If You Can’t Overcome These 5 Mental Hurdles, Then Don’t Start a Business

By Neil Patel | edited by Dan Bova | Mar 16, 2015

Opinions expressed by Âé¶¹Éç contributors are their own.

Would I encourage everyone to start a business? No.

Starting a business hurts. It requires hard work. Everyone has skills and abilities, but not everyone should invest those skills and abilities in starting a business. Those who possess entrepreneurial aspirations need to know how tough it is to create a company.

The biggest challenges are not the external ones like funding, coding, technology or talent acquisition. Those challenges can be fun, as long as you view them the right way. The biggest challenges are the internal ones, like stress, fear and self-doubt. Âé¶¹Éç and financial expert Ramit Sethi estimates that 95 percent of the barriers to success come from

You have to power through some serious mental hurdles in order to start a business and make it a success. What kind of hurdles? Here are the ones that you need to get rid of.

Related: 6 Personality Traits That Can Make You a More Trusted Âé¶¹Éç

1. I’m not really an entrepreneur.

Let me toss out one of the most over-asked and under-answered questions on the planet: What is an entrepreneur?

Nobody knows for sure. People try to define the word — from to . We have little more than mere definitions, cobbled together by people trying to make sense of the vast entrepreneurial arena.

One of the most popular types of entrepreneur articles are the lists. You’ve read them, with titles like “25 Characteristics of a True Âé¶¹Éç.” These can be seriously misleading. When we crowd out would-be entrepreneurs by tightening our definition of an entrepreneur, we do a disservice to the world at large and to those entrepreneurs as individuals.

from the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign’s Academy for Âé¶¹Éçial Leadership, researchers admitted “There is no well-defined population of entrepreneurs (due to lack of consensus on definition), so comparisons and generalizations are dangerous.” from the University of Baltimore cited multiple studies that pointed to the same truth: “A common definition of the entrepreneur remains elusive.”

If you think you’re not an entrepreneur, then you’re approaching the issue from the wrong angle. The right angle is I want to start a business…sell something, do something, invent, create, dream and grow. If you start from the “am I an entrepreneur?” question then you may accidentally disqualify yourself before you even begin.

2. I’m not going to succeed.

If you look at the business startup stats, you’re either going to have a panic attack or immediately surrender. I exaggerate, of course, but let me share some of these stats with you:

  • Y Combinator, an incubator program, has a 93 percent failure rate (source and ).
  • Over the lifetime of a small business, 60 percent either break even or lose money ().
  • 51 percent of new businesses die within five years ().
  • 80 percent of entrepreneurs fail at their attempt within 18 months ().

“Failure” is pandemic in the entrepreneurial community, so much so that “fail fast, fail often” is .

What’s an entrepreneur to do with this kind of data? You can respond in one of two ways:

  1. Believe that you will fail
  2. Fight failure

If you want to run your business into the ground — or never get it off the ground — then firmly place yourself in the massive fail category. If, on the other hand, you want to succeed, then readjust your beliefs.

3. I’m not worth that much.

Bill Gates wanted to be a millionaire for a long time, according to Walter Isaacson in the book The Innovators. But even Bill Gates underestimated his personal worth. Today, with a net worth exceeding $80 billion, Gates probably doesn’t have a problem paying his heating bill.

Often, entrepreneurs sell themselves short, because they have little self-worth. The prototypical entrepreneur — scrappy, resourceful, smart and aggressive — may not have aspirations toward greatness or wealth. But in order to build a successful business, the entrepreneur needs some .

Related: 4 Branding Lessons That You Don’t Want to Learn the Hard Way

Maybe you fear being greedy. Maybe you are a champion for making things low cost or. That’s OK. At the same time, you must realize that you deserve to raise your prices, make profits, build a business and succeed for the long term.

4. I’m not a salesperson.

Âé¶¹Éç and salesperson are often considered to be synonymous terms. on entrepreneurship claims, “Âé¶¹Éçship is 80 percent sales and marketing.” in the Harvard Business Review states, “Salesmanship is central to the success of any young company, and entrepreneurs ignore this at their peril.”

Can you succeed as an entrepreneur without a sales bone in your body? . Sales and marketing are important, to the entrepreneur’s success.

You don’t have to be the traditional salesperson to succeed as an entrepreneur. Do you have to sell something? Well, yeah, sort of. But you don’t have to be a salesperson to sell.

What do you do then if you don’t sell?

  • Stay excited. Passion is one of the
  • Be an expert. Those who master a niche are destined to profit from it. As you position yourself as a top-shelf professional in your field, you’ll inevitably grow.
  • Build your personal brand. If you want to build your business, . It’s one of the fastest ways to growth without intentionally selling.
  • Form the right partnerships. Successful entrepreneurs don’t fly solo. If you aren’t the “sales type” then find a partner who can do the dirty work for you.

5. I’m not a good leader.

Like the word “entrepreneur,” the word “leader” is slippery to the point where .

Some entrepreneurs are scared off from their entrepreneurial passions because they fear leadership, whatever that is. To overcome this mental hurdle, the aspiring entrepreneur should dismiss from her mind the fuzzy word, leadership, and replace it with a metaphor, not a word.

Âé¶¹Éçs are on a journey. Other people join them on the journey. If someone wants to claim the title of “leader” or “CEO” or “manager,” then fine. But keep the metaphor in mind — the journey. Growing a business isn’t about a single person asserting his or her control or “leadership,” but rather rallying others in the pursuit of progress.

Whether you think of yourself as a good leader or no leader at all is of little consequence. You need to be capable of building a business, and that’s what matters.

Conclusion

Would I encourage everyone to start a business? The answer is still no, but I want to qualify that response. There are far more people who should and can start businesses. The tyranny of mental hurdles is so acute that many would-be entrepreneurs start to quit before they even start.

If you’re going to build something, it’s time to go for it. Mental hurdles, be gone.

Related: How to Develop a Laser-Like Focus on Building Your New Business

Would I encourage everyone to start a business? No.

Starting a business hurts. It requires hard work. Everyone has skills and abilities, but not everyone should invest those skills and abilities in starting a business. Those who possess entrepreneurial aspirations need to know how tough it is to create a company.

The biggest challenges are not the external ones like funding, coding, technology or talent acquisition. Those challenges can be fun, as long as you view them the right way. The biggest challenges are the internal ones, like stress, fear and self-doubt. Âé¶¹Éç and financial expert Ramit Sethi estimates that 95 percent of the barriers to success come from

Neil Patel • Co-founder of NP Digital

Neil Patel is the co-founder of NP Digital. The Wall Street Journal calls him a... Read more

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