I was asked the other day what personality traits I thought
were important to entrepreneurial success. I immediately
gave my preprogrammed reply about passion and dedication and
hard work. After taking some time later to ponder the
question a little deeper (I normally operate in shallow
waters), I came up with a more detailed checklist for
entrepreneurial success. This is by no means a definitive
list, but I'd be willing to bet that if you don't have at
least a majority of these traits, your chances of business
success will be greatly diminished.
You must be self motivated.
If you don't have the wherewithal to bounce out of bed
each day without your spouse drenching you with cold water,
chances are you don't have the self motivation or discipline
required to be an entrepreneur. Business demands that you
take action based solely on your own volition. You have to
do a hundred things every day that will not get done unless
you make yourself do them.
You can't be afraid of hard work.
If you think working for someone else is hard work, try
starting your own business. You will be required to give
every ounce of blood, sweat, and tears you can muster and
then some. You will have to work long hours and be on call
24/7, at least in the beginning. If the mere thought of hard
work makes you tired, maybe you should just keep your cushy
day job.
You should have experience in the type of
business you plan to start.
If you can't locate your car's engine you have no
business buying an oil change franchise. The most successful
business owners have prior experience in the industry in
which they have set up shop. Consider working in an industry
at least part time for a year before jumping in with both
feet.
You must be able to climb back on the horse.
I always say: "If business was easy, everybody would do
it." Starting a business is hard work and the odds for
failure are against you in the first few years. If you want
to ride herd on your own business, you must be willing to
fall off your horse and get back on a few times without
giving up.
You need the support of your family.
When you start a business you may have to spend more time
away from the family than you like. The business may also
put a strain on you financially. You will have enough
obstacles in your way without having to worry if you have
the support of your family and those closest to you
You must have a thick skin.
If your feelings are easily hurt, keep your
non-threatening day job because business is not for you.
Many days in business, rejection waits around every corner
and you must be able to handle rejection without taking it
personally.
You must interact well with others.
Being an entrepreneur requires interacting with a variety
of people, from your own employees to vendors to customers
to investors. You must have the ability to effectively
manage people without offending them; the ability to accept
good advice from mentors and politely discount the bad; the
ability to overlook mistakes or quietly rectify them; and
the one I have trouble with: the ability to tolerate
incompetence without losing your cool (at least not on the
outside).
The deeper your pockets the better.
The number one cause of business failure is a lack of
money. Before you start your business you should have access
to enough capital to see you through until the business can
sustain itself.
You must be able to delegate.
Running a business requires the performance of dozens of
simultaneous tasks and it's foolish to try to handle them
all yourself. You must learn to put your trust in others. If
you can't dish out responsibility without worrying over the
result, your business growth will be limited.