VAIDS

Wednesday, January 23, 2013

10% may be better than 100%

No entrepreneur is happy if his or her business is not doing well. Failure of a business to perform as expected may give its owner sleepless nights and long hours of thinking and rethinking on what next to do to make the business perform better.
 
Who would not want to be happy seeing his or her efforts yielding good fruits? In the latest published result of a research on the top happiest countries of the world, it is explained in part by the researchers that “happiness means having opportunity – to get an education, to be an entrepreneur.
 
What’s more satisfying than having a big idea and turning it into a thriving business, knowing all the way that the harder you work, the more reward you can expect?” In the outcome of the research, which has Norway, Denmark, Sweden, Australia, New Zealand, Canada, Finland, Netherlands, Switzerland and Ireland as the top ten happiest countries, the researchers noted that what contributed more to the state of the countries include being small in size.
 
“Being small also seems to help. Big countries with heterogeneous populations are more unwieldy; disparate groups make it harder for a society to build social cohesion and trust.”
 
The gist I am picking for this page from the happiest country report is: how can a Nigerian business owner enjoy doing business or what can he or she further do to reap maximum profit; i.e. working smarter for higher rewards and better quality of living?
Not a few Nigerian entrepreneurs have seen their business ideas messed up because they chose inappropriate form of business to run it with.
 
The quest to own a business alone yet without adequate wherewithal to make it a success had made many businesses to wither few months after they are set up.
A lot of the businesses that have spent years are daily gasping for breath. Wonderful business ideas with capacity to become multinationals and first class global brands are struggling to get foothold just because their promoters want to hold on to the businesses as sole owners.
The end result is that they are proud owners of businesses that are fighting hard to survive.
 
Rethink your business structure
Ownership structure of a business is one challenge that most Nigerian entrepreneurs are finding so hard to really get right.
These entrepreneurs have good intentions and they express it through the names of their businesses with words like ‘international’ or ‘global’, but the right attitudes and approaches to make these intentions become realities are lacking.
 
The outcome is lack of happiness because the businesses’ performances are far lower than their expectations.
You may have very bright business idea but you may not have the required resources to make the business idea realise its full potential.
In this case, it will be a great disservice to the business if you choose to make it run within the confine of your own capacity as a solely-owned micro or a small business.
 
If I may ask, which one is better: a 100 per cent of a struggling business whose total annual performance is not up to N1m profit or holding a 10 per cent of a bigger brand with capacity to do billions of naira in annual turnover and multi-million naira in profit?
 
What makes business thrive exceedingly is the coming together of several strengths to seize available opportunities and operate on good economy of scale in such a way that even people who may not immediately need the product are aware of its existence.
What is in the ownership structure of a business that will not allow its promoter open it up for other people to participate in the business? My take is that pride and that unexplained ‘sense of satisfaction’ to see oneself as business owner is the hidden reason.
The pride is brought about by the level of social exposure, level of intellectual capacity, and the desire to prove that one is economically better than the several millions around that are considered poorer.
It is sheer demonstration of ego and false opinion of oneself.
Yet, someone who wants to prove to be above the next person is not anywhere near where he or she ought to be if he or she had allowed others to bring in their strengths to bear on his or her business idea.
 
If we look at some big global brands today – Microsoft, Facebook, Apple – we still know their owners despite the fact that the businesses are opened to other people to participate in.
The businesses were started anyhow but they didn’t remain anyhow. The difference is that they know what to do and how to do it.
 
Because of the mindset these people operate with, they are making huge profit with less stress. Some other people are doing the thinking for them while they go on holiday enjoying themselves and looking younger everyday.
So, why not you? You need to tackle the selfish and possessive tendency that may not allow you enjoy the best your business can offer you. Remember: at times, one per cent ownership of a business is better than gleefully holding on to 100 per cent of a worthless business.
for more info contact:-
 Ola Emmanuel 08023257707

No comments:

Post a Comment

Share

Enter your Email Below To Get Quality Updates Directly Into Your Inbox FREE !!<|p>

Widget By

VAIDS

FORD FIGO

+widget