Posts Tagged ‘Revenue’

14 Entrepreneurship Axioms

Wednesday, January 11th, 2012

As classical singers, many of us have ideas for start-ups, gigs and special projects. A lot of us have ideas for businesses even outside of the musical realm. We are self-starters with endless creativity and big ideas.

If you are thinking about taking the leap into action, this list may help you avoid some common pitfalls and get a better sense of what reality will be like once you get rolling. Read through this list and shoot me an email, I’d love to encourage you in your journey!

As I have developed Velvet Singer, LLC over the last five years, I have added to this list of lessons learned, which I have taped on the wall by my desk. The list grew quickly at first, but I find I keep uncovering more even now. Here they are, in the order that I discovered them.

As I look through the list, I realize several are religious / spiritual. If you are into any “higher power,” they may translate. If not, you may still identify with the meat under the sauce.

Why would God be in the mix? From a practical point of view, starting a business or start-up project will challenge you on all levels. You will experience high “highs” and low “lows”. Exhaustion and profound joy. Worries and great optimism (mostly optimism for me, let’s be honest!). Entrepreneurship is a spiritual experience. It has the power to cut to the core of your self-worth and reveal your priorities and values. If you want in, get ready to be revealed!

Enjoy,
Bill


1) Always altruism, never cash.

Don’t get burned thinking about the money, and not genuinely focusing on solving people’s needs. It is a bit like method acting, people know when you are faking it.

2) Humble joy for any rewards the Lord gives.

It is a miracle of God that we can do anything at all that makes money. Throw a small God party any time anyone pays you even $1. Many people in the world don’t have access to behold this miracle in such close proximity, count yourself lucky.

3) Exercise patience.

We all want to wring the thing by the neck and make it submit. It is OK to wait. Many great things can happen when you wait. “Waiting is fullness” says the Martian from “Stranger in a Strange Land.” Do you grok?

4) Don’t spend money.

Don’t buy anything. Make it from scratch or skip it altogether. You don’t have to spend money to make money. Don’t go into debt, just start small and give it time.

5) Phone calls, not email.

Especially if you have gone ten rounds with an unhappy client or customer, pick up the phone rather than taking three hours to compose the greatest email of all time that will finally illuminate and defuse the situation. This is also true of selling any idea or product. Email eats. Attachments will not get clicked on, links will not get clicked.

6) Reply quickly.

Count it a point of pride that you are quick on the reply. People notice.

7) Listen and let people talk.

The best way to “sell” is to be genuinely interested in and deeply understanding of your customers’ needs. The only way to do that is to listen. Furthermore, you can’t lose sight that you are in this business, even in a small way, to help heal the world and to do good. Part of what you offer is an ear. Think of yourself as a minister or counselor, not a salesperson.

8) Don’t sell to your friends, they won’t buy anything anyway.

If you have created a business plan, even if it is just in your head, don’t count on getting off the ground with a little help from your friends. They won’t buy anything and you’ll strain the relationship by asking them. Plan on making brand new friends / contacts (which may come out of existing relationships / partnerships), and if any of your old friends want to join up, they know where to find you.

9) Plan for mistakes. Error capture. Log findings.

Even for non-technical businesses, plan that you will make tangible, repeated mistakes. Wherever possible, be deliberate and extremely thorough about documenting and understanding how your mistakes happened. If you are in a technical world, measure the damage and “capture” the error.

10) Donate a portion of your revenue at a fixed proportion.

Even if it is only 1% – 10% of revenue, donate a portion of your revenue from the first dollar you make. Besides the actual good that donating revenue to a good cause does, it helps reshape your understanding of your purpose, it elevates your endeavor from a boring job to a noble calling. Instead of feeling like Willy Loman, all of a sudden, you will feel like Don Quixote. This is your quest!

11) Walk by faith, not by sight.

Entrepreneurship is a spiritual endeavor. You are entering uncharted territory. Pray and trust your gut. Don’t take too much time to research option A vs. option B. You probably already know what choice you want to make. Go for it.

12) Have fun and be cool.

Don’t get all frazzled and take things too seriously. If you need to make money so you can eat food, get a job. Entrepreneurship is for fun. You’ll regret the times you run around like a mad man at conferences trying to make every last bit count. It is more important to “be cool, honey bunny, be cool.”

13) Fight resistance with courage.

Every day you will feel resistance, a little nagging voice trying to divert you and discourage you. Be encouraged, the louder that voice is, the more you know you are on to something great. In fact, seek out that wet blanket feeling of heavy resistance, learn to make it your friend, like a rival in a tennis match, and then face it with explosive bursts of courage. Read The War of Art by Pressfield for more.

14) Have an opinion, take a stance.

Don’t offer too many products, don’t allow too much customization, don’t be too flexible, don’t say yes to everything. Take a stance, defend a point of view. Your brand, no matter what it is, needs to have personality. Your customers / clients ultimately commit to you, they buy you, not a product or service.

Your Future: Trending Up

Thursday, June 2nd, 2011

“If you build it, they will come” was the mantra in the 1989 baseball classic, Field of Dreams staring the incomparable Kevin Costner. Finest actor of our day, IMHO.

Well, our mantra at Velvet Singer is that “If you can see it, you can improve it.” Say it with me — “If you can SEE it, you can IMPROVE it.” That is the truth.

Do you believe that? Do you believe that one of the barriers between you and success is simply clarity and understanding?

Automatic Trends Email

I am so excited about this new feature that I built earlier this week that I am not even waiting until it is released before announcing it. Because we overhauled the Trends module in the last update (v2.9.2) it is was a simple step to add an automatic email report.

Now whenever you log out of Velvet Singer, you will get a clean and clear snapshot of where you stand and where you are headed:

  • Are you performing more often?
  • Are you making more money?
  • Are you learning new arias?
  • Are you singing more lessons?
  • Are you faithfully journaling?
  • Are you networking more regularly?

And so you will have clarity on where you stand and can spur yourself along to greatness.

Need accountability? No problem! Because the report will be a nicely formatted HTML email, you can forward it along to your teacher, friends, family or supporters to involve them in your journey.

Look for this and much more in the next release!


Here is what the full Email report looks like:


Velvet Singer

www.velvetsinger.com

James Testdata

lyric baritone

 
Session Update

as of 6/1/2011 10:12:28 AM

Summary

During this session, I added records to the following tables:

Journal

673 total

10 new entries

Auditions

274 total

1 new audition

Contacts

274 total

5 new contacts

Repertoire

114 total

1 new record

Finances

283 total

6 new transactions

Email

633 total

No new emails

Projects

61 total

No new projects

Events

739 total

21 new events

 

 
 
Trends Update

Journal

Trending

Average

Journal Line Items

Up ↑

150 journal line items per season.

1346 journal line items in 9 seasons.

16 journal line items per month.

673 journal line items in 42 months.

Journal Forms

Down ↓

31 journal form entries per season.

153 journal form entries in 5 seasons.

4 journal form entries per month.

162 journal form entries in 42 months.

 

Audition

Trending

Average

All Auditions

Up ↑

39 auditions researched per season.

274 auditions in 7 seasons.

All Sent Applications

Down ↓

19 applications sent per season.

134 applications in 7 seasons.

2 applications sent per month.

134 applications in 70 months.

All Sung Auditions

Up ↑

9 auditions sung per season.

54 auditions in 6 seasons.

 

Contact

Trending

Average

New Colleague / Peer

Up ↑

22 new colleagues entered per calendar year.

112 new colleagues in 5 calendar years.

All New Contacts

Down ↓

55 new contacts entered per calendar year.

274 new contacts in 5 calendar years.

5 new contacts entered per month.

274 new contacts in 51 months.

New VIP Contact

Up ↑

11 new important contacts entered per calendar year.

55 new important contacts in 5 calendar years.

 

Repertoire

Trending

Average

Solo Repertoire

Up ↑

6 audition selections learned per season.

37 audition selections in 6 seasons.

Role / Work

Down ↓

5 roles learned per season.

21 roles in 4 seasons.

 

Finance

Trending

Average

Income

Up ↑

$13,924 in income per calendar year.

$55,698 in income over 4 calendar years.

$1,547 in income per month.

$55,698 in income over 36 months.

Profit

Up ↑

$11,732 in profit per calendar year.

$46,928 in profit over 4 calendar years.

$1,311 in profit per month.

$46,928 in profit over 36 months.

Expense

Down ↓

$2,192 in expense per calendar year.

$8,769 in expense over 4 calendar years.

$230 in expense per month.

$8,769 in expense over 38 months.

 

Project

Trending

Average

All Projects

Up ↑

14 projects added per season.

56 projects in 4 seasons.

 

Event

Trending

Average

All Events

Up ↑

106 events totaling 198 hours per season.

739 events totaling 1384 hours in 7 seasons.

12 events totaling 22 hours per month.

739 events totaling 1384 hours in 64 months.

Voice Lesson

Up ↑

1 voice lesson totaling 1 hour per month.

33 voice lessons totaling 30 hours in 38 months.

Performance

Down ↓

27 performances totaling 76 hours per season.

109 performances totaling 304 hours in 4 seasons.

Voice Lesson

Up ↑

8 voice lessons totaling 7 hours per season.

33 voice lessons totaling 30 hours in 4 seasons.

Coaching

Down ↓

21 coachings totaling 20 hours per season.

83 coachings totaling 80 hours in 4 seasons.

2 coachings totaling 2 hours per month.

83 coachings totaling 80 hours in 37 months.

Practice / Vocalizing

Up ↑

7 practice sessions totaling 8 hours per season.

29 practice sessions totaling 32 hours in 4 seasons.

1 practice session totaling 1 hour per month.

29 practice sessions totaling 32 hours in 35 months.

Teaching

Down ↓

1 lesson taught totaling 1 hour per calendar year.

4 lessons totaling 4 hours in 3 calendar years.

0 lessons taught totaling 0 hour per month.

4 lessons totaling 4 hours in 26 months.

 

©2011 Velvet Singer, LLC. Chicago, IL 60640
www.velvetsinger.com
All rights reserved.