Seek the Contrarian: What to Expect of a Good Entrepreneurship Program
In a speech in Paris, in 1910, Theodore Roosevelt remarked the often encouraged, “Comparison Is the Thief of Joy.” That, when we compare ourselves to others, we rob ourselves of our own happiness as, through comparison, we either feel a sense of inferiority or superiority.
What we see in entrepreneurship and among founders is this manifest as something referred to as imposter syndrome, the misleading but persistent feeling of self-doubt or inadequacy, despite evident success, which misaligns reality with one’s internal perception, undermining confidence and self-worth. Feeling imposter syndrome nearly reinforces Roosevelt’s mental health related turn of the phrase, encouraging that entrepreneurs too should keep their head down, execute, and seek validation.
There couldn’t be any notion more harmful to entrepreneurs.
Comparison is the Gift of Opportunity
Starting a venture distinct from existing businesses (a startup), entrepreneurs must act to avoid the causes of failure more than hoping they are essentially unique among mortals, themselves likely to be the 1% that greatly succeeds. Entrepreneurs are taking on the different, the broken, the new, and the difficult, hoping to make the world a better place while creating value in the process, doing so without comparison (a competitive analysis) is not only dangerous, but also simply stupid.
Entrepreneurship is in many ways, a world in which good intentions can seem harsh, while positive support is actually harmful.
You need to be told your baby is ugly, it’s harsh, but it helps you avoid wasting your time and money.
That entrepreneur program that encourages that everyone can do it, isn’t inspiring, it’s misleading people who can’t, or shouldn’t, that they should pay to try.
Comparison is a competitive analysis and the only way you can actually determine if an opportunity for a startup is NOT through customers but competitors: Are there any? Can you compete? How do they succeed? Can you achieve that or accomplish other things necessary? Can you overcome their accomplishment?
Most entrepreneurs don’t do this and as a result, most fail.
Common Pitfalls that Entrepreneurship Programs Should Help Startups Avoid
What sparked this consideration of comparison is that I was asked provocatively, since I have a tendency to be critical of incubators and accelerators that aren’t actually helping founders, “what should we demand of programs?”
If you run down the list of what causes failures (overwhelming such that arguably all startups fail because of this) we have three areas of focus:
- Team
- Marketing
- Location (though this is really just a subset of #2)
So, rather, what are some common pitfalls that GOOD entrepreneurship programs MUST help startups avoid?
Notice, the CAUSES of failure is not in fact what most entrepreneurship programs offer (or claim to offer). I did a brief look at a dozen local incubator websites to find these are the benefits typically promoted:
- Access to capital
- Coworking space
- Networking
- Free credits to HubSpot
- AWS infrastructure
When a startup space or entrepreneurship program is leading with these benefits, they probably aren’t actually doing what’s meaningful to help. Ask yourself, is there anything there that you actually need?
TEAM
What causes a failure because of team could be any number of things from the wrong skillsets, inexperience, misalignment, life changes, and irreconcilable disagreement.
Meaning an entrepreneurship program should do what with and for you?
- Personality assessments
- Developing Mission and Vision
- Clarifying personal and startup NEEDS and desires, both now and in the future
- Teaching the makeup of a startup that tends to work
- Aligning priorities and expectations
- Providing team agreements that require vesting and address failing to perform
All of this is well researched. We know which personality types tend to perform as entrepreneurs and which personality types work well together. We know the skills and experience required in a startup team likely to succeed.
MARKETING
Marketing is not promoting what you’re doing! If you think it is, you’re already likely to fail. Study the market, know what might work, how, what’s valued, know the competition, know the investors, and know what has failed before. We can tell you’re likely to fail if you’ve already built and MVP or send a pitch deck seeking funding (as it’s clear you didn’t to this first and foremost).
Meaning an entrepreneurship program should do what with and for you?
- Competitive analysis
- SWOT analysis
- Communication development and practice
- Effective content creation
- Market research
- Market (which is inclusive of and more than customer) validation
LOCATION
ARE YOU IN THE RIGHT PLACE?
One of the most repeated sayings in marketing is “location, location, location” because this alone will cause your success or failure…
- Right city? Or are you trying where you are because you want to be there?
- Right country? Just because you live there… if it’s better elsewhere?
- Downtown? Ah, I see, are all best resources for that sector downtown? Isn’t it expensive?
- Website or Mobile? Sure, you’re a mobile developer so you think so… do you KNOW?
- iOS or Android? “But Paul, everyone loves iPhone and I’m an iPhone developer”
- Facebook? “No, our customers aren’t on Facebook.”
The work to determine the ideal location is what we call marketing. When a founder proclaims they aren’t ready to do marketing (or worse, an advisor or investor misleads a founder in the same way), we KNOW they are going to fail.
An entrepreneurship program failing any of this, should see its doors shuttered because in failing this, they are misleading you or misrepresenting what is researched and known to matter. What you might seek from an entrepreneurship program is a program director who in fact says, “you should not be here, we’re not ideal for that.”
I often look at this in reverse when qualifying a program:
- LOCATION: Is the program pushing that here is best for you? Is the program pushing that HERE in particular is capable of helping everyone? They may not be intentionally lying but if not, they’re ignorant — why would you want to be there? What they would be doing is saying “Not that,” “Not here,” “We can’t…” — helping REMOVE for you the risk of being in the wrong place — helping you remove the known causes of failure.
- MARKETING: How they handle an assessment of location effectively already tells me how they handle marketing (as they too should be in the right location for the right reasons). But let’s look more at what they’re doing… Are they creating compelling content? Are they monetizing the right customers as an entrepreneurship program (hint, you the founder aren’t a customer). If they fail marketing on their own behalf, how can they capably help you through the same? And by the way, evidence of successful marketing is NOT “popular” or “growing” — that’s the result of promotion, support, or attention. If the program is huge but charging founders merely to host office hours, they aren’t MARKETING effectively, they’re merely cannibalizing (and beloved for it).
- TEAM: The reason assessing a program by going through my list from end to beginning works, is because if we’ve failed location and we’re not sure about marketing, they aren’t going to be helpful in developing your team. What more can we explore of a program in this case? Do they help “all” entrepreneurs? Then how likely are they to know and find the right people for you?? Beyond that, look too at their team — is turnover high? are previous team members happy with them? what is private sentiment, distinct from public sentiment? Keep in mind, revenue is a consequence of having customers — revenue doesn’t necessarily mean the business, the marketing, or the team, is actually any good at what they’re doing.
All entrepreneurship programs MUST EFFECTIVELY ensure founders overcome the causes of failure: wrong place, misunderstanding or failing marketing, and a team set up to fail. If not, they’re just taking advantage of you under a guise of good intentions.
Notice, I’m being contrarian. Most entrepreneur programs promote the access to a community, space in which to work, and encourage office hours with mentors, and yet let’s be blunt, none of that correlates with your success or failure. What I’m saying might seem harsh (to some) but in entrepreneurship, criticism helps while a false sense of opportunity and encouragement harms. What might help us all overcome that sense of imposter syndrome, is rather than internalizing it, putting it out in the world to see if in fact others are merely imposters trying to help; we’re all struggling through our work as entrepreneurs, and only those who are open about their challenges, honest about their capabilities, and questioning everything, succeed.
Originally published at https://seobrien.com on October 15, 2024.