Four Traps that Catch Entrepreneurs

Written by Claudette Rowley


You have permission to publish this article electronically or in print as long asrepparttar resource box is included. Please notify me of publication by sending a website link or copy of your publication to claudette@metavoice.org.

Word Count: 618 words, 65 characters per line

Thanks, Claudette Rowley ==============

Four Traps that Catch Entrepreneurs Claudette Rowley Copyright 2003

"A problem cannot be solved onrepparttar 104747 same level that it was created." - Albert Einstein

Trap #1: I am my business.

Truth: Who you are is so much bigger than your business. Your business is simply one expression of you. You as a person are complex and multi-faceted, and inrepparttar 104748 best of situations, your business doesn't define you, you define it. Just as it's unhealthy to let a relationship define all of who you are, so is it unwise to allow your business to completely define you.

A common subset of this trap is: "If my business fails, I'm a failure." When discussing this topic with clients, I often hear two responses to business success and failure. When an entrepreneur fails, she or he often falls right into self-blame. And when an entrepreneur succeeds - "I just got lucky" is a common response.

Trap #2: If it's worth doing, it must be hard.

Truth: This is a consistent message in our culture. If something is worth doing, we think it must involve incredibly hard work. When I coach entrepreneurs, I often askrepparttar 104749 question "How could this be easy?" The notion that hard work equals worth is so embedded in us, that we sometimes feel uncomfortable when a great opportunity drops in our lap or new venture comes together seamlessly. Yes, as entrepreneurs, we work hard when we need to. However, hard work does not have to includerepparttar 104750 notion that struggling, suffering and working 80 hours per week makes us better entrepreneurs or more virtuous people. As much as possible, let it be easy. Accept great opportunities, and let people help you.

Trap #3: My success is measured in profits.

Truth: Expand your definition of success. What does success actually mean to you? Success is measured in many different ways, profit being only one of them. Are you making a social contribution? Are you creating an innovative product? What is your vision and are your realizing it? Do you have autonomy and control over your own time? Success is relative and a matter of perception. One person's success is anothers failure. How high is your bar? Some entrepreneurs setrepparttar 104751 bar so high for themselves that they can never "succeed" in their own minds. They can't win - kind of like a dog chasing its tail.

Does the PR Blueprint Work?

Written by Robert A. Kelly


Please feel free to publish this article and resource box in your ezine, newsletter, offline publication or website. A copy would be appreciated at bobkelly@TNI.net. Word count is 1075 including guidelines and resource box. Robert A. Kelly © 2004.

Doesrepparttar PR Blueprint Work?

Managers, please take a minute and read two sentences: People act on their own perception ofrepparttar 104746 facts before them, which leads to predictable behaviors about which something can be done. When we create, change or reinforce that opinion by reaching, persuading and moving-to-desired-actionrepparttar 104747 very people whose behaviors affectrepparttar 104748 organizationrepparttar 104749 most,repparttar 104750 public relations mission is accomplished.

Properly executed, this comprehensive blueprint will help you persuade your key external stakeholders to your way of thinking, then move them to take actions that lead to your unit’s success.

And, as you moverepparttar 104751 emphasis ofrepparttar 104752 public relations crew assigned to your operation from communications tactics torepparttar 104753 model outlined above, YOU move ever closer to personal success as a unit manager.

Here’s why. The blueprint demands of you a sharper focus onrepparttar 104754 very groups of outside people who play a major role in just how successful a manager you will be – your key external audiences.

Like most managerial initiatives you implement, your new public relations blueprint also will require aggressive execution.

But, how do we KNOWrepparttar 104755 blueprint works? In three ways:

1) Goal achievement

2) Followrepparttar 104756 big boys

3) Problem-solving muscle

Goal achievement -- Becauserepparttar 104757 blueprint requires that a public relations goal be established,repparttar 104758 first way we knowrepparttar 104759 blueprint works is when you achieve that goal. That’s just pure success when you end up nailingrepparttar 104760 objective you planned for up front.

Followrepparttar 104761 big boys -- watchrepparttar 104762 performance of big business, non-profit and association operators. Over time, large organizations become aware of those outside audiences whose behaviors affect itrepparttar 104763 most because those stakeholder behaviors can and do cause pain. In due course, a list of these “publics” is created of special interest torepparttar 104764 public relations department and its agencies.

Because some behaviors hurt more than others,repparttar 104765 big boys often assign key stakeholder audience rankings. This prioritizes them as to impact, highlighting which target audiences require special attention and a hefty chunk ofrepparttar 104766 public relations budget.

Unlike smaller entities, big organizations benefit from extensive early-warning networks inrepparttar 104767 form of field representatives, suppliers, customers of all sizes, various vendors, local, regional and national print and broadcast media who cover their activities, university contacts, retirees, sales representatives and residents of towns where its facilities operate.

Such networks provide much ofrepparttar 104768 perception monitoring needed to discover and track howrepparttar 104769 organization’s key target audiences perceive it. In many cases, larger organizations retain professional survey counsel to gather these data, while others utilize staff public relations expertise in perception and behavior matters.

Many larger organizations waste little time applying corrective action to serious perception problems because they know how they can morph into troublesome behaviors. The public relations goal usually reflectsrepparttar 104770 most negative perceptions discovered either duringrepparttar 104771 opinion monitoring phase or from input gleaned from members ofrepparttar 104772 organization’s diverse network. For example, a new goal such as clarifying a dangerous misconception, correcting an unfortunate inaccuracy or spiking a potentially hurtful rumor.

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