Yury Yavorsky – The Art of Winning. The Startup Guide (страница 1)
The Art of Winning. The Startup Guide
Yury Yavorsky
© Yury Yavorsky, 2024
ISBN 978-5-4485-6953-1
Created with Ridero smart publishing system
First published in 2017.
All rights reserved. No part of this book may be reproduced in any form or by any means, including posting on the internet and in corporate networks, for private and public use without written permission from the copyright owner.
To an aspiring entrepreneur
Recipes for success are innumerable. But it is not my intention to try and convince the reader that my speculations and conclusions based on personal experience (which is, by the way, one of those things that money cannot buy) are bound to work in any situation.
What I do know is that the most difficult thing is to be honest with yourself. This is why everyone who is thinking about becoming an entrepreneur should not look inside their wallet, but rather inside themselves.
Start-up money is not the most important thing in business
An ear for music, a sense of rhythm, inner musicality… such things are not naturally given to everyone. Nevertheless, a huge number of kids enter music schools every year: their parents want them to become musicians.
After that the selection process begins: the first to drop out are those who are not patient and hardworking enough; some skip classes, others break down and quit; the next to leave are those without musical talent, and finally those who cannot cope with internal competition. Very few actually reach the finish line – the most talented, interested and persevering. The same is true about business.
Ask yourself, why do you want to become an entrepreneur? What drives you – desire to earn a lot of money or to prove something to someone? Such goals are not just false but also extremely risky. The eagerness to earn a lot of money, preferably quickly, is more treacherous than gambling. Substituting striving for self-fulfillment with the trivial intent of becoming rich can play a low-down trick on a person. In this situation, an aspiring entrepreneur risks losing everything and first of all – their time and confidence in their own abilities.
Ideally, the money stimulus is secondary. It emerges and gains importance only after the actual results of entrepreneurship are seen: the hairstyles clients of your private salon are happy with; the scones in your family bakery, for which people line up every morning; the design of an apartment that you decorated with your own hands, and that you are not ashamed to show to even the most fastidious customer.
It is only when the market starts to recognize you and pay you back that the money stimulus starts working and motivates you to expand your business. Profits and revenue are only a future criteria of success. As soon as you get your first results, close your first deal, complete the design of your first technological or manufacturing process, sell your first goods, you will turn that process into a continuously functioning profitable business.
At that time this seemingly simple business – butter packaging – started developing faster than the internet. First butter was pre-packed by hand, and then special equipment was bought. After a while they started pre-packing butter not only for shops, restaurants, and tourist kits, but also for export.
Later, I watched a number of similar businesses develop in different cities across Russia: packaging coffee and tea, spaghetti and dumplings, sugar and pepper. Think about it: we always buy prepacked fruit and vegetables more readily, even though they are more expensive. So, why not prepack nuts and raisins, and do it like nobody else has done so far? Entrepreneurs in Turkey, Jordan, China and other countries make good money on packaging. And there is always place for new brands.
Unfortunately, in many cases a start-up ends in a failure. Opening a new business is an endeavor taken up by entrepreneurs, already successful in other areas, as well as top managers and other people, who know nothing about the basics of business. The reason is usually the same – the wish to earn money. And yet, I repeat: money is secondary.
Remember: you should not only know a lot about what you want to do, but also be very passionate about it. You have decided to open a restaurant, but you do not know a dozen different fried egg recipes, and do not constantly effuse about it talking to your friends? Better not even start.
You should sincerely love your first restaurant, small cybercafé, massage parlor or bakery.
Naturally, resources are an important aspect for building a business, and at times they can be the backbone of the technological process you are creating, but the crucial things to start are your willingness and your skills.
When, at the beginning of the 90s, I took up entrepreneurship, there was one thing I knew for sure – I did not want to be a salesman. My teenage dream was to design and create modern cars. I was fervently driven by the desire to give clients what they needed: to equip the car with a hatch, power windows, and air-conditioning, to upgrade the passenger compartment with real leather of any color, and so on. And we designed tuned cars, unimaginable at the time, we experimented with various disks and tires, participated in summer and winter car and go-kart races, lost and won, searched and found new solutions for the development of the growing demand for non-standard cars.
I did not merely strive to earn money; the most important thing for me was self-fulfillment, becoming the best at car tuning first in my own city, and then in Russia. I am sure that any aspiring entrepreneur must try to make their business better than everyone else’s, set the goal of looking for any internal possibilities to make their dressmaker’s, hairdresser’s, their bakery, restaurant or printing house the best of the best.