I had a dream: my real
estate company with a massive but fancy premise overlooking the city in the
sun. Then I wanted a big office for myself as the owner of the business. A big
competent team that does the work for me, obviously I’d be their CEO. And that
very cute secretary who prepares documents and does the office work for me.
Then I’d be signing cheques and other serious docs like transfers, consents
application and sales agreement from Monday to Friday. Then I’d have a very fat
wallet which whenever I’d sit on would compensate for my short frame. On Friday
evening I’d call my dear wife and sometimes kids, then we fly to wherever and
enjoy our weekend as we thank ourselves for the good and hard work already done.
Life would definitely be very sweet and I’d enjoy every bit of it.
That was a wonderful
dream back then when I wanted to start my business. That was until I realized
the reality is so different especially now that my wallet decided not to
co-operate and be supportive of my good dream. I actually almost thought it has
some holes. In fact that time the wallet was essentially my company's
life-blood. I was the business owner; no doubt. I would have liked to recruit
that competent team to work for me but for my start up business but I ended up
being the Owner, CEO, errands boy, Secretary and the man on the ground all
rolled into one. At the end of each day I’d be one very tired man.
I learned the hard way
how to be frugal; every coin that passed through my hands had to be accounted
for. I had to triple check every expense against the income. Overheads had to
be maintained at the minimum. I even settled for a 10ft by 10ft office just to
ensure that I paid the least rent. I read books and captured very crucial principles
like cash flow being king for any business.
I used to have plans
and counter plans until it dawned on me that I could plan no more and there is
nothing like perfect plans. No business book or business plan can predict the
future or fully prepare you to become a successful entrepreneur. There is no
perfect road or one less traveled. But I made sure that I never jumped right
into my new business without any thought or planning.
Again, I convinced
myself that it was not worth it to spend months or years waiting to execute a
simple plan. My mentor advised me that for me to become a well-rounded
entrepreneur there was need to be tested under fire. The most important thing I
could do is learn from any mistake I’d make; after all who never makes mistakes—but
never make the same mistake twice.
Mine was a classic
case of going through the refiner’s fire; the way they purify gold and silver.
The end product is definitely worth it. I could be somewhere midway my dream
and someday all will come to pass. At least am no longer confined to the 10ft
by 10ft and I have a team (albeit small) that works for me. I never pretended
that my business was at one point a start-up and I was never ashamed of doing
all it took to grow. By the way, I used to sell plots without owning a car. It
is no mean feat to take clients to sites using their own cars. As they say,
image is everything but God shone his light on me and I have seen His mighty
Hand guide me and watch over me.
Several BIG lessons
for starters:
1.
Practice frugality; actually perfect the art
of being frugal.
2.
Watch every shilling and triple-check every
expense
3.
Maintain a low overhead and
4.
Manage your cash flow effectively.
Next we
shall talk about guys who eventually become victims of their own crap or is it bullcrap?
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