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Top Ten Startup MistakesThat Almost Always Lead to Business Failure
by K. MacKillop
More Business Skills Articles

Published on this site: February 27th, 2010 - See
more articles from this month

Many startup ideas fail to ever be launched and many, many fail
within the first year or two. In most cases, the failure has
nothing to do with the business idea, but how the business side
is handled. The business of entrepreneurship is business first,
then operations (what your business actually does). The Top Ten
startup mistakes that lead to ultimate failure are:
- Insufficient Startup Idea Development: Most startups do not
fail because the business idea is bad. The problem is that many
first-time entrepreneurs fail to actually plan the business
before sinking cash into the startup. No matter how great a
business idea is, it can't succeed without detailed planning.
Take the time to work through every angle of your business idea.
Not only will you have a better grasp of how far your business
can go, you will also reduce your risk and prepare yourself to
make the best decisions as you go.
- Failure to Understand and Comply with Legal Obligations: An
unbelievable number of entrepreneurs leave the legal aspects of
business startup to someone else or, worse, ignore them
altogether. Eventually this failure to comply with legal
obligations will come back to bite you...and the outcome can be
devastating. Every entrepreneur must understand and secure all
necessary licenses and permits, and set up compliance systems for
taxes and fees due the local, state, and federal government.
- Poor (or no) Marketing Planning: Marketing is the lifeblood
of every business startup, and it is more than business cards and
a yellow pages ad. A significant portion of your time and expense
budget should be dedicated to marketing. Poor or no marketing
equals no sales...equals business failure. Do your homework
before you launch to identify your target markets, figure out how
to best reach them, and establish clear objectives and
evaluations to ensure your marketing efforts are paying off.
- Poor (or no) Financial Management: Success in business is
all about the bottom line -- no profit, no business. Keeping the
books correctly is half the battle. Too many first-time
entrepreneurs are willing to turn over complete responsibility
for the books to someone else -- a dangerous decision that very
often leads to business failure. Reviewing and analyzing the
financial reports is the other half. It is critical for every
business owner to understand what the financial reports mean and
how a change in one area affects all the others. Cash flow issues
are also major financial management problem for many startups in
the earliest stages. Good planning before launching a startup
will clarify how much cash on hand your business idea will need
to succeed. Whether you consider yourself a numbers person or
not, as a business owner it is critical that you take
responsibility for learning and applying basic financial
management skills if you want to succeed.
- Sales Forecast Errors: Establishing your initial sales
forecast can be difficult, but there are procedures you can
follow to make it as realistic and accurate as possible. All too
often would-be entrepreneurs build a sales forecast around what
they would like to sell, rather than what they are likely to
sell. While optimism is an excellent entrepreneurial trait, an
overly optimistic sales forecast will leave you with serious cash
flow problems and even greater difficulty in securing financing.
For example, one business plan we recently reviewed appeared
well-written and professionally laid out. However, the sales
forecast reflected sales that required every member of the staff
to bill out 19 hours per day, 300 days per year. Another retail
business showed average total purchases at $230 each, even though
the average price of their products is only $12. Assuming that
each customer will purchase an average of 19 items each time they
visit is unrealistic. Any competent investor will look for these
errors.
- Under-Capitalization: Not starting with enough capital to
support the business through the initial stages is a common
error. By thoroughly planning your idea, you will know how much
capital you need to cover while you build your customer base,
including working capital to keep yourself in ramen noodles until
your business takes off. Good planning will also increase the
chance of securing investors, whether public (banks) or private
(family and friends).
- Poor Web Presence: An effective web presence is an absolute
must for any modern business. Simply posting a website is not
enough. In fact, uploading a website without marketing it is like
posting ad copy only in your own living room -- if your target
market doesn't see it, it might as well not exist. Many recent
startups have crashed and burned because the entrepreneur thought
that simply posting a website to the internet would drive sales.
It won't.
- Leaving Critical Tasks "To the Professionals": Many
entrepreneurs believe that a good idea and solid operations are
enough to build a successful business, so they opt to turn over
critical startup tasks, like marketing and accounting, to
outsourced professionals. For some, the business side of business
just doesn't interest them, so they choose to forgo learning the
details of financial and marketing management. Eventually, these
choices backfire. If you don't know how the money works, you
can't make the best decisions for your business. If you are not
aware of the outcomes of your marketing efforts, you can't
accurately forecast sales and thus can't plan for the future.
It's your business, you need to know and understand every facet
from the beginning, or you might as well be working for someone
else.
- No Ongoing Planning and Review: As the actual operations of a
startup take up more and more of an entrepreneur's time, it is
very easy to overlook the critical tasks of reviewing and
planning. Every aspect of a company should be reviewed
periodically, particularly the financial statements and marketing
plan. If you don't know where you are or where you have been,
it's impossible to know where you are going.
- Lack of Patience: Pit of Despair - Every startup experiences
a period of time between being ready to sell and actually
building the sales. We call this gap the Pit of Despair because
the entrepreneur is left wondering if they have made the right
decisions and whether the business is ever going to work. Many
startups hit this point and the entrepreneur quits in
frustration. Startups don't generally succeed overnight. The Pit
of Despair should be used to refine internal systems, work
through free internet marketing techniques (participate in
relevant forums, write and publish articles, build website
content), and plan for the future of the business. Don't let the
inevitable delay destroy your chances of success -- plan for it,
expect it, and use the time wisely.
For the most part, a strong focus on the three keys of startup
success (planning, marketing, and financial management) will
overcome most of the common reasons for business failure. Pay
attention to the details from the beginning, learn all you can
about running your own business, and don't let anything get in
the way of building your business into the thriving company it
can be.

K. MacKillop, a serial entrepreneur, is founder of LaunchX
and authors a small business startup blog. The LaunchX
System includes step-by-step business startup procedures
(http://www.launchx.com/features.html), small business
software and more, to help entrepreneurs start a business
based on their idea and avoid these top ten startup mistakes.
Visit http://www.LaunchX.com/ for a free Business Readiness
Assessment and get on the road to starting a business today: http://www.launchx.com/are-you-ready.html.


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