Friday 29 September 2006

Screw the Portage Trail

For today's key insights into the febrile minds of Canadian entrepreneurs, I present this hard-scrabbling evidence.


These pics come from an online photo album that Toronto entrepreneur Michel Neray (www.EssentialMessage.com) created of his recent canoe trip in the Ottawa Valley. I refer not so much to Brent and Stuart (I don't know them) but to the picture at right.

"Screw the portage trail" could stand as the timeless motto of entrepreneurs across Canada. Sure, the portage trail is likely easier, and undoubtedly safer. But it's also longer, and likely dull. If the point of a canoe trip is to be on the water, entrepreneurs want to spend as much time as they can on the water.

Impatient? Yes - though most entrepreneur would prefer to be labelled focussed.

The natural entrepreneurial inclination is to climb the rock, haul up the canoe, and get on with it. And not just because they like to work. Because they are more goal-focussed than most people. They see the big picture, and are eager to bring it about.

Or as Michel puts it in his album:


For more tripping pictures (you can also see how they lost a paddle and improvised a new one out of sticks, which is of course another another fine entrepreneurial metaphor), click here.

Tuesday 26 September 2006

"I'm just a bad employee"

Nathan Kaiser is Seattle entrepreneur who interviews Internet entrepreneurs for his website, nPost.com. It's a great place to catch up on interviews with young, cutting-edge entrepreneurs and study how they think and act. Tremendous insights to be gained.

Consider these comments from Leonard Brody, the Vancouver-based CEO and Founder of NowPublic. He does one of the best jobs I've seen in explaining how an entrepreneur's life differs from that of a standard corporate manager/employee.

"This is my fifth company. Frankly, there's no divine inspirational moment. I'm just a bad employee. I don't answer to people particularly well and I tend to be a much higher level thinker so where my thoughts are typically fifty thousand feet in the air, it's very difficult I think, when you're working in a larger organization to be creative.

"... Twelve years after starting my first company I realized that have a job is quite luxurious. You show up there's a desk and a phone. There's lunch. You don't have to worry about who is keeping the lights on. You do your job, you work and typically you go home and the stresses of work, while you may carry little bits of task-related things you have to do, the overall direction and strategy and vision is not really in your hands. There is an element of peace of mind you've got that you wouldn't have if you were an entrepreneur.

"The luxury that you trade off for that is having to deal with other people's politics and the organizational problems. It is an intense ride being an entrepreneur. I think most people underestimate that. I think they think it's the easiest thing in the world. It's a wonderful thing to work for yourself and there's no stress. Stress is ten times what it would be in the workforce, but I wouldn't have it any other way."

Read the complete interview here.

Wednesday 13 September 2006

What do entrepreneurs want? Help.

Dave Free thought he had a service that marketing-oriented business owners would kill for: "an inexpensive, do-it-yourself system to collect customer feedback, generate referrals and stay in touch with their customers." It was a way to ensure their customers are happy and get them talking to their friends. And according to Free, testing showed users received substantial benefits, at low cost.

Funny thing, though. "As we've met with business owners in person or attracted them to our website, it has become clear that most of them don't want to be taught how to use the tool. They don't have time. They would much prefer to pay for a service."

Like many marketers before him, Free overestimated business owners' interest in learning new processes - even if it helps them save money. Time is their most precious commodity - and on their endless list of things to do, learning to use your service ranks, oh, somewhere about nowhere.

The ironically-named Free is now revamping his pricing model to cover the additional service his company must provide. "Some small businesses may balk, but I am now convinced that there are more small businesses looking for a fillet on the platter (complete with a wedge of lemon) than those interested in buying a fishing pole--even if it comes with a fly-tying kit."

Very interesting post from the front lines of small business marketing. Read the whole post here.
(Thanks to Dean Jones for the heads-up.)

Friday 8 September 2006

Keep it Simple!

I had a fascinating discussion today with a very frustrated vendor who targets small business.

They have a complex but very useful robust service for small business, and it’s very well priced. I can't imagine any business not getting its money’s worth, and much more, from their product.

Unfortunately, the prospects aren’t buying. Even though these services have been carefully targeted to the real needs of small business , the business owners remain skeptical and uninvolved.

I can't say much more due to client confidentiality, but I think there are three problems here, all of which are commonly encountered in selling to small business.

1) The client is trying to do too much. Its offer is bold and feature-rich. It’s like a VCR with too many buttons; I think the average entrepreneur has trouble taking it all in at first glance. And as we’ve said in this space before, even the best offers rarely get a second glance.

2) The client is trying to change behaviors. To take advantage of these services, most small business owners will have to change the way they view many of the functions they normally do. They’ll have to accept new, more sophisticated processes. While most of them need to make these changes, marketers (especially to small business) should never underestimate the difficulty of change.

3) The client is moving too fast. They need to start small and win the market’s trust before they can expect to sell complex integrated services. The solutions they're selling are valid, but they're not on the prospects’ priority list just yet. Keep it simple: Getting a few early wins would go a long way toward creating value for their prospects and thus build the trust needed to move them to the next level.

Entrepreneurs are no dummies. They know successful change is hard to achieve. Unless you make your offer bite-size and (relatively) risk-free, they're likely to take a pass.

That may be a mistake in the long run. But most entrepreneurs have enough on their plate dealing with short-term problems to worry about the long run.