Cover the basics first - you can't build a business when survival is your fulltime job.
Finding a job - it's just like fishing. The more lines you have in the water, the better chance you have of getting a hit.
Recognize your strengths and weaknesses - a lot of jobs in Erie for which I don't remotely qualified for.
Find your buyer first and work backwards. Based on what they want.
There's so many times that people throw away things of value. They just have to find a buyer to connect to.
People miss out on a lot of opportunities when they panic and quit too early.
Don't judge a book by its cover.
No job is beneath you - working hard at a job, any job, builds confidence and gives you selfworth. That confidence will help catapult you to the next level.
Diversify your efforts.
Buy low and sell high.
A relationship is what sales is all about. The key is knowing how to read people, convincing them that they need what you're selling.
Tap into the herd mentality - get in front of a group, and sell them. If you can get just two people in that group to buy what you're selling, odds are the whole herd is gonna follow.
P2
Find your buyer first and work backwards.
Identify a need and fill it - the trick to starting a successful business is to choose something the market needs and build a great team.
I'm gonna need some serious startup funds to get this business off the ground. The best way that I know to make big money is in real estate. So I want to buy a house to flip it to cover the startup costs for my business. But for now, I need to think on a smaller scale.
Craft beer business - people are spending money on it. The industry is in continual growth. It has the potential to scale nationally. It's a collaborative field.
Surround yourself with people who can strengthen your weaknesses.
Know your **** - make sure you know all aspects of the business.
Human capital - most important criteria for hiring someone is their personality. I need people with managerial skills, brewing experience, food component. But I don't have any money to pay them. It's sweat equity.
I care about if somebody is gonna fight hard, going to stay long, and going to believe in the company. I'm looking at their eyes. I'm seeing if they stare back at me. I'm seeing how long they blink.
Instill confidence - if your team doesn't believe in you, you're going nowhere. Make sure your team believes in the vision as much as you do.
P3
Be ready to pivot - not every deal goes as planned. A good business person is always prepared to handle the quick turns and failures that come with starting or running a business.
Surround yourself with experts
Do your due diligence - just having a great idea doesn't mean it's right for the market. Always research and vet your business before you get too far down the road.
1. BBQ and beer restaurant. 2. Go national with sauces and rubs. 3. Bring in local beer. Diversifying my business effort will get me to my milliondollar goal. Now I need to sell my team on the idea.
What would an IT system look like that would really enable this business to run as efficiently as possible.
Underdog needs to be worth a million dollars very quickly. One way that I can quickly scale up is by creating my own brand of beer that is made by the craft brewers and then take that national.
Venn diagram.
Know how to motivate - how do you push someone to be better without knocking them down? How to read people? What tactics to use in order to motivate them to step it up?
There's all different styles of leadership. What I fall under would be called 'servant leadership'. I want my employees to feel that I work for them. Tell me, give me feedbacks.
Knowledge is power - you have to know what you're talking about when you sell your product.
P4
If you're going to build the American dream, be prepared for setbacks. It's how you recover that counts.
Chris Sirriani is like the godfather of craft beer in Erie. If I can get him on board, I think all the others around town will follow.
Turn rivals into revenue - always eliminate potential conflicts by striking deals that are mutually beneficial.
Create space for talent - if you don't have a space for the talent you met, create one.
Streamline the pitch - a too large picture confuses suppliers. Less is more. Focus.
"No" is the start of the conversation.
P5
Find people smarter than you.
Set your own table - actively seek out opportunities to be successful. Don't wait for the perfect opportunity to fall into your lap because it never will.
Business is tough that people are gonna eat you up. This is about you fighting for every scrap you can get.
Don't let a setback kill your confidence. You're gonna have them, no matter what. It's inevitable. Take it and learn from it. These are the days you fight. Because that's the only way you win.
Lose the battle to win the war. Selling house is not the war; the war is to build a million-dollar business.
(Once bitten twice shy)
P6
Don't pigeonhole your players - while Matt the beer director, he is an ultimate MacGyver. There isn't a tool he can't use, and he can help Chris Trotte to finish the smoker.
Majority of time when I worked well, I had competent people who knew what they were doing. I am nervous, but the more confidence we have for Christine, the more chances we are gonna have to win this whole thing.
Check your plane before you fly it - pilots go through an exhaustive checklist before they take off, because lifes are at stake.
If things go wrong, don't go with them - the ability to remain cool under pressure is what sets apart the pros. I remember at the height of the financial crisis, I walked outta a deal very upset. I said I would never work with them and I would never do a deal. But I needed to make a deal. So they withdrew my original deal, came back and charged me an extra 50% on top of what I was trying to get. Why? Because I lost my cool.
Managing cash flow issues are something that people starting a company deal with everyday.
(I thought the financial crisis in 2008 was bad. This takes the cake.)
This is what it's like to start a business. It's messy, and the only way to get throught it and be successful is to have the right people around you.
P7
Shut up and listen to the experts. Open your ears to the experts you surround yourself with recognize they are offering up feedback to help you succeed.
Ribfest is the opportunity to see how they can work together under pressure.
Interviews don't tell you everything. Cream rises to the top during the Ribfest, and it's Ashley.
Leaders need to step up. Christine is responsible for inventory. She should have known how much stock she would need to hit today's sales target.
If you can't stand the heat, get out of the kitchen.
Adults are grown children. They just need somebody to listen to them.
When conflicts rise, combat is optional. Don't react at companion in the midst of a war.
When everybody else packed up and left because of the bad weather, we kept serving. I won't quit. The weather is an excuse. When you make excuses, you never reach your goals.
Endure more pain than anyone else - the reason why I've been successful is that I push through tough times and endure more pain in my competition and ensure I don't quit.
P8
Don't confuse effort with results - spinning your wheels only works when you are going forward. It's a given that we all have to work hard, but it's about working smart. It's about what did you get done at the end of the day.
People deserve hand-ups not handouts. Underdog team worked its tail off and they deserve the money. I don't feel I'm giving them anything.
Don't make excuses.
With talent, hard work, intuition and ultimate resilience, you'll find that taking the risk can manifest your dream. When we bet on ourselves and work together, we keep the American dream alive.
3.5 有演戏嫌疑,但是真的有点精彩,整个感觉和呆过的创业公司差不多。从未意识到团队那么重要,也从没体会过所谓leadership到底是啥样的。大开眼界吧。
表白哼哈二将Matt和RJ,还有独当一面的女神设计师Dawn。大企业家操刀,果然很多沟通问题轻车熟路迎刃而解,其实一般人在很多环节会花很多时间。很多挫折在人性方面表现的很真实,特别是那个最容易激动的女pitmaster,一直隐隐的不是太喜欢她,结局真实了!最不能接受的是二手车赚差价的情节!最后八成算赢了吧,但也不能排除一部分人可能是对镜头的吸引力而凝聚在一起,不过骨干成员还是很真实的,特别是女设计师Dawn,很喜欢她,善良勇敢,勇于担当,生活负担很重的情况下依然愿意倾尽所有,最后揭晓男主身份的那一刻,她的第一反应很真实,说明她真的是全心全意在为男主的愿景努力,男主给予她回报时,她的人生愿望真的是朴实无华!RJ不说了,全篇接受一切指令任劳任怨!Matt考虑全面,军师一样的存在!很喜欢这个团队!
看完全部,再回看开头,五十几岁大叔,蹲在地上给人刷马桶,大冬天在车里过夜,去见人之前只能在公厕里洗漱一番,虽然是真人秀,但还是挺感慨的,且不说经不经济头脑的问题,我们很多人,包括我,还是吃不了这种苦,拉不下这块脸。结尾葛伦说:我能成功的原因之一,就是我会设法熬过难关,比别人忍受更多痛苦。还有,别把努力和结果混为一谈,转动车轮也要前进才有意义。泪点PS:拿到支票时,单亲妈妈喜极而泣,说这几年一直过着零存款的日子,现在我要带孩子去迪斯尼乐园,长大去就没那么好玩了。
还是要有个好领导
虽然是个真人秀,但是有很多值得学习和借鉴的地方,有过创业经验的我真诚推荐,不要说这个不适合国内环境,要看人家是如何思考问题和解决问题的,如何与人沟通等等这些才是有用的东西
进一步了解了一些美国的情况,社区创业培训中心的普吉程度,真是太让我惊讶了,商业氛围很好。想尽一切办法赚取第一桶金,寻找团队发掘主营业务。
不愧是亿万富翁,具有卓绝的思考方式、严格的时间节点、抓住任何可能的活动展现品牌,并且拥有百分百的执行力。以上。中国也适用找行业专家,行业专家反而比较谦逊。
学到了,目标、预算、沟通、追进度、不找借口、信任团队
情绪稳定很重要
即便是一部纯虚构的电视剧也算是很有质量的了,很好地刻画了不同性格的人在创业中的表现,以及他们应得的结果。
普通人和亿万富翁的差距可能只是执行力,懂大道理的人有太多,有经验知识的人也太多,但是可能真的能抓住一切资源为了目标坚定执行的才能成功。
全程看完。总结下:落魄到救助站,睡汽车。第一时间打零工,找工作,顺便认识人。发现需求轮胎,找了一星期。顺便一起练摊,有钱倒卖二手车,最重要的一笔是倒卖二手房。有些人就是在这些打零工,做固定工作,捡垃圾,搞倒卖,做一辈子。那没希望。只是解决了生存问题。重点是他在找工作和打零工的时候认识的人。阿杰服装店老板,练摊感情好,搞设计有时间有人脉。在创业中心,空头支票招揽人才,遇到了麦克。市场调研,认识了更多。打算搞实业,其实开始是想太好,投入大,回报小,流程长。90天搞不成。最后结合当地情况,和每个合适的活动,进军餐饮,见效快,资金流转快。这是个创业的好方向,就是非常看后续发展,起得快,也死得快。不过主角抓住了,烧烤节的商机,建立品牌口碑。更重要的是,一个人成不了事,发现人才,留住人才,管理人才,
1%的努力,10%的运气,89%的摄像机,缺一不可。
1、面子一文不值,做事不要意气用事。2、一点点重复的积累,主角从垃圾厂找的轮胎转手卖1800刀,几百块钱的车卖4000多,令我惊叹,这个世界就是在比谁更黑心。但我更敬佩的是主角没有觉得卖轮胎赚钱就一直卖,二手车赚钱就一直都卖二手车,财富的积累是为了达到更大的目标。3、干一行爱一行,既然决定去做便把最好的状态,展现给大家。4、不要把努力和结果混为一谈。5、我认为我学到最重要的东西。先寻找买家再做产品。最近我也有学习大学生创新创业的网课,发现无论是创业还是在生活中,我们有太多,不可预测的事情了。我们不可能做好万全的准备,这个时候,我们所需要的更多是面对生活的勇气。
下次听到有人给你画大饼不要扭头就走
Glenn Stearns这是准备竞选总统吧? 宣扬“美国梦”、团结底层、获得一个地区的选票……P.S. Glenn Stearns有点儿《亿万》主角Bobby的感觉
意图过于明显,美国梦得大型广告片
虽然不知道有多少内容是真实的,但对于创业者或者单纯希望能挣到钱的人还是有很多值得学习的地方,比如1、先设定好期限并想办法解决这段时间的温饱才能安心创业;2、先弄清别人需要什么,再决定你该卖什么;3、低买高卖;4、算出每个关键点需要的预算,并且想办法在关键时间赚到这笔钱;5、充分利用社会可以帮助你的免费资源;6、开始前先做市场调研,选有发展空间且限定时间内可行的领域;7、找到比你专业厉害的人并团结他们的力量跟你合作;8、创业全程尤其初期会遇到各种危机,要想尽一切办法找解决方案;9、找有创业心的人加入你的团队,且领导者必须有强大的能力不断为自己和整个团队做好心理建设;10、领导者必须找到每个关键位置上能负责的人,并且有能力让每个人充分发挥他的作用,以便让整个系统在没有领导的情况下也可以良性运转
喜欢他与别人相处的方式,真诚又得体,富有激情,总能反思并改进。B站搜索富豪谷底求翻身。
1、节日当天购入甩卖小商品在酒吧卖出挣0.4K,用时1天。2、从垃圾场找到别人求购的2个旧轮胎挣1.5K,用时1周;(下面的操作,同样匿名和现金交易,先打个❓)3、买2辆清仓甩卖的二手车洗干净转售挣7K,用时1周;4、贷款购二手房翻新出售挣40K±,用时6周;5、召集数个无薪合作人,参加烧烤节获奖,啤酒烧烤店开业第一天估值750K,用时10周。