For Professor Fred Tuffile's Bentley Class
Article recommended by Bruce Fenton
Property Entrepreneur Magazine
By MARK HENRICKS,
Entrepreneur.com
John Osher has developed hundreds of consumer products, including an electric
toothbrush that became America's
best-selling toothbrush in just 15 months. He also started several successful
companies, including Cap Toys. He built sales to $125 million per year and then
sold the company to Hasbro Inc. in 1997. But his most lasting contribution to
the business world just may be a list of screw-ups he jotted on the back of a
piece of paper.
"After I sold my business to Hasbro, I decided I'd make a list of everything I'd
done wrong and [had] seen other entrepreneurs do wrong," explains the
57-year-old Jupiter, Florida, serial entrepreneur. "I wanted to make a company
that didn't make any of these mistakes. I wanted to see if I could come up with
the perfect company."
He came up with an informal list of "16 Mistakes Start-Ups Make"—since expanded
to 17—that has been used in a Harvard Business School case study, has been cited
in many publications, and has become a part of what he teaches budding
entrepreneurs in his frequent university lectures. He also used the list in 1999
when he started Dr. John's SpinBrush to sell a $5 electric toothbrush that
quickly became America's best-selling toothbrush. In 2001, Procter & Gamble
purchased the company from him for $475 million.
"I didn't expect it to actually work like that, but it did," Osher says. "It'll
probably never happen again. But we made a perfect business, from the beginning
to selling it to another company." Since then, however, Osher has created
another product, an electric dish scrubber that he also sold to Procter &
Gamble. And he has yet another health-and-beauty product-development effort
underway—although he's keeping the details close to the vest—in which he'll try
again to create the perfect business.
To home in on what lies behind the 17 mistakes, Osher told Entrepreneur what
they are and how you can learn from them to achieve your own level of
perfection.
Mistake 1: Failing to spend enough time researching the business idea to
see if it's viable. "This is really the most important mistake of all. They say
9 [out] of 10 entrepreneurs fail because they're undercapitalized or have the
wrong people. I say 9 [out] of 10 people fail because their original concept is
not viable. They want to be in business so much that they often don't do the
work they need to do ahead of time, so everything they do is doomed. They can be
very talented, do everything else right, and fail because they have ideas that
are flawed."
Mistake 2: Miscalculating market size, timing, ease of entry and
potential market share. "Most new entrepreneurs get very excited over an idea
and don't look for the truth about how many people will want to buy it. They put
together financial projections as part of a presentation to pump up their
investors. They say, 'The market size is 50 million people that could use this
product, and if I could only sell to 2 percent of them, I'd be selling a million
pieces.' But 2 percent of a market is a lot. Most products sell way less than 1
percent."
Mistake 3: Underestimating financial requirements and timing. "They set
their financial requirements based on Mistake 1, and they go ahead and make a
commitment to this much office space and this many computers, and hire a vice
president of sales, and so on. Before they know it, based on sales projections
that were wrong to start with, they have created costs that require those
projections to be met. So they run out of money."
Mistake 4: Overprojecting sales volume and timing. "They have already
miscalculated the size of the market. Now they overproject their portion of it.
They often say 'There are 200 million homes, and I need to sell [to] x number of
them.' When you break it down, though, a much smaller number of those are really
sales prospects. That makes it impossible to make their sales projections."
Mistake 5: Making cost projections that are too low. "Their cost
projections are always too low. Part of the reason is that they project much
higher sales. There are also unknown reasons that always come out that usually
make costs higher than planned. So on top of everything, their margins are now
lower."
Mistake 6: Hiring too many people and spending too much on offices and
facilities. "Now you have lower sales, higher costs and too much overhead. These
are the things that you see every day in companies that fail. And they all grow
out of that first mistake: failing to research the size and viability of the
opportunity."
Mistake 7: Lacking a contingency plan for a shortfall in expectations.
"Even if you're realistic in your estimates to start, there are things that
happen when you start a new business. Your sales ideas may be no good; bank
rates may go up; there may be a shipping strike. These aren't the result of poor
planning, but they happen. More often than not, entrepreneurs just feel that
something will come along when they need it. They don't have contingency plans
for it not working out at the size and time they want."
Mistake 8: Bringing in unnecessary partners. "There are certain partners
you need. For instance, you often need money, so you're going to need money
partners. But too many times, the guy with the idea takes on all his friends as
partners. Many people don't provide strategic advantages and don't warrant
ownership. But they're all going to get 25 percent of the company. It's totally
unnecessary, and it's a mistake. Before people are made partners, they have to
earn it."
Mistake 9: Hiring for convenience rather than skill requirements. "In my
first business or two, I hired relatives. It was easy to do, but in many cases,
they were the wrong people [for the job]. And it's hard to fire people,
especially if they're relatives or friends. More time needs to be spent
handpicking people based on skill requirements. You really need super-skilled
people who can wear more than one hat. It just bogs you down when you hire
people who can't do the job."
Mistake 10: Neglecting to manage the entire company as a whole. "You see
this happen all the time. They'll spend half their time doing something that
represents 5 percent of their business. You have to have a view of your whole
company. But too often, the person running it loses that view. They get involved
in a part, and they don't manage the whole. Whether I do this product or that
product, whether I hire somebody, [I consider] how they [will] fit long term and
short term in the big picture. Constantly try to see your big picture."
Mistake 11: Accepting that it's "not possible" too easily rather than
finding a way. "I had an engineer who was a very good engineer, but with every
toy we developed, he would say, 'You can't do it that way.' I had to be careful
not to accept this too easily. I had to look further. If you're an entrepreneur,
you're going to break new ground. A lot of people are going to say it's not
possible. You can't accept that too easily. A good entrepreneur is going to find
a way."
Mistake 12: Focusing too much on sales volume and company size rather
than profit. "Too much of your management is often based on volume and size. So
many entrepreneurs want to say 'I have a company that's this big, with this many
people, this many square feet of space, and this much sales.' It's too much
[emphasis] on how fast and big you can build a business rather than how much
profit it can make. Bankers and investors don't like this. Entrepreneurs are so
into creating and building, but they also have to learn to become good
[businesspeople]."
Mistake 13: Seeking confirmation of your actions rather than seeking the
truth. "This often happens: You want to do something, so you talk about it with
people who work for you. You talk to [your] family and friends. But you're only
looking for confirmation; you're not looking for the truth. You're looking for
somebody to tell you you're right. But the truth always comes out. So we [test]
our products, and we listen to what [the testers] say. We give much more value
to the truth than to people saying what we're doing is great."
Mistake 14: Lacking simplicity in your vision. "Many entrepreneurs go in
too many directions at once and do not execute anything well. Rather than
focusing on doing everything right to sell to their biggest markets, they divide
the attention of their people and their time, trying to do too many things at
[one time]. Then their main product isn't done properly because they're doing so
many different things. They have an idea and say they're going to sell it to
Wal-Mart. Then they say they're going to sell to [the] Home Shopping Network.
And then the gift market looks good. And so on."
Mistake 15: Lacking clarity of your long-term aim and business purpose.
"You should have an idea of what your long-term aim is. It doesn't mean that
won't change, but when you aim an arrow, you have to be aiming at a target. This
[concept will] often come up when people ask 'How do I pick a product?' The
answer depends on what you're trying to do. If you're trying to [create] a
billion-dollar company with this product, it may not have a chance. But if
you're trying to make a $5 million company, it can work. Or if you're trying to
create a company [in which] family members can be employed, it can work. Clarity
of your business purpose is very important [but] is often not really part of the
thought process."
Mistake 16: Lacking focus and identity. "This was written from the
viewpoint of building the company as a valuable entity. The company itself is
also a product. Too many companies try to go after too many targets at once and
end up with a potpourri rather than a focused business entity with an identity.
When you try to make a business, it's very important to maintain a focus and an
identity. Don't let it become a potpourri, or it loses its power. For instance,
you say, 'We're already selling to Kmart, so we might as well make a toy because
Kmart buys toys.' If you do that, the company becomes weaker. A company needs to
be focused on what it is. Then its power builds from that."
Mistake 17: Lacking an exit strategy. "Have an exit plan, and create your
business to satisfy that plan. For instance, I am thinking I might run my new
business for two years and then get out of it. I think it's an opportunity to
make a tremendous amount of money for two years, but I'm not sure [whether] it's
proprietary enough to stop the competition from getting in. So I'm in with an
exit strategy of doing it for two years and then winding down. I won't commit to
long-term leases, and after the first year, we'll start watching the marketplace
very closely and start watching inventories.
Simultaneously, I will keep the option open to sell it in case I can't get
something more proprietary. That means I won't sign international agreements
that would kill any opportunity to sell it to a multinational. I will make sure
that the patent work is done properly. And I'll try to make sure manufacturing
is up to the standards of any multinational company that I might try to sell it
to.
Another exit strategy can be to hand the company to [your] kids someday. The
most important thing to do is to build a company with value and profits so you
have all the options: Keep the company, sell the company, go public, raise
private money [and so on]. A business can be a product, too."
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