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How to Get Into an Entrepreneurial Mindset

  • Thomas Oppong
  • May 17, 2021
  • 3 minute read

Making the jump from a regular employee to a full-on entrepreneur is quite the leap. No longer will you be beholden to the whims of a boss, and instead, you are in control. 

Of course, being in charge of a business is a great responsibility. While you can never plan or predict what will happen in the future, you will be the driving force behind your success or failure when you start your own business. It’s a lot to take in, and it can be pretty cruel. 

You might be exceeding your sales quota one month but struggling the next. Normally, you wouldn’t feel the full weight of that stress as a regular employee, but you absolutely have to figure out how to improve your sales when you are in charge. 

Essentially, you have to switch your mindset. The following tips can help you transition into the entrepreneurial mindset you need to succeed. 

 

Have a plan

Sure, some people can do things on the fly and achieve success, but you have to wonder, how long can that last? It’s best to strategize and develop plans that will help your business succeed. 

Effective business plans will help guide your thoughts into tangible actions. You’ll be able to chart a path to help your business grow and how you can pivot if something needs to be changed. It’ll help keep you focused and grounded in your expectations. 

Take the initiative

No one is going to order you around to do something, and it’s up to you to get things started. You have to adopt a growth mindset and put things into motion that will help your business expand. 

If you see a good opportunity, seize it. You can’t afford to wait around. Sure, you’ll have doubts, but you need to understand that all actions carry some risk. The worst thing you can do is nothing. 

Hold yourself accountable

When things go wrong, it ultimately falls on you to fix them. Again, some things will be out of your control, but it’s up to you to figure how to make things work. 

Maybe you can’t afford to maintain an office space. Look into remote working or getting a smaller office. Maybe you’re being charged for a marketing service you ended months ago. Make some time to call the business to sort out the problem. No one will tell you to fix these things, so you have to hold yourself accountable. 

Stay resilient

Resiliency requires you to have patience, which isn’t easy. You have to deal with a lot of setbacks when you run a business. Some of them are completely out of your control, but you have to roll with the punches. 

Who could’ve honestly predicted the world would enter a global pandemic three years ago? It kind of came from nowhere. It’s been a major setback for many businesses, and you know what, there are bound to be other unpredictable events that will set you back in the future. You have to pull through the tough times to achieve success.

Accept your failures

Accepting your failures is a tough one to overcome. In everyday life and in business, it’s a struggle to accept failure. You want to succeed, and to admit failure can leave you feeling like a loser, but that’s pretty far from the truth.

When you’re able to admit you failed at something, you can then start to figure out why things went wrong. You can start asking questions like, “Why didn’t this work out?” or “What can I do to avoid this scenario again?” Failure is the greatest teacher, and when you learn to accept it, you’ll end up better in the long run. 

Owning a business is hard. It will challenge you in ways you wouldn’t think imaginable, and it may just break you, but it’s so rewarding. 

Through grit and pain, you really start to feel alive when you start to see results. It requires a lot of effort, but it’s worth it. 

 
Thomas Oppong

Founder at Alltopstartups and author of Working in The Gig Economy. His work has been featured at Forbes, Business Insider, Entrepreneur, and Inc. Magazine.

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