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Jim Blasingame

Business futurist, award-winning author, speaker and columnist

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Entrepreneurship

Small Business Owners Are Still Crazy After All These Years, Thank God

February 2, 2023 by Jim Blasingame

“Still crazy after all these years.”

That’s the title of a 1975 song and album by the legendary Paul Simon. Hearing that song – for the zillionth time – makes me think about what makes small business owners different.

It’s the crazy way they look at the world.

Entrepreneurs think about challenges, imagine outcomes, appraise risk, project potential, and measure all of that against their resources and themselves, differently than everyone else. And when they decide to move forward, [Continue Reading]

Filed Under: Entrepreneurship, Innovation / Creativity, Leadership, Start Ups Tagged With: entrepreneurship, leadership, small business, small business owner

Sustained Small Business Success Requires Two Kinds Of Passion

January 3, 2023 by Jim Blasingame

Over the years, as I’ve talked with many a budding entrepreneur about how to start their business, it continues to amaze me how many haven’t conducted anywhere close to a prudent amount of research or due diligence on their baby. Indeed, they often act as if they must get their business going … right … now … or … they … will … just … POP!

This kind of impatience is dangerous.

Doing my best to talk them down off the ledge, I walk the fine line of tough love, between slowing them down to the speed of reason and smacking their entrepreneurial passion into a wall.

When would-be small business owners get that far-away look in their eyes at this impetuous stage, they have plenty of passion for what the business does. They can’t wait to sell suits, manufacture plastic parts, bake bagels, or (your baby here). And passion for what they want to do is not only a good thing, it’s essential.

But without a healthy interest in – if not an attraction for – business fundamentals, passion has only slightly more value than a dream. [Continue Reading]

Filed Under: Entrepreneurship, Management Fundamentals, Start Ups Tagged With: entrepreneurship, management fundamentals, small business, small business owner, startup

Success Will Come From Relationships You Build With People

December 19, 2022 by Jim Blasingame

Dave was the fifth of twelve children raised during the Great Depression. His father worked at a sawmill and was a part-time basket weaver.

Dave had some problems: He was a stutterer, he had epilepsy, plus a learning disorder, all of which prevented him from graduating high school until he was 21. How do you like Dave’s chances in life so far?

But Dave was a good employee: first a Fuller Brush salesman and next a route man for two bakeries. Then, with all of his personal challenges, he purchased and successfully ran a restaurant and a grocery store.

Remember Dave’s father’s part-time basket weaving? Well, he started selling baskets: first from his father’s hands, and later from Dave’s factory. Oh, that’s right. You didn’t know Dave had a basket factory. Well, it was the basket factory Dave sold his two very successful businesses to buy. Turns out Dave had serious entrepreneurial sap rising in his bark.

Dave’s friends, family, and bankers were incredulous. Why leave a successful and sure thing to make baskets? By the way, they knew Dave didn’t know anything about how to make baskets himself. Would you have invested in Dave?

We now know that Dave also had vision. He envisioned a world that would need baskets – lots of baskets. And Dave Longaberger wanted to fill that need. [Continue Reading]

Filed Under: Entrepreneurship, Ethics / Trust, Leadership, Networking Tagged With: entrepreneurship, leadership, networking, small business, success

Four Business Lessons I Learned On The Farm

December 8, 2022 by Jim Blasingame

Growing up on a farm provided many valuable lessons that have transferred beautifully to my life in the non-farming marketplace. Here are four of those timeless and universal lessons.

The Application of Patience

In civil society, patience is respected as one of the great virtues. Who hasn’t heard the admiration, “The patience of Job?” But in the marketplace, patience is half of a powerful paradox because of its alter ego – impatience.

Impatience can be a problem – everybody knows that. [Continue Reading]

Filed Under: Entrepreneurship, Management Fundamentals, Start Ups Tagged With: entrepreneurship, management fundamentals, small business

Entrepreneurial Intangibles Are Essential To Tangible Success

November 20, 2022 by Jim Blasingame

Now in my fifth decade as a business owner, this Baby Boomer has been reflecting on what’s been learned that would benefit the next generation of entrepreneurs.

It’s understandable to focus most of our attention on the many hard fundamentals of how to sustain a successful small business operation. But after logging many hours in that tangible mode, you’ll discover that it’s just as critical to respect the softer entrepreneurial intangibles that tend to be the human being behind the venture. And those who recognize and incorporate these in their approach to ownership are more likely to achieve that elusive holy grail of human intangibles: happiness.

In that spirit, allow me to offer two intangibles that are just as essential to business success as cash flow and profitability:  [Continue Reading]

Filed Under: Entrepreneurship, Start Ups, Work-Life / Balance Tagged With: entrepreneurship, small business, small business owner, success, work-life balance

Patience Is Not Standard Equipment On Entrepreneurs

November 5, 2022 by Jim Blasingame

One of the markers of American culture is the “sticker” on the window of a new car. This document reveals to shoppers a listing of standard equipment and options, plus, of course, the manufacturer’s suggested retail price, or MSRP.

But what if someone is shopping for an entrepreneur to work for? That may sound silly, but prospective employees increasingly do it all the time out here on Main Street. Yes, the money comes into play. But these days, it’s the list of “equipment.”

A prospective team member would be justified in expecting the list of entrepreneurial standard equipment to include characteristics like courage, creativity, perseverance, and adaptability. Innovative, creative, and visionary are other important line items. One of the newer expectations increasingly prominent here in the third decade of the 21st century is values. What are the values of this prospective entrepreneur/founder/employer? What do this business and its founder stand for?

But there’s one trait that’s historically not itemized on an entrepreneur’s standard equipment list: [Continue Reading]

Filed Under: Communication, Entrepreneurship, Leadership, Start Ups Tagged With: communication, entrepreneurship, leadership, small business, small business owner

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