1. The best way to predict the future is to create it.
2. The most important decision you can make is…where do you want to spend your time. You
only have so much time, energy and ability to focus. That means, as
much as you would like to, you can’t do everything. That’s a given. So
is this: The places which receive your full attention will do better
than the places that won’t. What follows from that is this: You need to
make hard choices about what you will do–and what you won’t. And it is
really is the important decision you can make, because everything else
you do will flow from it…including the next point.
3. If you want to be a successful entrepreneur, there is no such thing as work-life balance.
I am not advocating that you spend a disproportionate part of your life
working on your company. (I am also not advocating against it.) I am
simply reporting that is what the most successful entrepreneurs do. I
have never found an exception.
4. The best entrepreneurs don’t come up with great ideas, they solve market needs.
You and I can come up with wonderful ideas all day long but unless they
satisfy a large enough need, one that can support a business, they
don’t do anyone any good.
5. The one thing all successful entrepreneurs have in common is the desire to make their idea a reality. What entrepreneurs need most of all—above
motivation, focus, hope, financing, marketing skills, a brilliant idea,
etc.—is the will to bring their idea into existence. Unless you truly
want to make something happen, the odds are nothing will. Without that
desire, nothing else matters…or occurs. Your life will be filled in
other ways.
6. Action trumps everything. Stop thinking and get underway.
7. Take small, smart steps towards your goals. Contrary
to the popular press, the most successful entrepreneurs are not
swing-for-the-fences, bet-everything-on-one-roll-of-the-dice types.
They are extremely conservative. They take a small step toward their goal;
pause to see what they have learned from taking that small step and
build that learning into the next small step. Then they pause to see
what they have learned from that second small step, build that learning
in and then take another small step and so forth. They don’t take large
risks.
8. If you want to build a successful company give up control.
You can try to micromanage but: the business will never grow bigger than
one person (you, the CEO) can handle effectively; the company won’t be
able to move very quickly. Since everything will have to flow through
you, you will create a bottleneck; you won’t get the best ideas out of
your people. Once they understand the company is set up so everything
revolves around you, people are not going to take the time to develop
their best ideas. “Why should I,” they’ll ask. “He is just going to
do what he wants anyway.” And it’s exhausting.
9. Forget about working on your weaknesses, play to your strengths. This is what will make you successful in the long-run.
10. You need to be able to turn every obstacle into an asset. Yes, every single one.
11. All you need to know about marketing in exactly 30 words? Marketing,
when you strip everything away, is extremely simple: You figure out who
you want to sell to, and then you determine what it is that will get
them to buy....... read more from www.forbes.com(Contributor:-Paul B. Brown)

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