It’s common for founders to feel lost at the zero to one stage. So they “do stuff” all day, keeping them busy and “accomplishing” things. The problem is they are busy with the wrong things, from the ridiculous – spending forever researching what laptop to buy, office space, choosing your desk – to filing paperwork, signing up for and attending non-stop events.
You are inspiring me. I have a fairly simply solution to a somewhat complex problem that will meet demand in a market segment that can best be described as having giant egos. I imagine you encountered some of that in the medical field. I can do this. I am just starting as the concept has just taken root - but your advice on focus and scalability makes so much sense to me. I have seen entrepreneurs - brilliant ideas - not succeed as they should have - and I beleive it was the misguided post launch focus you describe. If I could only turn back time...
You are inspiring me. I have a fairly simply solution to a somewhat complex problem that will meet demand in a market segment that can best be described as having giant egos. I imagine you encountered some of that in the medical field. I can do this. I am just starting as the concept has just taken root - but your advice on focus and scalability makes so much sense to me. I have seen entrepreneurs - brilliant ideas - not succeed as they should have - and I beleive it was the misguided post launch focus you describe. If I could only turn back time...
You're 100% correct. We met at one of those events that a supposed to build business.