Albuquerque Journal

Experience, expertise, commitment crucial to success

- BY PAUL BUTLER MANAGING PARTNER, AZRAEL PARTNERS Paul Butler is the former chief operating officer of Lumidigm Inc. Under his leadership, Albuquerqu­e startup Lumidigm grew revenue more than 30 percent per year, attracted investment capital, and employed m

Building a startup or creating a new line of business is hard work, and statistics show the odds of success are long ones. Beating the numbers comes down to a combinatio­n of experience expertise, and commitment.

The last of these three traits is important, but experience and expertise can make or break your venture in three critical areas.

BUILDING A HIGHPERFOR­MANCE TEAM: Behind every profitable venture is a team. You might have a compelling idea, an excellent offering with market fit, and a large market opportunit­y, but without a competent team, your business won’t make it.

You need folks who excel at what they do because they’re an order of magnitude more productive than average employees. They also know what not to do. By helping a business avoid unnecessar­y cycles of learning and poor decisions, they allow more of that productive power to be used efficientl­y.

Employees with this level of skill are drawn to startups because they seek a challenge, expect the payoff to be significan­t and hate mediocrity and bureaucrac­y. They must believe in the offering and will do their own calculus on your venture’s probabilit­y of success before joining the team.

If you lack startup experience, recruit to your core management team individual­s who have built at least one successful venture. It will increase the likelihood of success and also attract investors.

BEING GREAT AT CUSTOMER DEVELOPMEN­T: Selling an idea to partners, investors and customers requires deep knowledge about what problem your business is solving, how others are addressing it and how your approach is the best available solution.

Market research reports can be insightful and provide data about growth rates and trends, but they’re no substitute for actually getting out of the office and interactin­g with potential customers, asking them how they will buy the product or service, what costs are involved in installing or maintainin­g a product and how the total costs compare with the value delivered.

To test your proposed solution, early adopters and potential large buyers who have the problem should be encouraged to try out the proposed remedy.

This type of customer developmen­t is hard, timeconsum­ing and inexact, but awesome technology and great ideas don’t just sell themselves.

DEVELOPING AN ADAPTIVE PLAN: Succeeding in the world of business involves an adaptive, learning oriented approach that is constantly evolving and responding to real-world challenges. But being open to feedback doesn’t mean operating without a plan; that’s a good way to burn cash, waste valuable time and miss opportunit­ies. A good plan builds in margins to allow it to adapt to reality rather than fail with nothing to show for it.

To begin, envision the future goal and reason backward, imagining what could go wrong along the path. Then start in the present, building toward the future on a path that avoids anticipate­d obstacles. The intent is not to spend months striving for a perfect, problem-free plan, but rather to think deeply about what to expect on the journey.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States