scalability.

And IT’S ALL A LIE.

If you ask the average American who a real entrepreneur is they’ll say Jobs, Musk or Zuck. We read their books and idolize them and hang on to their every word.

So the brightest among us think they need a moat. A new idea. Something revolutionary. We're setting them up for FAILURE.

I took an entrepreneurship course at Cornell in 2011. 24 kids with new ideas. Big plans. Pitch decks looking for series As.

I was #25 with a regular old-fashioned business. When professors asked me what my differentiator was I didn’t have an answer.

"We're just going to pick up people's stuff and store it when they go home for the summer. I'll answer the phone, do things a little better and I think I can make some decent money."

I saw a company out there doing sweaty, non-scalable work. They weren't very good at it and yet they made really good money.

I started by trading my time for money. Bought a $1500 cargo van. Storage Squad was born. Used the things I had in my life to make some profit.
I wasn’t trying to educate a customer base.
I wasn’t following my passion.
I didn’t need funding or a network.
I wasn’t competing against brilliant folks from Stanford.
I want trying to prove a concept.
I wasn’t emotionally attached to anything except adding value.
My customers and my competitors existed. I could study them interacting with each other. I made decisions with my brain, not my heart. I was competing against folks with fax machines, clipboards and paper ledgers.

And the best part... WE WERE PROFITABLE FROM DAY ONE.

Not a single one of those 24 folks in my class succeeded. They all went and got jobs. Their new ideas didn’t catch on. They all had dreams of millions of users and an exit. Scalable models that could work anywhere from a computer. But 99% failed to make a single dollar.

We made enough money in a few years to build our first self storage facility. That grew into the 60+ property $100m+ portfolio we own and operate today. We sold the service business in January 2021 for $1.75 million. We had no debt and no silent partners. My business partner and I split the cash.

So who are the real entrepreneurs? Who are the wealthiest people you know? I’m not talking about money. I’m talking about the people who do what they want to do when they want to do it. Who are they?

Now here comes the hard truth. I know a lot of wealthy entrepreneurs. None of them had new ideas. Very few of them raised VC money. None of them were on shark tank. They all did common things uncommonly well. Regular old businesses just a little better.

BORING STUFF.

Most of them have a few things in common: They worked really hard doing something not fun for 5+ years. Many times 20+ yrs. They started out trading their time for money. They did things that weren’t scalable. Many of them offered services.

They all had to talk to people. Most of the time face to face. They had to sell themselves and their ideas. They didn’t take a lot of risk. Most of them hired coders but few of them were coders.

The main point:

Stop buying into the hype. The click bait. The sexy stories of overnight success and mega riches. Entrepreneurship isn’t that complicated. Do something with good odds, low risk and moderate rewards. Don’t master your craft, master leading other people.

Think with your head, not your heart. It’s not about you and what YOU love or what YOU want to be doing. And lastly.. Start SMALL.

Biz is about momentum. I started 10 yrs ago carrying boxes up spiral staircases. Now I’m buying millions worth of real estate.

And the best part. When you’re successful, experienced, wealthy and you have a killer network...

It’s time to change the world with something BIG.
 
It’s true. You need innovation but, this pie in the sky shit people think you have shoot for to be a business owner is not realistic. You hear some of the most disconnected dumb shit from so called entrepreneurs(mostly online). They think every is “Their Brand” when on a basic level you ain’t got shit anybody wants to buy in the first place and think marketing will solve everything. The actual formula is real simple, provide a service/goods people need/want. You don’t have to reinvent the wheel. Keep your customer service good and the people will return.

It’s a huge part of the reason trades are dwindling while they are some of easiest and most lucrative fields to get into. That overprice degree that pays them no more will teach people a lesson.
 
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It’s true. You need innovation but, this pie in the sky shit people think you have shoot for to be a business owner is not realistic. You hear some of the most disconnected dumb shit from so called entrepreneurs(mostly online). They think every is “Their Brand” when on a basic level you ain’t got shit anybody wants to buy in the first place and think marking will solve everything. The actual formula is real simple, provide a service/good people need/want. You don’t have to reinvent the wheel. Keep your customer service good and the people will return.

It’s a huge part of the reason trades are dwindling while they are some of easiest and most lucrative fields to get into. That overprice degree that pays them no more will teach people a lesson.
I wouldn't call trades easy to get i to
I had to try three times over several yrs before i got into my union
 
Depends on the trade. I know some unions are harder to get into, but on whole it’s much easier to pick up a trade and live well than going the college degree route. Plumbing and HVAC to name two.
For folks that poo-poo on building and facilities disciplines, they don't get it. A lot of money can be made. Recently, corporations are trying to figure out how to get folks back to the office after the pandemic. I think it's a waste of time, and they should just sublet or offload their leases. IMO, 2 things we brothas need to drive our youth is automation and AI. Everythng I've seen lately is pointing that way for sustainable jobs globally. Robotics is going to kill many "human" tasks quickly. I'm focused to school my kids but TBO, I'm glad retirement is coming sooner than later because of the drift to rely on outside (different timezone and language barriers) support solutions. Other than finding a way to recycle our waste into power efficiently (energy renewables), healthcare and childcare are at the top ways to make money, unfortunately.
 
Stop buying into the hype. The click bait. The sexy stories of overnight success and mega riches. Entrepreneurship isn’t that complicated. Do something with good odds, low risk and moderate rewards. Don’t master your craft, master leading other people.

Think with your head, not your heart. It’s not about you and what YOU love or what YOU want to be doing. And lastly.. Start SMALL.

I started my company DJing a soft opening for a Brooks Brothers. My first regular gig was Friday nights at a hair salon on Fillmore for $75.

Ten years later I played a high school winter formal for $2,500

My success came from four simple words

DELIVER WHATEVER IT TAKES!

A couple calls you up to play their wedding at the last minute? Check your gear, and rehearse the damn music until it's ready. Even if it's Chris Stapleton.

Just finished the 14 our gig and now you're getting called for an after hours? Drink a 5-hour energy and make it happen!

Got food poisoning so bad that you can barely make it out of bed to get to the toilet? Put on your best suit, take some imodium, and suck on jolly ranchers for the calories. You can sit down while you play, but only if standing up will make you pass out.

People don't hire me because I'm the best. They hire me because I do the job no matter what! Once I deliver I get hired again, only next time is for a bigger job with a bigger check.
 
Damn good read. I was literally having this conversation with a buddy of mine this week. The incentive/reward model for startups is all fucked up. They get praised for how much capital they raise, not how profitable and sustainable their business models are.
 
I started my company DJing a soft opening for a Brooks Brothers. My first regular gig was Friday nights at a hair salon on Fillmore for $75.

Ten years later I played a high school winter formal for $2,500

My success came from four simple words

DELIVER WHATEVER IT TAKES!

A couple calls you up to play their wedding at the last minute? Check your gear, and rehearse the damn music until it's ready. Even if it's Chris Stapleton.

Just finished the 14 our gig and now you're getting called for an after hours? Drink a 5-hour energy and make it happen!

Got food poisoning so bad that you can barely make it out of bed to get to the toilet? Put on your best suit, take some imodium, and suck on jolly ranchers for the calories. You can sit down while you play, but only if standing up will make you pass out.

People don't hire me because I'm the best. They hire me because I do the job no matter what! Once I deliver I get hired again, only next time is for a bigger job with a bigger check.


Being available all the time is the key to any small business success. Long live 1099
 
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