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You are at:Home»Uncategorized»Top tips for entrepreneurs
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Top tips for entrepreneurs

Grocott's MailBy Grocott's MailMarch 15, 2016No Comments4 Mins Read
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Entrepreneurship involves more than just a great idea, a successful entrepreneur requires tenacity and flexibility to keep up with the many moving parts of a business that need to be managed.

Entrepreneurship involves more than just a great idea, a successful entrepreneur requires tenacity and flexibility to keep up with the many moving parts of a business that need to be managed.

Running a business in any environment is difficult enough, but when things change as fast and fundamentally as they do in the modern world, entrepreneurs need to keep the engine running even while they upgrade it.
 
This is according to Christo Botes, executive director of Business Partners Limited, who says although adapting to evolving needs is difficult, it is possible. 
Here are his five top tips.
 
1. Adaptable entrepreneurs work ON their businesses, not IN them
Business owners can see the wider trends affecting their enterprise only if they are able to stand back and get an entire overview of the business. This can only be done if the entrepreneur adopts the role of the general manager and not the specialist technician, salesman or any other function fulfilled usually by people who work within the organisation.
 
It is easy for a business owner to become preoccupied by small distractions in a business, simply because there are so many issues that constantly crop up. Adaptable entrepreneurs, Botes says, are able to stay focused on the main priorities, while constantly scanning the environment for threats and opportunities.
 
2. Adaptable entrepreneurs run businesses responsibly
It seems obvious, but it is very true that a business is in the best position to adapt to changing circumstances if it is making enough money to fund transitions and changes. The most adaptable entrepreneurs are those who never lose sight of the importance of cash flow and profitability.
 
Impulsive decisions, for example, those that lead to the chasing of turnover to the detriment of profitability, or taking money out of the business to buy a fancy car, are made all too often in the business world, but not by adaptable entrepreneurs. “Adaptable entrepreneurs accept responsibility for the ultimate well-being of their businesses and remain accountable for their decisions,” says Botes.
 
3. Adaptable entrepreneurs encourage staff participation
The staff of a business is at the coal face of production and the market. In the workshop, it is the staff members who grapple with the difficulties of production, and on the road or on the shop floor, it is the staff members who watch and listen to the customers as they interact with the business's service and products.
 
Adaptable entrepreneurs ensure that all the ideas that are constantly sparked by these situations are fed back to the management so that they can help the business adapt to changing circumstances. Staff members will only share their ideas if they are encouraged to do so, says Botes. Entrepreneurs who feel threatened by suggestions from their staff members on how to do things differently are not able to adapt.
 
4. Adaptable entrepreneurs scan and listen
Even the most locally focused businesses can be fundamentally affected by changes that happen on the other side of the world. The most adaptable business owners are those who see change coming from afar and take an interest in the world beyond their immediate business, community and target market.
 
Adaptable entrepreneurs are therefore curious about the world, they follow the news, network with their peers in their own as well as in other industries, and are good listeners.
 
5. Adaptable entrepreneurs work according to a plan
For inexperienced business people, the constant need to change may seem to do away with the need for structured business plans.
 
Botes argues that the volatility of the business world is all the more reason to work according to a plan. Without it, changes made by entrepreneurs as they try to adapt to changing circumstances tend to be ad hoc, impulsive, and done without the necessary strategic thought and financial calculations. “A plan is the wheel with which the adaptable entrepreneur steers the ship on a wild ocean, and keeps it well away from the rocks,” says Botes.  

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