Get specific. When you set yourself a goal, try to be as specific as possible[...] Knowing exactly what you want to achieve keeps you motivated until you get there.
Harvard Business Review
TVSTRANGERTHINGS

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@mixtips-blog
Get specific. When you set yourself a goal, try to be as specific as possible[...] Knowing exactly what you want to achieve keeps you motivated until you get there.
Harvard Business Review
You need to be continuously talking to your customers. Find out what makes them excited about your product. Discover their pain points.
Speak 1-1 with your early users. It takes effort/time but totally worth it. It'll provide meaningful insights that survey or analytics will not be able to give at a very early stage.
From: Rachna Singh founder of Hachi
Get some traction. Get people using your product. At the early stage, do things that don't scale, and don't worry about scaling until you NEED to.
Realize that sometimes, one of the best ways to succeed is to fail fast
You should never, ever try to please everybody.
These rules of entrepreneurship are not laws of nature. You can break them.” — After all, the nature of entrepreneurship is that you’re doing something for the first time.
Reid Hoffman - founder of LinkedIn
Treat all customers the same. No favoring. You never know how much they'll be worth.
Create something simple that generates results.
Emi Gal - founder of Brainient
Get some traction. Prove that people are willing to use, and then pay, for what you're building. Get people using your product. At the early stage, do things that don't scale, and don't worry about scaling until you NEED to.
Reed Morse - founder Punchd
Confidence is everything minus 1: Act like you've done this a million times before and people will respect you and your product just because they think you're the best.
Jun Loayza - Founder of RewardMe
"Not much in life that’s worthwhile is easy, especially at the beginning. That’s not an excuse to not do it."
-Jason Cohen - ASmartBear Blog -
What's your one thing?
Remember your One Thing.
Your startup can only do one thing well at a time. Know Your One Thing. Write it on the wall. Repeat it every day. Put it at the top of every regular company-wide communication. Don’t let anything distract you and your team from it.
From Jason Goldberg - serial entrepreneur [founder of Fab.com]
When to start your startup?
Now is actually the least risky time for you to start a startup. It will only get worse from here. As you age, you naturally accumulate things that will make it harder for you to start your startup: a spouse, kids, aging parents who need care, an expensive lifestyle, a career, respectability. The more of these you get, the more risk averse you become. Start your startup now, before it's too late.
From: David Albert - Founder of Hackruiter