This book has really great practical advice for an entrepreneur. I think an easy way to review this book would be to tell you that I highlighted almost 60% of this book's text because it has so much good content.
Ten golden morsels:
~ "Take a few minutes out of your schedule every now and then and remind yourself why you can achieve your goals. Make sure that your brain is getting enough training in seeing you and your business as a success and as a winner and not as a failure.”
~ “When you promise but don’t deliver, you start competing against yourself, against the image that you have built of your brand for your customers.”
~ “You are not selling products. You are selling value to your customers. The more value your customers see, the more they will like your business.”
~ “When you’re ready to enter the battlefield of business, make sure you are armed with the two most important tools for business survival: industry experience and business knowledge.”
~ “A business will require you to wear many hats. You have to be a leader with a mission, vision, and direction.”
~ “A failed entrepreneur has just passion but a successful one knows how to plan to keep that passion alive.”
~ “Great things take time. Your business idea is one of those things. If it’s taking time, it means your idea is trying to bring a big societal and cultural change.”
~ “Vision and mission metaphorically represent the address that I’d forgot to add in my “invitation.” Alternatively, they represent the final destination of your business.”
~ “Sometimes the right business decision is to let it go - to let go of an underperforming employee, to let go of an unprofitable branch, to let go of a weak advertising campaign, and to let go of an idea that fails to create the hype you wanted it to be.”
~ “We have to start listening to what our ideal customers have to say about our product with an open mind.”
Loads of lessons on running a company and avoiding failure. Lessons that could be applied to business and life. Glad I picked it up!