Entrepreneurship culture in America is all messed up and it’s a shame.

TechCrunch. Product Hunt. Shark Tank.

It’s all about new ideas. Changing the world. Innovation. 0 to 1. Blue ocean. Venture capital and exits and scalability.

And ITS ALL A LIE.
You ask the average american who a real entrepreneur is they’ll say Jobs, Musk or Zuck.

We read their books and idolize them and hang on their every word.

So the brightest among us think they need a moat. A new idea. Something revolutionary.

Were setting them up for FAILURE.
I took an entrepreneurship course at Cornell in 2011. 24 kids with new ideas. Big plans. Pitch decks looking for series As.

I was #25 with a regular old-fashioned business.

When professors asked me what my differentiator was I didn’t have an answer.
I saw a company out there doing sweaty, non scalable work. They were terrible at it.

I started by trading my time for money. Bought a $1500 cargo van. Used the things I had in my life to make some profit.
I wasn’t trying to educate a customer base.

I wasn’t following my passion.

I didn’t need funding or a network.

I wasn’t competing against brilliant folks from Stanford.

I want trying to prove a concept.

I wasn’t emotionally attached to anything except adding value.
My customers and my competitors existed. I could study them interacting with each other.

I made decisions with my brain, not my heart.

I was competing against folks with fax machines, clipboards and paper ledgers.

And the best part... WE WERE PROFITABLE FROM DAY ONE.
None of those 24 folks in my class succeeded. They all went and got jobs. Their new ideas didn’t catch on.

They all had dreams of millions of users and an exit.

Scalable models that could work anywhere from a computer.

But 90% failed to make a single dollar.
So who are the real entrepreneurs?

Who are the wealthiest people you know?

I’m not talking about money.

I’m talking about the people who do what they want to do when they want to do it.

Who are they?
Now hear comes the hard truth.

I know a lot of wealthy emtrepreneurs.

None of them had new ideas. None of them raised VC money. None of them were on shark tank.

They all did common things uncommonly well.

Regular old businesses just a little better.
Most of them have a few things in common:

They worked really hard doing something not fun for 5+ years. Many times 20+ yrs.

They started out trading their time for money.

They did things that weren’t scalable.

Many of them offered services.
They all had to talk to people. Most of the time face to face.

They had to sell themselves and their ideas.

They didn’t take a lot of risk.

Most of them hired coders but few of them were coders.
Stop buying into the hype. The click bait. The sexy stories of overnight success and mega riches.

Entrepreneurship isn’t that complicated.

Do something with good odds, low risk and moderate rewards.

Don’t master your craft, master leading other people.
Think with your head, not your heart.

It’s not about you and what YOU love or what YOU want to be doing.

And lastly..

Start SMALL.

Biz is about momentum.

I started 10 yrs ago carrying boxes up spiral staircases. Now I’m buying millions worth of real estate.
And the best part.

When you’re successful, experienced, wealthy and you have a killer network...

It’s time to change the world with something BIG.
Also - I’m just talking my book here. I could be very wrong.

Luckily there are thousands of ways to win at this game.

Feel free to disregard, challenge me or move right along!
Also, if you’re looking for an opportunity check out this list and take your pick:

sweatystartup.com/businesses-I-l…

The sweatier the better!

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More from @sweatystartup

19 Oct
Disagree.

You can be profitable from day one. I was. Bootstrapping is the way.

Everybody thinks entrepreneurship is super risky.

I think it’s more risky being an at-will employee.

Would you rather have a few hundred customers or one boss deciding your fate?
When I started I was going to school 20 hrs a week, studying another 10, D1 Track & Field another 30 AND I had just met my wife and was building a relationship with her.

You can make time for anything if it’s important enough to you.

You don’t need to quit your job.
And I had very little money and my parents didn’t invest a dollar in my company.

We were RESOURCEFUL and found a way to get started by trading our time for money.

Nobody is willing to do that part because it isn’t fun and it isn’t described in the entrepreneurship books.
Read 4 tweets
18 Oct
Everybody I know loves LEVERAGE when it comes to real estate.

It’s a beautiful and scary tool, kicking appreciation, depreciation, and cashflow into overdrive.

It amplifies everything. You can make a lot of money really fast and go broke in months.

Here’s how it works👇👇👇
Let’s say you’re buying a $1MM asset at a 7 cap. Meaning it generates $70k in net operating income (before debt service)

You put $300k down and borrow the rest ($700k) from a local bank.
At a 4% interest rate on a 20 yr amortization schedule you’re paying about $25k in interest and $25k in principle a year.

That’s 20k in cashflow on your $300k cash investment. A 6.6% CoC return.

You need better debt terms to buy 7 cap deals nowadays. But let’s continue.
Read 30 tweets
15 Oct
I strongly believe there’s one thing all entrepreneurs MUST understand:

THE TAX CODE

CPAs are humans and most take the path of least resistance and make mistakes.

Understand it so you can hire the right one, ask the right questions and help develop your own strategy.
A simple ex:

Everybody told us to lease or buy personal cars through the biz. Write off all of it.

Instead we bought cheap cars, paid for our own gas, and wrote of MILEAGE.

Our cost per mile was $.25. We wrote off $.55.

Huge advantage when you drive 30k miles a yr.
Buy this book. Read it. Take notes. Read it again.

I read it when I was 20. Has saved me tens of thousands since then.

amzn.to/38zQWKB
Read 4 tweets
7 Oct
A rant.

Everyone looks at service businesses, let’s use a plumber as an example, and wants to help them generate leads.

“Nick plumbers suck at marketing! I can solve that problem! I can help them bring customers in the door!”

News flash:
Plumbers don’t have a customer problem. They have all the customers they could ever want.

They don’t need more leads!

What we need is more plumbers and landscapers and washers and cleaners and fixers!
Everybody wants to sit back on their computer and make money by doing something easy.

They want a scalable model. They want to work from anywhere. They want to take 1% of transaction to link two parties together.

This is ultra competitive. Low odds. Tough.
Read 4 tweets
6 Oct
Early in my career I held a lot tight to my chest - worried about others stealing my strategies.

Now I share as much as possible. Try to add value everywhere. Often without expectation or pay.

Since that shift my net worth and network have both exploded.

Not a coincidence.
Example #1.

I upset my partner by doing a mentoring session with a college kid who was starting up a direct competitor to Storage Squad.

3 weeks later he called me and tipped me off on a school contract he was pursuing but wasn’t big enough to take down.
He made the intro, we pitched the school, secured the contract, it’s now an extremely profitable branch.

Example #2.

About 2 yrs ago I was cold calling competitors in my area (self storage now) seeing if they wanted to sell.

I spoke to one owner and it turned into a..
Read 5 tweets
28 Sep
How to get rich without getting lucky:

Find a way to make $100 an hour doing something simple IN YOUR TOWN.

Do it until you have $10k+ in the bank and you’re too busy to sell new customers.

Hire employee for $25 / hr to do what you do so you can sell new customers.

Repeat.
Be willing to work and sweat and even maybe scrub toilets for 3-6 months.

Look at the market unemotionally. It’s not about you and what you love doing.

Don’t try to reinvent the wheel. Look at competition as a sign there is money to be made.
Compete with folks who run their business like its 1985 with secretaries, yellow pages, and cash.

Wrap in technology. Never take cash. Outsource accounting and get software for all other admin.

Turn quotes in 10 mins or less without site visits.

Book in 30 secs or less.
Read 11 tweets

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