From Employee To Entrepreneur: 4 Steps To Get You Started
by: Suzanne Mulvehill, MBA
The first time I left my job to begin an entrepreneurial venture, I was
ready. I had money and a business plan. What else did I need, I thought? I
gave notice to my employer and to my surprise, fear set in immediately. I
didn't leave my job…that time. I realized that while I prepared externally, I
didn't prepare internally – emotionally, mentally, physically
and spiritually – for this life transition.
Almost nine years have
passed since I left my job and began my
venture as an entrepreneur. I've
learned that entrepreneurship
is a process – it is like building and then
crossing a bridge.
I've also learned that entrepreneurship takes place
"within" an
individual – it is not necessarily about leaving a job ,
but
rather about living a life of fulfillment. Entrepreneurial
thinking
and living takes time, energy, tools, and action.
Here are some ideas that
have proven to be helpful to my clients in
making the transition to
entrepreneurial thinking and living.
1. Do Something Different Every Day
The purpose of this exercise is simply to get your mind
accustomed to
new experiences on a regular basis. Part of being human is that we develop
patterns and are comfortable with
habits. By doing something different every
day, the mind becomes
accustomed to change and new experiences.
I gave one of my clients this exercise as part of her "homework;" she came back a week later and said, "The homework assignment that I thought was going to be the easiest (doing something different every day) turned out to be the hardest." Sometimes, we need to practice integrating change into our lives.
Here are
some ideas to start:
-
Walk your dog on the other side of the street;
- valet
park if you never valet;
- order something different at a restaurant;
- get up ½ hour earlier.
New ideas will come to you once you're committed to doing
new things on a regular basis.
2. Evaluate your Belief System
This
is a big one for both new and experienced entrepreneurs.
What are your
beliefs, particularly about money? Many of the
clients I work with have
created new beliefs about money because
the old belief system no longer
serves them. The best example I
have is a client who has a for-profit and a
non-profit
organization.
Her non-profit organization raises money for
homeless children
in Brazil. When she evaluated her belief system, she realized
that her old beliefs blocked the flow of money to her, which
in
effect, blocked the flow of money to the children she was
desiring to
help in Brazil. She re-designed her belief system
and now experiences greater
financial success in her business
and non-profit organization.
3. Write
down your wildest dreams
We can create what we can imagine. After doing
something
different every day for about ten days, new ideas will begin
to
flow to you.
Creative thoughts will slip in and out of
your consciousness, so write them down when they come to you. By capturing
them on paper, you make room for new ideas and can
then decide in which
"dreams" to invest.
4. Affirm, Affirm, Affirm…
Affirm yourself,
affirm your goals, and affirm your vision and
dreams. Miracles happen this
way. I worked with a client who was
frustrated with his job; each time he'd
return for business
counseling, he would share a similar frustration.
One day I asked him what he really wanted to be doing with his life and he said, without hesitating, "I want to live and work in Italy." I asked him, "Why aren't you there, then?" He shared the feelings that were "blocking" him from doing what he wanted. From that point, he and I worked on creating affirmations to help him achieve his goal. He left for Italy six weeks later.
Affirmations work.
Suzanne Mulvehill, MBA is the author of
Employee to
Entrepreneur: A Mind, Body and Spirit Transition,
available through http://www.amazon.
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