Newsletter Subject

How Failure Helped Me Develop An Entrepreneur Mindset...

From

jamesaltucher.com

Email Address

james@jamesaltucher.com

Sent On

Fri, Mar 30, 2018 08:37 PM

Email Preheader Text

“I had ZERO business sense...” March 30, 2018 | A proven indicator is flashing “BUY

“I had ZERO business sense...” March 30, 2018 [WEBSITE]( | [UNSUBSCRIBE]( [Altucher Confidential] “I had ZERO business sense...” [Man Climbing Ladder] How Failure Helped Me Develop An Entrepreneur Mindset... By James Altucher [Ends TONIGHT] Crypto Genius James Altucher: “The Best $2 You Could Ever Spend” [James Altucher](A proven indicator is flashing “BUY” for a crypto sitting at just $2. This same indicator was found in a crypto that turned $25,000 into an extraordinary $1.8 million with one trade. Now, crypto genius James Altucher predicts this $2 penny crypto could start climbing at least 800% in the coming weeks. This is urgent and expires Tonight @ Midnight. That's right, less than 24 hours away... [Click here now.]( After the third attempt and failure at starting a business I said, “That’s it. I’m never doing this again! This is clearly for other people.” I hated it. But I tried again. I HAD ZERO BUSINESS SENSE. All I knew about business was this: if you do work for someone, you get paid, and then you pay bills. That’s the entire knowledge I had about running a business. It was very incomplete. But it worked. In what follows, I am mostly focused on my first business. How come? Because like most people who start their first business, [I had almost zero knowledge of what an entrepreneur was.]( I had to figure it out while it happened, I had to survive, and then I had to cash out. After that first time, you know a lot more. So it gets easier. I also assume: you need to be profitable. 99% of businesses don’t live off of “VC welfare” (i.e. they don’t have investors who will subsidize their many failures. So I had to start a business that was profitable right away. Which meant I had to provide a service that people paid for. In my case: a business that made websites for the many companies that did not have one in the mid-90s. [Billboards] (One of our first websites we (Reset, Inc.) created: [HBO.com]() A) BIG VISION, BUT SMALL IMPLEMENTATION Have a big vision (“every company will need a website”) but know every subtlety in the business (I could program a database, design a graphic, knew how to optimize the website. Knew how to market it, etc.). Keep up with all the small in the industry, but make sure the BIG still holds. B) WORK HARD BUT DELEGATE WORK The biggest day for me was when I realized I didn’t have to do everything. I could hire someone to do some of the work. Then I was able to work 90 hours a week but get 300 hours a week worth of work done. Thanks Chet for being the first person I hired! C) OVER PROMISE AND THEN OVER DELIVER You have to get the job. So you have to promise the world. Yes, we can get it done in less than two weeks. Yes, we will be on call all the time. Yes, we will solve your personal problems and show up at your charities. Yes, we will put our best designer on the project and our best programmer. And then we always did more than we promised. We always had extra features that they didn’t ask for but we knew they would need. We would provide those for free. Eventually, when you are an agency, all (most) client relationships go bad over time. But when you over deliver you instantly crush all competition for a long time. They can’t even think about competition. Trust me, they will think about your enemies later. It’s not a marriage and even many marriages disintegrate into first boredom and then contempt But first, overpromise and then over-deliver. D) DIVERSIFY, DIVERSIFY, DIVERSIFY The first 18 months after I started the business, I kept my full-time job. I HAD to make sure I would pay my bills or I would die. I couldn’t risk that. So I diversified in many ways to reduce personal risk. When you reduce personal risk, you can focus on what’s important. What is important? Doing something that you love that will make you more money than your bills. If this sounds brutish, so what. It’s true. You can’t be scared about what’s in your bank account. I diversified by having a job and a business. I also diversified at my job. I was a computer programmer but I was also pitching TV shows and even got an agent to shop a collection of short stories. And I considered other job offers all the time. I diversified my business by having as many clients as possible. We’d do anything to get a new client. And we diversified the business by trying to think of new products to offer. But, honestly, we weren’t smart enough or business savvy enough to figure anything out. IF WE HAD MORE BUSINESS SENSE, we would have also diversified by raising money and making a scalable product and going public like many of our competitors. But we weren’t that smart. So we stuck to what we knew: people needed websites, we charged a lot of money for them, and we paid less for rent and people than we charged. E) SALES I didn’t know anything about sales. I probably looked down on it. Like in a “Death of a Salesman” sort of way. But I had a natural skill for it when I cared about what [I was selling.]( There’s a million books on sales and persuasion. I had read ZERO of them. Now I’ve read them and I think they are useful. But I think there are [basics that every entrepreneur]( has to have. - Likability. Don’t be a “sales guy”. Do “the 3Ls” (I am making that up). Love their product. Like the client (find common ground). Listen to them. - Solve their BIG problem and their SMALL problem. When I was pitching companies that I could do their website I knew they had one big problem and one small problem. The BIG problem is the Vision - e.g. if you don't get a website, then all of your competitors will get a better one faster and you’ll miss out on an enormous audience. The SMALL problem was their budget. Even big companies had none. So undercharge the competition and meanwhile help the client figure out how to impress the budget-makers enough to increase the budget for this. - Recommend the competition. There’s nothing wrong with analyzing the landscape of “the competition”. I never see a sales book talk about this. But when you analyze the competition for a potential customer you create “choice ambiguity bias”. It puts this fog-like feeling in their heads whenever they think about “the other companies” versus YOU. And you also appear to be on their side helping them evaluate all their choices in an unbiased way, even though you are obviously biased (and everyone rationally knows you are biased) - Have a champion. You can’t get a deal done if the decision maker, or someone close to the decision maker, is not your champion. If someone low-level is your champion then give up immediately and don’t waste time. You won’t get the deal. How do you get a high-level champion? Find as a many touch-points as possible. People in common, agendas in common, etc. Make sure they understand your ENTIRE goal is to make their lives much better. This is even more important than making their companies better. - Sales is all the time. Every second. You are never doing anything at all without thinking of the sales aspect of it. F) Love your business AND Hate it With my first [successful business](, I was excited every day to solve problems, and deal with all the issues. You have to have a problem-solving mindset and get-new-clients mindset every day. BUT I badly wanted to[sell the business](. And sell it as fast as possible for a lot of money. Cash later is never as a good as cash now. And for me, this was my [first successful business](. I had no money in the bank. Money doesn’t solve all of your problems but it solves your money problems. YourSecret Penny Stock Formula Revealed For First Time… [[[ BREAKING NEWS ]]] [Man Holding Oversized Check](How many chances do you think you could’ve had in 2017 to double your money (or more) with this secret penny stock formula? (HINT: 78% guess too low.) [A.) 79 B.) 93 C.) 148]( This secret penny stock formula could’ve given you the chance to turn a small sum into $2.316 million for you this year. [See the right answer here]( and find out how a shy recluse in Maryland stumbled on this secret formula. Using this formula’s easy. Anyone can do it. [Now, it’s all yours](. At least at first. Sometimes people tell me, “if [I sell my business]( I’ll just end up starting another business like this and doing the same thing”. That’s ok. Do that. But even if I did the exact same thing, I still wanted more cash in the bank. So love your business every day, but make sure you are building value (i.e. the business can survive without you) and always have a “for sale” sign up. By the way, I didn’t know this then, but this is a common strategy on the path to billions. Look at Mark Cuban (sold his first software company before starting Audionet / Broadcast.com), or Elon Musk (sold Zip2, then Paypal, before starting Tesla, SpaceX, etc). Don’t fall in love with a company. G) NEVER GET ANGRY Here’s the people who angered me in my first business: customers, partners, employees, landlords, buyers of my business, competitors - in that order. In later companies add in shareholders. But you can never get angry. Life + Anger < Life. So how do you get rid of the anger? Remember this other equation: Anger = Fear clothed. Ask: what is it I am afraid of? Am I afraid the client will quit? Am I afraid the employee will damage a project? Am I afraid the partner will refuse to go along with my very personal idea for how the company can grow? Solve the fear. Look at the worst case scenario. Is it that bad? For instance, make a plan for WHEN the client will leave you. And try to compromise with the partner (something you can’t do if you are yelling at each other). And if the project is not so good because of what the employee does, maybe that’s not the worst thing either. Maybe don’t have expectations so high all the time. H) SAY YES AND SAY NO First, Say “Yes” to everything. Can you do X? Yes. Can you do Y? Yes. Can you do it for less than $Z? “Yes!” You have to get the deal. And the client is always right! But then the client is often wrong. So that’s when you can either say “No” or negotiate or fire the client. Negotiation was rare for me in my first business. I simply did everything every client asked for whatever price. The only times I said “No” was when startups wanted me to work for equity. Then I said “No”. Because equity is worth nothing ALL OF THE TIME. But I did the Miramax website for $1000 even though I did the website for “The Matrix” for $250,000. I just said “yes” to everything and soon our company was “THE company that did ALL of the entertainment websites”. [System Failure] That brand value was worth millions during the small window that opened up when agencies like mine were being bought by public companies. I) DON’T SPEND MONEY Above I said, “delegate”. But now I’m saying “don’t spend money”. Real businesses have cycles. If you are as lean as possible then you can handle a downturn. I never hired a secretary, for instance. And we only moved offices when we were 40 people in a three room office. If your business lives on “VC welfare” (i.e. you are funded by big-pocketed investors who will put in more) then ignore all of this. If you live in the real world and not on welfare then you need to spend less than you charge. We didn’t know what we were doing. We had no sense of accounting or what a P&L was. Knowing accounting is the froth on top of a good business. It makes the business better. But it’s not a startup [entrepreneurial mindset.]( The startup mindset is: “Do I have more cash in the bank at the end of the month (when bills are due) than I had at the beginning of the month”. Note that accounting often ignores that (“money owed by clients” is an “asset” on paper but not in real life). J) DON’T SMOKE CRACK Everyone thinks their business is the best ever and their employees are “the top 1% of what they do”. There’s a cognitive bias that describes this but I forget what it is. And it’s really hard not to think this way. Even if you know something is a cognitive bias, even if you know that you are probably irrational, you will still smoke your own crack. When I look back at some of the websites my first company made, I can see how bad they are in retrospect. We sucked. [So we got a little lucky](but that’s what hard work, and being good at sales, and [selling the company](are for. It’s really important to take a step back, constantly look at the landscape, and try to objectively see where you and your company fit in. Have a mindset of constantly trying to get better and offer more and more instead of resting on, “we’re the best”. K) HAVE FUN I started my first [successful business]( with my sister. It was such a roller coaster. My sister was an aspiring novelist. I worked for a TV company. And her husband was a painter by training. And we had another partner who was a photographer. We knew absolutely nothing other than: Sell, Work, Charge, Repeat. We had to learn so much while we built up to millions in revenues and ultimately [selling the business.]( It was really brutal. Almost all of the time we were either working hard, or running around scared. And we argued with each other A LOT. But we did it and built it and sold it and got out alive. Many of our competitors didn’t. Because that entire sector imploded within months in 2000. We traveled together, we ate all of our meals together, we spent so much time together. We had to make it fun. We threw parties. We made fun side projects. My brother-in-law was best man at my wedding. We supported each other’s lives. But an “[entrepreneurial mindset](” is really brutal and is a raging fire that often scorches the Earth until there are no survivors. So now we don’t speak to each other at all. And I miss them. Sincerely, [James Altucher] James Altucher Add james@jamesaltucher.com to your address book: [Whitelist us]( Additional Articles & Commentary: [The James Altucher Website]( Join the conversation! Follow me on social media: [Facebook]( [LinkedIn]( [Twitter]( [instagram]( [Read & comment on site]( ["The James Altucher Show" on iTunes]( Since I launched my top-10 rated podcast back in 2014, it has more than 200,000 listeners and has gotten more than 12 million downloads. [Listen and subscribe on iTunes]( Altucher Confidential is committed to protecting and respecting your privacy. We do not rent or share your email address. By submitting your email address, you consent to Choose Yourself Financial delivering daily email issues and advertisements. To end your Altucher Confidential e-mail subscription and associated external offers sent from Altucher Confidential, feel free to [click here](. Please read our [Privacy Statement](. For any further comments or concerns please [contact us here.]( If you are you having trouble receiving your Altucher Confidential subscription, you can ensure its arrival in your mailbox [by whitelisting Altucher Confidential](. © 2018 Choose Yourself Financial, LLC. 808 Saint Paul Street, Baltimore MD 21202. Although our employees may answer your general customer service questions, they are not licensed under securities laws to address your particular investment situation. No communication by our employees to you should be deemed as personalized financial advice. We expressly forbid our writers from having a financial interest in any security they personally recommend to our readers. All of our employees and agents must wait 24 hours after on-line publication or 72 hours after the mailing of a printed-only publication prior to following an initial recommendation. Any investments recommended in this letter should be made only after consulting with your investment advisor and only after reviewing the prospectus or financial statements of the company.

EDM Keywords (279)

yes yelling writers would worked work welfare week wedding websites website way useful urgent understand undercharge turn trying try true tried training top times time think thing take survivors survive supported sucked subsidize subscribe submitting stuck starting started start spent speak soon something someone solves solve sold smart small site sister simply show shop shareholders share service sense selling sell see security secretary scared saying say sales said running risk reviewing revenues retrospect resting respecting rent refuse recommend realized readers read rare quit puts put provide protecting prospectus promised promise project problems privacy printed possible plan photographer persuasion people paypal path partner paper painter order optimize opened one ok offer none never negotiate need much month money miss mindset millions meant maybe matrix marriage market making makes make mailing mailbox made low love lot lives live like likability licensed letter less leave least learn lean law launched landscape know knew kept job issues investors instead instance industry indicator increase incomplete impress important immediately ignore husband honestly high hated hate happened handle gotten got good given give get funded fun froth found formula forget follows following focus fire find figure fast fall failure expectations exact everything even evaluate equity entrepreneur ensure end employees employee earth due downturn double done diversified develop describes deliver deemed death deal damage cycles crypto crack could contempt consulting considered consent compromise competitors competition company communication committed comments come collection clients client click clearly choose choices charged charge chance champion cash case cared call businesses business built budget brother bought bills biased beginning basics bank bad ate asset ask arrival argued anything angered analyzing analyze always agent agency afraid advertisements address accounting able 3ls 2017 2014 2000

Marketing emails from jamesaltucher.com

View More
Sent On

29/10/2020

Sent On

29/10/2020

Sent On

28/10/2020

Sent On

28/10/2020

Sent On

27/10/2020

Sent On

26/10/2020

Email Content Statistics

Subscribe Now

Subject Line Length

Data shows that subject lines with 6 to 10 words generated 21 percent higher open rate.

Subscribe Now

Average in this category

Subscribe Now

Number of Words

The more words in the content, the more time the user will need to spend reading. Get straight to the point with catchy short phrases and interesting photos and graphics.

Subscribe Now

Average in this category

Subscribe Now

Number of Images

More images or large images might cause the email to load slower. Aim for a balance of words and images.

Subscribe Now

Average in this category

Subscribe Now

Time to Read

Longer reading time requires more attention and patience from users. Aim for short phrases and catchy keywords.

Subscribe Now

Average in this category

Subscribe Now

Predicted open rate

Subscribe Now

Spam Score

Spam score is determined by a large number of checks performed on the content of the email. For the best delivery results, it is advised to lower your spam score as much as possible.

Subscribe Now

Flesch reading score

Flesch reading score measures how complex a text is. The lower the score, the more difficult the text is to read. The Flesch readability score uses the average length of your sentences (measured by the number of words) and the average number of syllables per word in an equation to calculate the reading ease. Text with a very high Flesch reading ease score (about 100) is straightforward and easy to read, with short sentences and no words of more than two syllables. Usually, a reading ease score of 60-70 is considered acceptable/normal for web copy.

Subscribe Now

Technologies

What powers this email? Every email we receive is parsed to determine the sending ESP and any additional email technologies used.

Subscribe Now

Email Size (not include images)

Font Used

No. Font Name
Subscribe Now

Copyright © 2019–2025 SimilarMail.