4 truths about running your own business


There are a lot of emotions that go into being a business owner. It’s easy to take pride in owning your own company. Yet it’s just as easy to feel the stress of it too. Running a company can be exhilarating and heartbreaking, incredibly fulfilling while it keeps you up at night, and everything in between. That’s why, if you’re thinking about starting a business, it helps to know what to expect.
The following 4 truths are just a few of the points you need to know about running your own business. While they won’t necessarily remove the stress of what it takes to be a business owner, they can guide you toward keeping consistency and ensuring your business runs successfully.
You need clear goals and to check in regularly
It’s important to set up goals from the start of your business. They’ll serve as a roadmap for your company and will keep you on track from the beginning. The key is to not forget that those exist. You should have long-term and short-term goals, and it always helps to have lofty goals along the way, too. If you can meet those short-term goals on the way to those bigger ones, it will keep you motivated to keep moving forward.
It’s important to check in regularly with those goals. If you aren’t meeting the ones you’ve set up for yourself, it may signal that something needs to change. Know what you’re working toward so you can fix it if things get off track. Without that stability, it’s easier to get off track than you may realize.
You should know your market and what they need
Chances are, you started your business because you saw a need and wanted to provide a solution. But at some point, you need to know that your market will start driving your market. After all, without that target market, you wouldn’t have a business at all.
It’s important to understand who your target market is and how you can successfully deliver the solutions they need. You need to be intimately aware of these insights, because if you can’t answer their needs, they won’t keep coming back to your business. Be sure to listen to them, because they will tell you what they want and need from you.
You need to remember that you are what drives your business
You may be one of many who offer the type of business that you do. But it’s important to remember that you’re the only one who has the passion, knowledge, insight, and story that you have to offer. There is nobody else who has that story to tell.
Be open and honest about your story and what drove you into your business. Your story may be what makes a person choose your company over another one. After all, today’s consumers want to believe in the brands and services they consume. That’s true in a small business as well. Tell your story, and the people who believe in you will follow.
It’s important to understand you can’t scale alone
You may have been the one who started your business. But you need the right people in place to take your work to the next level. You need to build a team that will help you achieve the goals and objectives you have in place for your business.
It takes the right people — not necessarily the right positions — so keep that in mind as you work toward growing your business. The other important thing to remember is that you can’t do it all. Be willing to admit when you need help. And remember that there are things people bring to the table that you just don’t have the capacity to do. Bring the right people on board and they will help you succeed beyond your wildest dreams.
Final thoughts
Launching a business is the easy part. It’s driving it toward success that is tough. But with the right people in place and the right outlook, you can make your business a massive success both now and well into the future. Do you have your own tips that new business owners should remember? Share them in the comments below!
Jim Allen is a business leader and entrepreneur who has built one of the top-producing real estate groups in the Triangle. He is President of The Jim Allen Group, which is consistently named one of the top real estate teams in North Carolina and even North America.