Sunday, May 20, 2012

Lessons for Aspiring Entrepreneurs


1. An untended garden quickly becomes a field: plant what you want to grow.
2. Have partners, but don’t do the same things: make sure you both do something you enjoy.
3. Hire people for what they can teach you, not for what you can teach them.
4. Everyone should be able to take criticism: creative trust is built on critical honesty.
5. Design is only one part of the puzzle: savor the discussion, development, debate, and dissemination of your work just as much as the making of it.

6. Goals may be arbitrary, but not having them will be maddening when there’s no one else to tell you if you’re doing a good job: set 3-month, 6-month, and 1-year goals at the outset.
7. When you take your favorite clients out to lunch, it’s a good time to propose what you’d like to do together next.
8. Knowing more designers doesn’t necessarily translate into having good clients: spend your development time wisely.
9. Be known for something: it helps.
10. You will never work harder than when you’re building something: find balance. Sometimes the best way to solve a creative problem is to take a vacation or read a book
Advice on design entrepreneurship from Rob Giampietro
I realise these lessons are set within the context of design, but I still think these rules apply to all entrepreneurs :)

3 comments:

Lau Eng Chong said...

This is indeed great advice. Thank you for caring enough to post and share with us. A million Thanks. I am a entrepreneur looking for like minded person to join venture with. If you aee that person or have friends who are please refer me to them. Have an Awesome Day.

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