Monday, September 28, 2009

Street Smarts


European Entrepreneurs must Startup Global

European startup companies actually have a big advantage over US based startups and many don’t even know it. No, I am not talking about fat government subsidies or protected local markets. I am talking about “street smarts”.

When I was 13 I remember visiting New York City. Not just the Big Apple Manhattan, but I visited a neighborhood in a ghetto of the Bronx where not too many white people visit unless they come in police cars and carry guns. It was severe culture shock for me, a skinny white middle class boy from the suburbs. If you grow up in the Bronx you learn street smarts fast or you don’t survive.

European entrepreneurs and startups grow up in tiny local markets and are surrounded by different languages and cultures. They develop their own type of street smarts. I read an interesting interview on European Entrepreneurship today. Here is an excerpt:

TechCrunch Europe Blog: (http://uk.techcrunch.com)
Seedcamp Founder Saul Klein Talks European Entrepreneurship
by Mark Hendrickson, September 25, 2009

MH: What are some of the more unique traits of European entrepreneurs, especially when compared to entrepreneurs in the US or elsewhere? Do you find they are driven by different motivations or that they have different personality tendencies?

SK: I think that the best entrepreneurs, regardless of geography, have similar traits; they are very determined, single-minded, and not afraid of taking risks. And I think that’s true wherever they are. One of the things that European entrepreneurs might have different than US entrepreneurs is that they are typically more international in outlook, by virtual of the fact that most of their home markets are not big enough to sustain really big businesses. So you actually have to think internationally and globally from the get-go. Whereas in the US, you can build a huge business by just being successful in the US. I think with the web the way it is now, that’s potentially an advantage.

When I worked with USA based tech startups in the late 90’s, I remember how little they understood about internationalization. The rule then was that only after a company has passed 10 Million $ in sales should they consider foreign markets. Consider that less than 30% of the American public even own a passport.

If you are a European entrepreneur, then you have an advantage. Do you know how to capitalize on it?

Rick Salmon is an energetic entrepreneur who believes that this beautiful world that we have created needs our help. Learn more at www.ricksalmon.com

Wednesday, September 23, 2009

By the Bootstraps

My grandfather was an entrepreneur, just like me. Unfortunately he died of a heart attack at an early age. Big doses of stress and cigarettes were standard fare for entrepreneurs and shop owners in those days. Although I never met him I have envisioned that he would look at me with his ancient blue eyes, stare for a long, dramatic moment and then say “You´ll have to pull yourself up by your own bootstraps son”. I expect that this would be his advice for my life. Little did he know that I would also have that entrepreneur gene (or is it an illness?).

Learning how to ´bootstrap´ a startup company is an important lesson. In every startup I have done I have been successful in raising capital, but only after I had proven to the investors that I had the ability to make sales and generate revenues on my own. Pulling myself up by my bootstraps has always been a healthy and necessary process.

But there is another kind of bootstrapping that is even more important to us entrepreneurs. It is the ability to pull ourselves up by our own bootstraps when we are discouraged, tired, disappointed or disillusioned with our startup businesses. We all hit that stage. As entrepreneurs we all have those days when it just seems impossible to be able to hold out – to endure tight cash flow, limited resources, the nagging pressure of bills and the fear that we might not be able to keep our fragile little boats afloat in the storm. Those dark days are always a part of an entrepreneurs´life.

One of the key differences between the great entrepreneurs and the merely mediocre ones is the ability to rise to the occasion – to find a way to raise energy levels – to see the opportunity, even in the darkest hours.

Yesterday I had a dark and stormy entrepreneurial day - but I also found the way back to the blue skies and to high energy. How about you?

Rick Salmon is an energetic entrepreneur who believes that this beautiful world that we have created needs our help. Learn more at www.ricksalmon.com

Thursday, July 2, 2009

The WHO is much more important than the WHAT

Too much to do all the time, but not getting the results you want? Struggling to reach your customers? Having a hard time getting your message across? Tired of cold calls and chasing leads?

“There is always just too much to do all the time. I don’t know how much longer I can keep this up!” complained a struggling young entrepreneur yesterday. In spite of the fact that he has a good business concept and a great new technology, he is going crazy and considering quitting. In spite of his superman efforts and 70 hour work weeks, his startup business is just not taking off and accelerating like it should.

As entrepreneurs we should all recognize this situation. “Too much to do” usually means that we are attempting to do too many different things, and this is most often a result of an “inability to focus”. Focusing for a startup company is most often a matter of deciding “WHO” you are going to market to and not just “WHAT” you are trying to sell.

Determining the WHO you market to is actually much more important than WHAT you sell. You can have a great product, excellent sales arguments and yet you will still fail to sell if you are chasing all the wrong people. If, however, you truly understand WHO you are marketing to, then you will experience faster success and you will end up with less to do. If you understand exactly who your best customers are, what kind of problems they have, what keeps them up at night staring at the ceiling and what they are most worried about in their own businesses, then it will be easy for you to effectively create, adapt and sell your products or services to them.

The often fatal mistake that many startup entrepreneurs make is to attempt to market to a broad group rather than a tightly focused group. In the case of the entrepreneur I talked with yesterday, he is attempting to break-into a rather large market. A big investor would love this, because the market is huge and the potential earnings are impressive, but the costs and the level of sophistication required to even get noticed in this market is substantial and overwhelming for a startup company.

We explored a different strategy… We looked at how he could attack a smaller market with a much more focused message and offering, then use the rapid success in this smaller market to prove his overall business model, thus driving a powerful wedge into the larger market. For a startup company to succeed in a large market, it requires a different strategy than that which a larger and better-funded company would use. Prove that your basic business model works in a smaller market and it will be easier to get investors to fund your scale-up to larger markets.

Carefully choosing the WHO makes it easy to succeed with the WHAT. Narrow down the WHO to a small, manageable, easy to identify group of customers and you will use less time, money and headache in closing sales. Marketing is not difficult, but it does require focus.

Do you want to figure out how to work less, yet get bigger results? We can help you to develop a better strategy for your business. Contact us and ask how we can do this.

Attention European Entrepreneurs who are seeking investors and funding in 2009! We can put you in the spotlight in front of the very best European investors and venture capital companies. Europe-Unlimited (www.e-unlimited.com) and Xelerator have created a unique, new program to put entrepreneurs on a fast-track to funding. Get your funding in 2009 by contacting us today to learn more. See www.xelerator.com/fast-track

Tuesday, June 9, 2009

Heart and Soul


I read lots of business plans and I meet with many different companies each week. Not all impress me.


I meet lots of talented engineers who struggle with marketing and I meet plenty of brilliant marketing people who push lousy products. Sometimes I get bored because I want it all. I want brains and beauty, strength and gentleness, speed and agility, vision and attention to detail, heart and soul.


I want to meet highly competitive companies that deliver great products, and insist on excellence and yet I also want to meet companies that live by their deepest values and put back more into this world than they take out.


I met such a company 2 weeks ago. Asker Produkt is a small business in Asker, Norway where all the work and production is done by employees who are either physically or emotionally handicapped. The company goes to extreme lengths to create work assignments and processes that compensate for the individual handicaps of each worker. Even though this is expensive and time-consuming, the result is that they have the happiest, most devoted group of employees I have ever seen. Anywhere.


But the best part was that their attitude towards the quality of their products is totally inflexible and unyielding. Their philosophy is that the quality of their products can never be compromised and must be the absolute best possible in order to maintain high standards of excellence and the ongoing loyalty of their customers. You cannot push social responsibility if you are selling junk. No matter how hard, you have to do both. Quality and conscience. Only then will your customers fully stay loyal to your products as well as to your ideals.


This is the combination that so many companies lack. Excellence

but also social responsibility. It’s rare, but something that business sorely needs. Heart and Soul.

- RICK SALMON (June 8, 2009)

Thursday, May 21, 2009

The inner game of a successful entrepreneur


Being a successful entrepreneur is an inner game. It's all about how you manage your mind and your internal beliefs. In Timothy Gallwey's famous book The Inner Game of Tennis, he pointed out that tennis players are often totally obsessed with external things (the new tennis racket, the tennis shoes, the competition, the weather, etc.). They tend to lose site of the most important factor to being a great tennis player - the inner game - the mental attitudes and internal focus that are necessary to succeed.

Being a successful entrepreneur is no different. It's the inner game that is the greatest challenge, not the external factors that are continually changing. Success for your startup is not really about the economy, or your competition or about the next technology platform. It's about you.

Last week I led a workshop in Prague for a group of 48 experienced entrepreneurs. I asked them a simple question -

"What are the most important traits that a successful entrepreneur must have?"


Here is their list:
  1. Passion & Enthusiasm in what you do
  2. The Belief that you will succeed
  3. The ability to keep a clear Vision of a successful future
  4. Determination and Persistance
  5. The ability to Motivate yourself and others
  6. Salesmanship & the ability to be Persuasive
  7. Effective communication and good Negotiation skills
  8. The ability to be a Leader
  9. The ability to Listen
  10. Keeping focus on the Customer
  11. Hiring the right people (and knowing how to identify them)
  12. The ability to manage scarce resources effectively
  13. A supportive family and balanced lifestyle
  14. Focus and the ability to Deliver (making a good idea work)
So take 2 minutes and examine your own situation as an entrepreneur. Which of the items in the list accurately describe you? Look at the list and honestly appraise yourself. Are there one or two areas that you need to strengthen in your own character? What would the effect on your startup business be if you did this? Just ponder this for a moment...

What if you were a tennis player and you discovered you needed help with a certain aspect of your game, for example, your backhand. Wouldn't your personal coach setup a training plan designed to strengthen your backhand? If you discover areas of your inner entrepreneur game that need strengthening, don't just think about it. Take action. One action might be to hire a personal coach. Hire the best one you can find and then make massive progress in this area. You will be surprised with the results.

Monday, May 4, 2009

Let the old trees die


While the global finance crisis might be showing some signs of improvement, the outlook for the entrepreneur is still bleak. Without easy access to capital, entrepreneurs cannot grow. A forest without new growth will age quickly just like an economy without new growth will fall. While governments around the world are busy propping up old businesses in order to save jobs, they might just be missing an important point. Old forests are supposed to die in order to make way for the new.

This weekend I read about Joseph Schumpeter, a Czech economist who was a professor at Harvard for over 30 years. His theory was that there is a process he called Creative Destruction, in which after a long period of growth, a crisis must arise. Each crisis creates its own new dynamics and as a result, new technologies will emerge or be used in a new manner. As a result of this, entrepreneur activities will increase, new companies will start and some of the old companies will die off. The old professor believed that this is a natural cleaning process, especially after long periods of sustained growth, and it is necessary because it creates a capacity for new growth.

Early-stage entrepreneurs must have access to capital in order to survive. During the internet boom of the early 1990's we learned that giving huge amounts of money to young and inexperienced entrepreneurs is like inviting the local Hell's Angels group to your house for an all-you-can-drink free beer bash. They will probably drink you dry and trash your house in the process. Even if in small amounts, early-stage entrepreneurs must have access to capital in order to keep their dreams alive and to meet simple milestones for solid growth.

For the representatives from local government who are reading this article, please keep the programs alive that give small loans and grants to early-stage entrepreneurs. Make it easier for them. You can also encourage companies that assist startups by offering them tax breaks and incentives. Make certain your local new growth economy is getting help so that it does not wither and die. When your big old trees come crashing to the ground, it is only the new growth that will sustain you.

For the entrepreneurs who are reading this article, don't give up. This crisis will also pass. They all do. Whether it takes 6 months or 2 years, if you keep your dream alive, you will be positioned for rapid growth when the smoke clears. Get help from companies that promote meetings between local governments, entrepreneurs and venture capital. Keep the faith. Help is on the way.

Tuesday, February 10, 2009

Smashing Barriers

When working with a startup business there are times to go slow, to create strategies, to contemplate and to carefully evaluate things...
Then there are other times when you need blazing speed and decisive action in order to make huge progress and to smash barriers in your way.

The following is from Seth Godin's excellent blog on marketing and life.
(see http://sethgodin.typepad.com)

Sprint!

The best way to overcome your fear of creativity, brainstorming, intelligent risk taking or navigating a tricky situation might be just to sprint.

When we sprint, all the internal dialogue falls away and we just go as fast as we possibly can. When you're sprinting you don't feel that sore knee and you don't worry that the ground isn't perfectly level. You just run.

You can't sprint forever. That's what makes it sprinting. The brevity of the event is a key part of why it works.

"Quick, you have thirty minutes to come up with ten business ideas."

"Hurry, we need to write a new script for our commercial... we have fifteen minutes."

My first huge project was launching a major brand of science-fiction computer adventure games (Ray Bradbury, Michael Crichton, etc.). I stopped going to business school classes in order to do the launch.

One day, right after a red eye flight, the president of the company told me that the company had canceled the project. They didn't have enough resources to launch all the products we had, our progress was too slow and the packaging wasn't ready yet.

I went to my office spent the next 20 hours rewriting every word of text, redesigning every package, rebuilding every schedule and inventing a new promotional strategy. It was probably 6 weeks of work for a motivated committee, and I did it in one swoop. Like lifting a car off an infant, it was impossible, and I have no recollection at all of the project now.

The board reconsidered and the project was back on again. I didn't get scared until after the sprint. You can't sprint every day but it's probably a good idea to sprint regularly.

So what are you going to do to accelerate your company today?

Join Xelerator and other entrepreneurs in a free online meeting where you can learn more about this and other tools to accelerate your startup business. Click here for more information.


Xelerator. Don't leave your success to chance.

Saturday, January 24, 2009

Xelerator client RPR wins prestigious European Venture Award

Xelerator Backround Info: RPR Technologies has been an Xelerator client for the past 3 years. In 2006 Rick Salmon took over as CEO for RPR in order to help the founders get their patented prototype on the market. The first thing Xelerator did was to assemble a professional Board of Directors and to raise the initial seed financing needed to launch the company. By the end of 2006 the first products were shipped and in 2007 the company passed breakeven. Today RPR employs 6 people, has established sales channels in N.America and W.Europe and has been publically recognized as an exciting and growing young Norwegian business. As part of a strategy to position the company with potential investors, RPR entered a series of venture competitons in August 2008. After winning both "Best Presentation" and "Best Elevator Pitch" awards in the qualifying rounds, RPR qualified for the finals of the EURECAN EUROPEAN VENTURE CONTEST and went on to win the award in the Cleantech category. Note that this is a strategy that Xelerator would recommend for all startup companies. If you are interested in learning more about how to succeed with this type of tactic, contact Xelerator today.

Norwegian company wins prestigious award with “Clean Technology"

RPR Technologies wins “Best Cleantech Company” prize in European Venture Awards

(Porsgrunn, Norway - January 13, 2009)
Removing paint from ships and oil platforms is hazardous to the environment and to operators. A new Norwegian technology virtually “peels” off paint instead of using sandblasting or high-pressure water blasting. This is accomplished in a fraction of the time and is so environmentally friendly that the company RPR Technologies was awarded as the “Best Cleantech Company” in the Eurecan European Venture Awards.


RPR Technologies A/S of Porsgrunn, Norway won the Best Cleantech Company award at the recent 2008 Eurecan European Venture Awards contest in Barcelona, Spain. RPR has invented a new technology for removing paint and corrosion from steel surfaces that is significantly cleaner for the environment than the traditional paint removal methods (sandblasting and waterblasting). The RPR machines use a patented process with induction heat to remove paint from steel that is not only cleaner, but also safer for operators and from 2 to 10 times faster than competitive methods, that emit hazardous dust and water waste into the sea and air. The RPR process creates no harmful waste byproducts and allows operators to work quickly, cleanly and safely.

The Eurecan European Venture Award is a multi-stage contest aimed to identify, promote and reward the most innovative early stage companies in Europe. The selection jury was comprised of experts from industry and venture capital and has evaluated the companies on the basis of 7 criteria (business potential, team experience, technology merit, competitive position, investment interest, growth potential and the entrepreneur). In this year’s competition 725 companies registered to compete. 261 companies were selected for the semi-finals and 21 were selected for the finals which were held on December 17 & 18, 2008 in Barcelona. RPR Technologies of Porsgrunn, Norway was awarded first prize in the Cleantech sector.

“Being selected as the top cleantech early-stage company in Europe is a huge honor for RPR. In these times of global financial crisis, it is important that the good young companies get help and assistance in order to grow “ says Rick Salmon, CEO at RPR Technologies A/S. “Not only is our product good for the environment, but it also allows our users to be more competitive financially. We believe that the market for ship and offshore repairs will actually increase in light of the current economic conditions and this technology can help protect industry jobs in countries where labor costs are high.”

About RPR
RPR Technologies manufactures an industrial machine that removes paint and other coatings from steel surfaces using the process of induction heat. This is a unique, cleantech technology that has been patented in 54 countries and competes with the traditional methods of paint removal such as sandblasting and ultra high pressure (UHP) water blasting. The competitive advantages are that the RPR process is CLEANER than blasting (no hazardous airborne or water waste), SAFER for operators (silent, minimal safety equipment required) and FASTER - especially when removing thick difficult coatings (from 5 to 20 times faster). This can result in considerable cost savings for customers. There are four initial target markets; marine, offshore oil platforms, land based oil & gas pipelines, and storage tanks (chemical, oil & water). RPR is based in Porsgrunn, Norway. On September 29, 2008 RPR was also the winner of “Best Presentation Award” at the EVC Cleantech Venture Forum in Linz, Austria.

See the following links for more information (Norwegian Language only):




NRK.no: Vant europeisk miljøpris (European Environment Award)
Offshore.no: Miljøpris til RPR (Environment Award to RPR)
Varden.no: Internasjonal miljø-pris til lokal bedrift
(International environmental award to local business)


About the European Venture Awards
For more information about the European Venture Awards see: www.e-unlimited.com
Contact Person: Tanja Baltus, Europe Unlimited, Place Flagey 7, B1050 Brussels, Belgium
Tel: +32 264 33682 Email: tanja@e-unlimited.com


For more information about RPR Technologies A/S, see www.rprtech.com
Contact Person: Rick Salmon Tel: +47 9139 0604 Email: rs@rprtech.com

Tuesday, October 14, 2008

How to accelerate your startup, even during a recession


If you listen too much to the financial news these days, you can put yourself into a deep clinical depression within about 15 minutes. Most of the experts are predicting global slowdowns and catastrophe scenarios, but how do you adopt a strategy to keep your small startup business afloat? Is it possible to even thrive in a recession?

To accelerate your startup during a recession you must have a
STRATEGY for SURVIVAL and GROWTH.


Here are four tips:

1. Don’t lose your belief and your will to win, even though most others around you are losing theirs… No other piece of advice is more valuable. Guard your enthusiasm and optimism carefully. This is what makes you special as an entrepreneur. Do not let anyone diminish this! The great news is that most people will give in to negative thoughts and walk around with a cloud hanging over their heads. You, on the other hand, will refuse to let this current (temporary) situation affect you and you will have the sunshine on your face at all times. Prospects and customers will notice this and be drawn to you.

2. Have the intellectual agility to quickly adapt… to modify your product or services, to repackage, rename or even reinvent what you are offering to harmonize with the dominant fears and beliefs of the times. During the Great Depression of the 1930s, companies that sold men’s neckties actually increased their sales. When consumers had less money, they put off buying a new suit, but invested in a new tie instead. Have you thought through how your business could adapt to actually benefit from the current situation? Can you change your message or packaging in order to reflect this?

3. Redirect your efforts at better, more likely buyers… (i.e., focus on those buyers that are the least or the last to be effected by the recession). We all have different types of customers. Which of your customers will be less affected by a recession? Look at public (government) spending. Take a look at the companies that are still hiring new employees today. Who are they? What is it about them that makes them less or last affected by the recession? There are clues everywhere. Are you looking carefully enough and are you flexible enough to take advantage of this quickly?

4. Work harder... There is no replacement for this. During tough times, you just have to work harder than the rest. You must be more diligent and follow-up more closely in order to get the optimal value out of every customer lead you get. Keep your optimism (as in point 1), work harder and you will be surprised that even during tough economic times you will survive and even thrive.

Remember that during the biggest crises, come the biggest opportunities.

Team up with others who can help you! Want to discuss this and other issues affecting startup companies with other experienced entrepreneurs? Attend one of our free monthly webinars. See www.xelerator.com for dates and times.

www.xelerator.com