Making business decisions are rarely just that. Choices regarding your business typically take into account family, and if you have made an impact, your sorrounding community. This is how you do it.

NBA Superstar LeBron James

LeBron James, NBA superstar, Cleveland hero athlete and family man had a big decision to make last night regarding which team he would play for this upcoming NBA season. His eventual decision to play for the city of Miami this Fall affected not only his ability to win a championship, but also the National Basketball Association, his family members and the entire city of Cleveland.  How many decisions do you make in a day that affect not just yourself but many other people?

This morning, like every morning is the beginning of decision day for me. As a person growing a small business, there are many options for work. I say “options” with a little laugh because they don’t feel like options at 8 in the morning -they feel like 20 hours of required work, all due today. Is today the day I update my website? Work on my newsletter? Call on my former clients? Reach out to new clients? Update my Accounting? Or check my post office box? How about write that blog posting? Well, you know which one I chose. Does any of this sound familiar to you?

Fortunately there is a way to choose from the “required work” that is constantly laid out in front of you. Last night LeBron James mentioned that he was making the best decision for himself. What’s different about running a business is that though you may have started for your own satisfaction, but you continue because your success will impact your family and clients you serve (your community). This is how you decide what to do:

  1. Start the day, every day, making a list of every stressor in your mind
  2. Take a hard look at that list and identify the things you CAN do
  3. Take those ‘can do’ items and separate them by long term strategic goal vs simple task

Emptying your head in the morning, of all of the scary demands on your time, will be a relief.  Making note of the things you can do will give you purpose.  Separating the short term versus long term tasks will give you a plan.

Start each day like this every time you start the day confused about what to do first.  At the end of the day when you are sorrounded by your loved ones and thoughts of things that really matter, you will be at peace.
 

Jason Howell is the author of AMERICA: Still the Land of Opportunity, Always a Home for the Brave.\” For more insights on success in business and in life, pick up your copy today.


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Carl Schramm, CEO, Kauffman Foundation

Entrepreneurial innovation drives the American economy. Well, you knew that.  Did you know that the economies of China and India are thriving because of our example?   They are merely “copy cat” economies says Carl Scramm HERE. 

Jason Howell is the author of AMERICA: Still the Land of Opportunity, Always a Home for the Brave.\” For more insights on success in business and in life, pick up your copy today.


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What are you doing special for National Small Business Week?  The event is being held right here in DC.    

This is the first time I have ever heard of such a “week” but maybe the reason is that now, coming upon my first full year in this business, I am a fully invested entrepreneur.  Entrepreneur magazine called 2010 the “Year of the Entrepreneur” in their December 2009 issue and I agree.  It is always a good time to start a business and contribute to our local economy but there is no better time than when our economy is facing a challenge of growth and ingenuity.  In short, there is no better time than now.

Last week I had the opportunity to visit the Arlington, VA office HQ of the Washington Business Journal.  There I met a group of people curious about how to better serve the Washington, DC business community.  They were literally asking “how?”  In celebration of this special week they supplemented the weekly paper with a feature magazine entitled: From Beginners to Bigshots.   Featuring a group of successful entrepreneurs, I was struck by how many of them used the Small Business Administration (SBA) as a resource for their success and how many small business people I know that do not (including myself).

To commemorate the week I am going to reaquint myself with the SBA beginning with the Small Business Development Centers (SBDC) which are designed to provide management assistance to businesses of my size. 

What do you plan to do?
 

Jason Howell is the author of AMERICA: Still the Land of Opportunity, Always a Home for the Brave.\” For more insights on success in business and in life, pick up your copy today.


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This young entrepreneur speaks the truth. That entrepreneurs are leading the economic recovery and can help to lead the growth of our communities at the same time.  This is Patriotic Development (TM) defined: 

Jason Howell is the author of AMERICA: Still the Land of Opportunity, Always a Home for the Brave.\” For more insights on success in business and in life, pick up your copy today.


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Watching Kobe Bryant and the Lakers is inspiring.  It is Friday night on the first day of the second blizzard of the 2009-2010 winter and I am focusing.

On a typical Friday night I might not be up this late writing a blog posting however something about watching my late Father’s favorite team has inspired me. Kobe Bryant’s 23 point performance in the first half – and especially the look in his eyes – reminded me what the power of focus can do for my business.

Focus is what separates the great athletes from the greatest; and it’s the same for entrepreneurs. Focus means doing a few things well:

  • Identifying your major targets, (true goals) and concentrating on those (and nothing else)
  • Eliminating distractions before they become distractions
  • Treating days “off” from your typical schedule as opportunities

For the next few days, those of us who live in the northeast are going to have our typical schedules adjusted by the second “snowpocolypse” of the season.   Here’s how I am going to maximize my focus as stated above:

  1. Spend some extra time with my loved ones (that’s why I’m an entrepreneur anyway)
  2. When my loved ones get a little tired of me, respond to those e-mails I’ve been flagging
  3. Take some time to improve my weakest revenue source

These “off days” are the best to catch up on the above and some of us may have a few of them coming up this weekend.   At least that’s what I think and the above is what I plan to do.  How about you?
 

Jason Howell is the author of AMERICA: Still the Land of Opportunity, Always a Home for the Brave.\” For more insights on success in business and in life, pick up your copy today.


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Networking is only one component of bringing in more business. The following is a response I gave to some friends of mine yesterday when they asked how they could improve.

Have you ever thought about how many ways there are to network both direct and indirect? Here are a few:

  • Join a network of peers (same profession) and exchange best practices
  • Take a leadership role in a professional development network and meet people from various professions
  • Become a member of a direct referral network like a Chamber or (www.BNI.com).
  • Socially network (Blog, Twitter, Facebook, LinkedInNewsletter, Podcast, etc.)

Don’t underestimate the meaning of #4 by the way. It’s more than just setting up some accounts and checking in once in a while. Unlike your personal profiles on say, Facebook, these professional accounts will require regular participation; as regular as follow up phone calls to potential customers always are. #1 and #3 are likely more familiar but people have varying success with these kind of networking opportunities for the same reasons that success may elude you in non-professional relationships. For you, these meetings must be more than just a handshake and exchange of business cards. Getting to know people you meet on a “text your cell phone” level is key to gaining their trust…and their referrals.

I didn’t save #2 for last on purpose but it’s a good one to end on. Taking a leadership role in a professional development group (like www.Toastmasters.org) gives you many benefits that will increase your business:

  1. You’ll learn or improve a professional skill; i.e. speaking publically (which helps to generate customers)
  2. You will find people open to new things (like your business)
  3. People will look up to you in your leadership role (and people buy from leaders)
  4. You will practice serving a group and that practice of service will help you better serve your customers

If you’d like more details on any of this let me know. Some of this used to be just conceptual to me but now that I am literally running my own business it’s become proven reality.
 

Jason Howell is the author of AMERICA: Still the Land of Opportunity, Always a Home for the Brave.\” For more insights on success in business and in life, pick up your copy today.


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The interdependence of small business owners and their communities has never been more obvious and necessary than now.   What the President tried to speak to last night is tough for any politician to accomplish within an election cycle.  It is up to us.

“Unfortunately too many of our citizens have lost faith in our biggest institutions,” said President Obama.  Well, the inability to rely on big insitutions births an opportunity for entrepreneurs in a world where customers and employees are seeking relationships with meaning and value (for each stakeholder).  “Trust” is one of the words of the year.  The President stated in his speech, “We face more than a deficit of dollars, we face a deficit of trust.”  Who do you trust?  

  • The Doctor who spends 4 mintues with you or the receptionist who sat with you in the waiting room?
  • The CEO of the large company you’ve invested in or the woman who attends your BNI meetings?
  • Your “financial advisor” or your babysitter (whom you’ve known since birth)?

If you are in the fortunate position of creating something of value for the marketplace than you are providing more to your community than products or services.  What you actually provide is a person to trust and a leader to follow (and real leaders are hard to come by).   How can you maximize this opportunity to contribute to society in a way that stretches beyond your products and services?

  1. Be visible.  Visibility is more than just buying ads in newspapers and cable tv.  It is being there when your community needs your service.  I met an IT entrepreneur this week who is donating his services to his community in Arlington, VA so they could put on a fitness expo.  He is helping to make that wellness event happen and he will be rewarded for the leadership he provides.  Cost to the taxpayer?  $0.  Value?  Health and wellness.  Value to the entrepreneur?  Hours of free publicity.
  2. Be relevant.  If your business is T-shirts in the Winter, you’re probably a little slow.  Just like “..it’s 5′o clock somewhere,” it’s also 75 degrees somewhere.  Partner with a West Coast or Southern state by offering your products to their communities.   Maybe there’s a sweater guy there who could serve your customers in January around here.  You’ll both expand your businesses and consistently be serving your community. 
  3. Expand -now.  Most small business folks wait until there’s an extra $50,000 before they start hiring.  Like tomorrow, that “extra $50K” never comes.  Great leaders take calculated risks; especially on good people.  In the metropolitan DC area alone there are thousands of talented, underemployed workers who would be happy to offer their service at a reduced rate initially to prove their value.  Find them, train them and help one more family to succeed.

The smallest businesses have the potential to do what our government can only hope to “provide the environment” for:  job creation.   You, my fellow entrepreneur are the saviors your underemployed neighbors are hoping for.  Your ambition, your ideas and your willingness to champion the ideals of personal courage and innovation are the hope of the world -no matter what your product or service.  As your businesses grow, you create the opportunity to lead in other areas of the community.  Are you ready for this next level of responsibility?  Are you ready to manifest that trust?
 

Jason Howell is the author of AMERICA: Still the Land of Opportunity, Always a Home for the Brave.\” For more insights on success in business and in life, pick up your copy today.


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Last week I attended the State of Entrepreneurship Address by the #Kauffman Foundation. It made me proud to be an entrepreneur. I hope the same for you :

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No better example of “Two is company, three is a crowd” than the juxtaposition of entrepreneurs, time and loved ones. (#JasonHowellCompany) Finding enough time to build a business and spend time with loved ones is nearly impossible except for the most effective time managers (which we entrepreneurs are typically not). So how do we show love to our business and our family?

Stories of successful entrepreneurs don’t help. Usually they begin with a lonely, destitiute protagonist with nothing left but an idea. Defeating all odds said protagonist discovers a need for his/her idea and then spends an inordinate amount of time (re: \”Outliers\”) trying to sell it. The guilt associated with trying to live up to the Outliers’ “10,000 hour” rule is also not much help. Most of us started our businesses to improve our own lives and the lives of our customers.  We intended to “share the wealth” with those that our closest to us but along the way, those loved ones feel most left out. Since most of us who actually run businesses know that there is no true overnight successs, here are a few ways to express your love for your family while so busily loving your business:

  1. Communicate – nothing says lovin’ like actually saying “I love you.”  Start with that phrase every once in a while to remind those close to you that your business is a means to the ends; not the ends.
  2. Be honest – it’s not just the strict requirements of building a business that keep us busy; sometimes it’s our own inefficiency.  We’re not perfect, we’re entrepreneurs.  I probably have misspellings in this blog post and the grammar’s probably off but hopefully you still get my message.  Explain to your loved ones that you try really hard but that sometims you fail and that failure leads to encroaching on family time -you’re sorry. 
  3. Get help – reading a book is a good start but be as inquistive with other entrepreneurs and even your clients regarding how they manage time with family.  The good news is that successful people with 9 to 5 jobs typically struggle with family time also.  Always asks for ideas and try them out.

Before writing this post I couldn’t help but read a couple articles on AOL.com that caught my interest.  Today is MLK Day and though it’s a day of service, it’s a holiday and I felt I was “owed” some repreive before working.  These are the mental gymnastics of an entrepreneur. Communicate and be honest about them with your family and be courageous enough to ask for help.  I will start.  

Do you have any other ideas for making time with loved ones?
 

Jason Howell is the author of AMERICA: Still the Land of Opportunity, Always a Home for the Brave.\” For more insights on success in business and in life, pick up your copy today.


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