Times Like These 🤔

Times Like These 🤔

More Posts from Degarcia4 and Others

1 year ago
8 years ago
Why A Calorie Isn’t Just A Calorie (in simple-ish English)
When I was taking grade 11 physics we were doing a unit on energy and one of the types of energy that we studied was calories. I remember all the girls were really into this unit because our teache…

Not all calories are equal

2 years ago
8 years ago

HOW TO STAY MOTIVATED AS AN ENTREPRENEUR

I believe motivation is highly subjective and that each person has a unique motivational catalyst. So this post isn’t actually written to motivate you (LOL). What this post will do, however, is give you 3 distinct suggestions on how you can generally stay motivated by yourself. These are based on observations made in my brief time working with entrepreneurs. Of course, like with anything, this is not a closed list.

1. Have Passion For What You Do:

You’ve heard this plenty of times, I know, it’s annoying to me too. But we wouldn’t hear it so often if it wasn’t so important.

Steve Jobs, when addressing a crowd at his alma mater, famously said “You’ve got to find what you love. And that is as true for your work as it is for your lovers.”

Do what you love, and not in an airy fairy, kumbaya kind of way. If you derive actual pleasure from what you do, you are likely to be more motivated than the average person. It follows that people who do what they love will approach their work with a guaranteed level of enthusiasm. I don’t think this needs a great deal of explanation.

2. Find A Suitable Co-Founder:

Some of the best companies in the world were started by co-founders (e.g. Apple, Microsoft, Procter & Gamble, etc.). Often, a start-up is launched and maintained through a combination of expertise, which, for complex projects, is hardly ever held by a single person. Sometimes it takes 2 or 3 people to start a project. So the importance of compatible co-founders cannot be stressed enough.

Like with every endeavour, there will be challenges that dampen the passion. The honeymoon period WILL end, and co-founders need to understand their effect on each other because this can serve as the necessary spark to push each other forward. During a slump in motivation, if you don’t feel more motivated after speaking with your co-founder, he or she may not be the right person for you to work with.

Some questions you should ask about your co-founder - When you are not feeling your best will they be able to take control? Do they create a mood which is conducive to productivity? How do you feel after talking to them about a hurdle you are facing? Do they actually have the capacity to perform the tasks that are needed to drive the project forward?

To achieve the best results, be brutally honest with yourself when answering these questions. Based on your answers, you may need to make some changes.

I left the first business I started at University because I could no longer work with my co-founder. The person whom I had originally chosen as my co-founder because of his technical knowledge of the (media) industry became the reason for my loss of enthusiasm. I am not sure what the root cause was, but my co-founder started developing a habit of killing the business relationships I had worked hard to build (and other bad habits, which are best left unmentioned). In turn, our reputation as a serious business began to take a knock. But this wasn’t yet the issue. The real issue was his inability to realise his problem, and then act in accordance with such realisation. 

Needless to say, I was brutally honest with myself - I just did not believe that he had the capacity to perform necessary tasks anymore, so I cut all professional ties with him.

3. Figure Out Your Motivational Currency

I define motivational currency as: a positive response which fuels the desire to be productive.

For example, I run a consulting business. Now, as much as I love what I do, there are mornings which feel completely hopeless (because - life) and my reason for continuing has escaped me. However, my mood suddenly changes when I get up from my bed, check my mail, and find an email from an entrepreneur requesting my services. After viewing this email, I feel a new energy, a sense of purpose, which prompts me to keep going. I am motivated, and the email is my motivational currency. 

If you are an outdoor event organiser whose event receives good reviews on social media and in the local papers, such reviews are your motivational currency because they prompt you to repeat the amount of effort put into your work, in pursuit of the same or an even better response from your market. 

This type of “currency” is different for different businesses, and is usually controlled by external factors. We cannot determine when motivational currency will be forthcoming, but the more work we put in, the more motivational currency we are likely to receive. (i.e. the more good work I do for my existing clients, the more likely I am to wake up to an email requesting my services.)

Conclusion:

Staying motivated is, in my opinion, the most important thing for any entrepreneur. You can do anything you set your mind to with the right amount of motivation. Conversely, you can do very little without it. This is why it is crucial for entrepreneurs to find what motivates them, and have ready access to it whenever it’s needed.

So print this. Put it on your wall, and highlight the points which speak to you the most. Every time you feel demotivated, give it a quick read, and remind yourself of the ways in which you can regain your motivation.

As always, thanks for reading. I promise to make it a shorter read next time.

1 year ago

This must be reposted again and again and again. 

This is outstanding! 

7 years ago

HOW TO STAY MOTIVATED AS AN ENTREPRENEUR

I believe motivation is highly subjective and that each person has a unique motivational catalyst. So this post isn’t actually written to motivate you (LOL). What this post will do, however, is give you 3 distinct suggestions on how you can generally stay motivated by yourself. These are based on observations made in my brief time working with entrepreneurs. Of course, like with anything, this is not a closed list.

1. Have Passion For What You Do:

You’ve heard this plenty of times, I know, it’s annoying to me too. But we wouldn’t hear it so often if it wasn’t so important.

Steve Jobs, when addressing a crowd at his alma mater, famously said “You’ve got to find what you love. And that is as true for your work as it is for your lovers.”

Do what you love, and not in an airy fairy, kumbaya kind of way. If you derive actual pleasure from what you do, you are likely to be more motivated than the average person. It follows that people who do what they love will approach their work with a guaranteed level of enthusiasm. I don’t think this needs a great deal of explanation.

2. Find A Suitable Co-Founder:

Some of the best companies in the world were started by co-founders (e.g. Apple, Microsoft, Procter & Gamble, etc.). Often, a start-up is launched and maintained through a combination of expertise, which, for complex projects, is hardly ever held by a single person. Sometimes it takes 2 or 3 people to start a project. So the importance of compatible co-founders cannot be stressed enough.

Like with every endeavour, there will be challenges that dampen the passion. The honeymoon period WILL end, and co-founders need to understand their effect on each other because this can serve as the necessary spark to push each other forward. During a slump in motivation, if you don’t feel more motivated after speaking with your co-founder, he or she may not be the right person for you to work with.

Some questions you should ask about your co-founder - When you are not feeling your best will they be able to take control? Do they create a mood which is conducive to productivity? How do you feel after talking to them about a hurdle you are facing? Do they actually have the capacity to perform the tasks that are needed to drive the project forward?

To achieve the best results, be brutally honest with yourself when answering these questions. Based on your answers, you may need to make some changes.

I left the first business I started at University because I could no longer work with my co-founder. The person whom I had originally chosen as my co-founder because of his technical knowledge of the (media) industry became the reason for my loss of enthusiasm. I am not sure what the root cause was, but my co-founder started developing a habit of killing the business relationships I had worked hard to build (and other bad habits, which are best left unmentioned). In turn, our reputation as a serious business began to take a knock. But this wasn’t yet the issue. The real issue was his inability to realise his problem, and then act in accordance with such realisation. 

Needless to say, I was brutally honest with myself - I just did not believe that he had the capacity to perform necessary tasks anymore, so I cut all professional ties with him.

3. Figure Out Your Motivational Currency

I define motivational currency as: a positive response which fuels the desire to be productive.

For example, I run a consulting business. Now, as much as I love what I do, there are mornings which feel completely hopeless (because - life) and my reason for continuing has escaped me. However, my mood suddenly changes when I get up from my bed, check my mail, and find an email from an entrepreneur requesting my services. After viewing this email, I feel a new energy, a sense of purpose, which prompts me to keep going. I am motivated, and the email is my motivational currency. 

If you are an outdoor event organiser whose event receives good reviews on social media and in the local papers, such reviews are your motivational currency because they prompt you to repeat the amount of effort put into your work, in pursuit of the same or an even better response from your market. 

This type of “currency” is different for different businesses, and is usually controlled by external factors. We cannot determine when motivational currency will be forthcoming, but the more work we put in, the more motivational currency we are likely to receive. (i.e. the more good work I do for my existing clients, the more likely I am to wake up to an email requesting my services.)

Conclusion:

Staying motivated is, in my opinion, the most important thing for any entrepreneur. You can do anything you set your mind to with the right amount of motivation. Conversely, you can do very little without it. This is why it is crucial for entrepreneurs to find what motivates them, and have ready access to it whenever it’s needed.

So print this. Put it on your wall, and highlight the points which speak to you the most. Every time you feel demotivated, give it a quick read, and remind yourself of the ways in which you can regain your motivation.

As always, thanks for reading. I promise to make it a shorter read next time.

7 years ago
You Are Learning Each Day, So Don’t Give Up On Your Dreams… You CAN Make It HAPPEN!

You are learning each day, so don’t give up on your dreams… You CAN make it HAPPEN!

  • distilled-prose
    distilled-prose liked this · 1 month ago
  • killroy-123
    killroy-123 liked this · 1 month ago
  • mrp921
    mrp921 reblogged this · 1 month ago
  • mrp921
    mrp921 liked this · 1 month ago
  • ghostriderskull
    ghostriderskull liked this · 2 months ago
  • thewildwisebear
    thewildwisebear liked this · 3 months ago
  • newyorkpatriot
    newyorkpatriot reblogged this · 3 months ago
  • mightybill
    mightybill liked this · 3 months ago
  • ginnnyo
    ginnnyo liked this · 3 months ago
  • furnace43
    furnace43 liked this · 3 months ago
  • unclestabby213666
    unclestabby213666 liked this · 3 months ago
  • qpine-69
    qpine-69 liked this · 3 months ago
  • christop45
    christop45 reblogged this · 3 months ago
  • christop45
    christop45 liked this · 3 months ago
  • lawyersgunsandhoney
    lawyersgunsandhoney reblogged this · 4 months ago
  • invincibleworld
    invincibleworld liked this · 4 months ago
  • funknrock
    funknrock liked this · 4 months ago
  • electronrunner
    electronrunner reblogged this · 4 months ago
  • electronrunner
    electronrunner liked this · 4 months ago
  • joeyd52
    joeyd52 reblogged this · 4 months ago
  • wheelscomedyandmore
    wheelscomedyandmore reblogged this · 4 months ago
  • don1911
    don1911 liked this · 5 months ago
  • theloon1972
    theloon1972 liked this · 5 months ago
  • davidwesley07
    davidwesley07 liked this · 5 months ago
  • yammowander
    yammowander liked this · 5 months ago
  • yammowander
    yammowander reblogged this · 5 months ago
  • keytomind
    keytomind liked this · 5 months ago
  • silvaelias83
    silvaelias83 liked this · 5 months ago
  • walkawaycampaign-org-video
    walkawaycampaign-org-video reblogged this · 5 months ago
  • walkawaycampaign-org-video
    walkawaycampaign-org-video liked this · 5 months ago
  • dreamilymellowtyrant
    dreamilymellowtyrant liked this · 5 months ago
  • dreamilymellowtyrant
    dreamilymellowtyrant reblogged this · 5 months ago
  • ekimekim82
    ekimekim82 reblogged this · 5 months ago
  • ekimekim82
    ekimekim82 liked this · 5 months ago
  • pre-64m70
    pre-64m70 reblogged this · 5 months ago
  • rosesmith12sblog
    rosesmith12sblog liked this · 6 months ago
  • beerfan68
    beerfan68 reblogged this · 6 months ago
  • justlookingtoswallow
    justlookingtoswallow reblogged this · 6 months ago
  • justlookingtoswallow
    justlookingtoswallow liked this · 6 months ago
  • dunerun
    dunerun liked this · 7 months ago
  • bobv48-blog
    bobv48-blog liked this · 7 months ago
degarcia4 - The Ultimate Fun Ride
The Ultimate Fun Ride

Easy to ride and explore the new new

36 posts

Explore Tumblr Blog
Search Through Tumblr Tags