Entrepreneur (2)

Don't Quit Your Day Job!

Almost everyone visiting this site had a day job at one time and some still do. Then there are all those wannabe artists who visit with you in your booth at each art fair and say they are going to quit but don't and you know why.

Here is how you to figure out if it is for you:

1. How valuable is comfort to your life?

Even if you “make it,” working for yourself never 8869098662?profile=originalcomes with a guarantee. Money varies from month to month, and it could cease at any moment; you just never really know. What about that health insurance, what about those monthly bills, what about a nice car instead of a utility vehicle?

(cartoon by Hugh MacLeod who packed up his imagination and quit his day job a long time ago.)

2. Is being an artist compatible with your past?

Before you start leaving the job behind are you thinking, “I’ve never been able to stick to a rigid schedule. How am I going to do it now?” Are you ready to rely on yourself and your own schedule?

3. How sentimental are you?

You will make mistakes. Whether you choose the wrong media or find yourself at the wrong kind of show or find out that because your art teacher said you were wonderful somehow the marketplace doesn't "get it," and you have to scrap months of work, you have to let it go.

4. When was the last time you learned something new?

Entrepreneurs are perpetual learners. Not only out of natural curiosity, but because if they don’t seek knowledge every day, they’ll be left in the dust by their more knowledgeable competition.

5. How would you do in the middle of a foreign country with no money and no idea how you got there?

Could you talk a cabby into taking you to the nearest bus station in exchange for a song and dance? Or would you find the situation hopeless and resign yourself to weeping softly in the corner of the nearest alleyway?

6. Do you really just want to get rid of your boss?

What if you’re lazy and think owning your own business is an easy way out? You may not think these exact words, but maybe, deep down, you feel like life would be much easier without a boss.

7. Am I prepared to die for my business?

Okay, no one is going to die for their business.

The point is, you have to be all in. Your business has to mean more to you than any immediate comfort. If you panic at the thought of living the rest of your life as a tool for achieving the goals of others, you need to get out before it’s too late.

I liked these 7 points and think that most people reading this will be way past them, but maybe not. They are the harsh reality of being an entrepreneur. If you can do all of the above you must be in the right place.

Read all of this interesting article from Penelope Trunk's blog The Brazen Careerist here.

Which of these seven do you find the hardest for you, or the most compelling?

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I've been having some up and down times lately surrounding my business experiences, really fearful that no one will visit this site anymore, that no one will be wanting to advertise with me, concerned about all the economic news. What if all I have built goes away? Amazingly two RSS feeds arrived in my mailbox discussing these fears.

One was from Steve Harrison who writes about media coverage for authors and speakers:

There doesn't seem to be much good news on the economic front these days.
 
Unemployment remains high and oil prices keep climbing. Many experts say the economy won't fully recover to pre-crisis levels for many years.
 
That may be true but that's still no reason you can't make more over the next year than ever before. Why do I say that?

Because what happens in the "Nation's Economy" isn't nearly as important as what happens in "Your Economy."


The gist of the article is that you can work yourself out of your economic hole.

But the article which really resonated with me (and made me recognize my fears as pretty normal and maybe even useful) was Johnny B. Truant's 6 Ways to Master Entrepreneurial Uncertainty.

My apologies for copying then entire post here -- it is just so good that I want all of you to read it.

I used to think that successful people had it all figured out.

If they wanted to make something happen, they knew exactly what to do.

If they created a new product, it would be instantly popular and profitable.

They knew all the right people, hired the right help, set all the right prices, and pulled all the right strings of the many moving parts of their business to make it all work perfectly.

Had they attained some kind of career Nirvana, a place in which they didn't need to struggle and worry and fail anymore?

It's a pretty nice story, this notion that success puts an end to fear and uncertainty.

But it's a lie.

 

The truth about insecurity

You know those freak-outs you have about whether your new venture will fly, whether you'll make enough money next month, and how people will judge your latest blog post?

You know how sometimes you can't sleep because you're not sure about your retirement, or are nervous that Customer X will demand a refund?

You know, those fears that people will decide that you're a phony?

Those thoughts that you won't be able to do that big thing that's on the horizon?

Well, get used to those fears, because they're never going to go away.

I've met enough of the stars in this field to know that "the ultra-confident and never uncertain successful person" is about as realistic as the tooth fairy.

No one has it all figured out

Not one of the people you look up to is confident all the time. They don't confer upon themselves the same degree of "expert status" that the public has conferred upon them. They don't feel they're infallible.

Every one of them has the occasional periods of doubt, of feeling that their next big thing might be their next big flop.

All of them put their pants on one leg at a time, head to their work spaces, and proceed to worry about most of the same things as every other human being.

Everyone has insecurities.

The difference between people who do big things and those who have the same ideas but do nothing is not that successful people are more capable or fearless.

The difference is that successful people feel the uncertainty, and they freak out a little (or a lot) about how what they're about to do could fail, or make them look stupid, or invite ridicule, or kill their profits for the month.

Then, they do it anyway

Whether you succeed or fail — and whether you continue to succeed or continue to fail — you're human. You're going to be uncertain about things. You're going to be afraid. That's not a bad thing, because the times when you're uncertain and fearful are the times you grow.

Don't fear uncertainty. Use it. Master it.

If you can make uncertainty your ally and your friend, a world of amazing things awaits you.

How to become a master of uncertainty

Tony Robbins has a catch phrase that he says all the time: "The quality of your life is in direct proportion to the amount of uncertainty you can comfortably live with."

Uncertainty is going to crop up anyway, wouldn't it be nice to find a way to comfortably live with more of it?

Here are six ways you can make that happen:

1. Embrace uncertainty

Certainty is a cage.

Sure, we all like that warm feeling that comes from knowing where we are and what's coming next, but that's not the way life is meant to be lived 24/7.

We are meant to grow and become more as people, and growth is always, always, always preceded by something novel and uncomfortable. You cannot evolve without new and challenging experiences.

You know that expression, "If you do what you’ve always done, you’ll get what you’ve always gotten"? It's true.

Uncertainty is your friend, because without it, you'll stagnate, and you'll begin to die a little at a time.

2. Uncouple fear from uncertainty.

The knee-jerk reaction to uncertainty is fear.

If you're fearful about money, that fear comes from an uncertainty as to whether or not you'll have enough money.

If you're afraid of your business failing, what that really means is that you don't know whether what you're doing will work or if it'll fail.

Even a fear of the dark is just a reaction to being unsure about what might be in the dark, rather than a certainty that a particularly scary thing is lurking in it. But even though uncertainty often brings fear, uncertainty is not the same as fear.

Make sure you see the difference.

3. Acknowledge fear, and hear what it is trying to tell you

Look your fear square in the eye.

Don't try to pretend you're not afraid, because as psychiatrist rockstar Carl Jung told us, "What we resist persists."

Fear is not bad. It's here to warn you. It's saying, "This might happen, so plan accordingly." But — and this is key — make sure you don't believe fear knows more than it does about the future.

It's making a guess, not assuring you that something bad will happen. Prepare, and do your best to mitigate any potential peril. Then try hard to let fear go.

Once you've heard the message and have prepared as much as you're able, don't let it keep screaming in your ear, repeating its prophecies of doom.

4. Do something

Action is the antidote to fear.

If you're uncertain and afraid, the worst thing you can do is to simply wait to see what happens.

Do something. Do anything.

If you're worried about money, send some emails to prospects who may hire you. If you're worried about your marketing message, re-read your sales copy and do what you can to refine it.

Remember how I said that uncertainty and fear are the keys to growth? Well, this step is where it happens. Don't just experience fear. Use your fear.

Chuck D. from Public Enemy said, "When I get mad, I put it down on a pad — give you something that you never had." He doesn’t just get angry; he gets angry and uses that anger to write lyrics. Fear works the same way.

It can cripple you, or it can inspire you to do something awesome, even if that awesome thing just feels like a way to escape fear at the time you do it.

5. Be courageous

Think that brave people are fearless, and are able to do the things they do because they aren't afraid of doing them?

Not at all.

Doing what's not frightening isn't bravery; it's rational, everyday decision-making. People who have courage are those who feel uncertain and afraid but proceed anyway.

Mark Twain said, "Courage is resistance to fear, mastery of fear — not absence of fear." Don't think you're doing it wrong if you still have fear. Fear is normal.

Proceeding in the face of that fear is the courage you need in order to grow and to become more.

What fear did for me

Personally, I've felt a lot of fear, and I'm glad for it. Fear is the reason I've been able to build the life I have today, which is honestly pretty amazing.

If a serious financial crash hadn't scared the pants off of me a few years ago, I never would have tried blogging.

If I hadn't seen enough uncertain situations, I would never have realized that there is no spoon.

Without uncertainty and fear, I never would have figured out that (overly woo-woo or not) things really do seem to happen for a reason.

If you're often unsure how things are going to turn out and if that really scares you, then I say: Awesome.

I say: You're on the right track.

If you face your fears, track them down, and then find a way to use them the way Muad'Dib faced and then rode the big scary sandworms in the sci-fi classic Dune, then congratulations, you really do have it all figured out — you've figured out that the key to a great life is being okay with not having it figured out at all.

You've found the wisdom in uncertainty. You've realized that the key to being amazing is doing the things that frighten you.

Keep it up. Deal with your fears about uncertainty, but forge on in spite of them.

I'd close by saying to not be afraid, but that would kind of be missing the point.

Many of these issues have been discussed on this site. I'd love to hear your take on this in the comments.

 

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