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Thursday, December 24, 2015

What if someone copies your awesome business idea?

When I meet an angel investor, he may ask: “What if a big company copies your idea and develops the same website as yours after your website goes public?”
How can I answer this question?
No, the question is: What are you doing now knowing that a big company will copy your idea?
No, wait, the real question is: What are you going to do when another smart, scrappy startup copies it, and gets $10m in funding, and is thrice featured on TechCrunch?
No, wait, I’m sorry, the real question is: What are you going to do when there are four totally free, open-source competitors?
No wait, I forgot, actually the question is: What happens when employee #2 makes off with your code and roadmap and marketing data and customer list, moves to Bolivia, and starts selling your stuff world-wide at one-tenth the price?
The good news: There are good answers to these questions!
The bad news: Almost no one I talk to has good answers, but they think they do. And that’s fatal, because it means they’re not working towards remedying that situation. Which means when one of the above scenarios happens, it will be too late.

The first step is admitting you have a problem.

Last week I detailed the most common misconceptions about competitive advantages, so go read that if you haven’t already.
To summarize: Anything that can be copied will be copied, including features, marketing copy, and pricing. Anything you read on popular blogs is also read by everyone else. You don’t have an “edge” just because you’re passionate, hard-working, or “lean.”
The only real competitive advantage is that which cannot be copied and cannot be bought.
Like what?

Insider information

They say the only way to consistently make money on Wall Street is to have insider information. Unfortunately it’s not a joke, and although it’s illegal (and people occasionally go to jail for it), those in the know will tell you it’s the norm.
stock-dance
Fortunately, using intimate knowledge of an industry and the specific pain points within an industry is a perfectly legal unfair advantage for a startup.
Here’s a real-world example of how this advantage manifests. Adriana has been a psychiatrist for 10 years; she understands the ins and outs of that business. During a lull in her practice she got a serendipitous opportunity to shift gears completely and ended up leading software product development teams.  (Turns out that for big-business project management it’s more valuable to be a sensible thinker and counselor than to be an expert in debugging legacy C++ code.)
Now Adriana has an epiphany: Traditional practice-management software for psychiatrists totally sucks; she knows both the pain points and the existing software first-hand. But now she has the vision and ability to design her own software, capitalizing on modern trends (e.g. a web application instead of cumbersome installed applications) and new interpretations of HIPPA regulation (which allows web-based applications to store medical records like patient histories).
Adriana holds a unique position: Expert in the industry, able to “geek out” with her target customer, yet capable of leading a product team. Even if someone else saw Adriana’s product after the fact, it’s almost impossible to find a person — or even assemble a team — who has more integrated knowledge. At best, they could copy. Of course by then Adriana has moved on to version two.

Single-minded, uncompromising obsession with One Thing

A popular comment on the previous post was that a “Unique Feature”could be a competitive advantage in some circumstances. Some examples of a feature being a company’s primary advantage are:
  • Apple compromises everything in the name of design.Their products are over-priced (magically being profitable at half the price 12 months after release), buggy (how many iOS debacles have there been?), and every experience I’ve had with their tech support has been atrocious, but man their stuff looks and feels nice! (I’m typing this on an Air and there’s an iPhone in my pocket, so no Apple fan-boy mail please.)
  • Google’s search algorithm was just better, therefore they won the eyeballs, therefore they were able to monetize. Sure Bing and Yahoo are good now, but the advantage lasted long enough.
  • Photodex is a little company you’ve never heard of I worked for in Austin in the 90’s. We made an image browser with thumbnail previews so you didn’t have to open each file individually to see what it was. (In the 90’s, y’all, before that was built into all the operating systems!) Our advantage was speed. Not the best, not the most stable, didn’t read the most formats, didn’t have the most features, just “fastest.” For many users of that product, speed wins; Photodex now makes tens of millions of dollars a year, and “speed” is still the only point on which they will not compromise.
However it’s not enough for a feature to merely be unique (like my mini-browser) because it’s still easily duplicated. Indeed, most of the innovations we’ve made at Smart Bear in the art of code review have already been duplicated by both commercial and open-source competitors.
Rather, this requires unwavering devotion to the One Thing that is (a) hard, and (b) you refuse to lose, no matter what.
Google has spent hundreds of millions of dollars on their search algorithm, the single biggest focus of the company even today, a decade after they decided that was their One Thing. They refuse to be beaten by competitors or black-hat hackers, whatever it takes.
37signals can build simple — almost trivial — software and earn three million customers because they absolutely will not compromise on their philosophy of simplicity, transparency, and owning their own company, and that’s something millions of people respect and support. Competitors could build trivial web applications too (as Joel Spolsky is fond of saying, “Their software is just a bunch of text fields!”), but without the single-minded obsession it’s just software with no features.
To remain un-copyable, your One Thing needs to be not just central to your existence, but also difficult to achieve.Google’s algorithm, combined with the hardware and software to implement a search of trillions of websites in 0.2 seconds, is hard to replicate; it took hundreds (thousands?) of really smart people at Microsoft and Yahoo years to catch up. 37signals’ ranting platform — a blog with 131k followers and a best-selling book — is nearly impossible to build even with a full-time army of insightful writers.
“Being hard to do” is still a true advantage, particularly when you devote your primary energy to it.
P.S. For more, here are detailed examples of how this mindset also sets up your sales pitch.

Personal authority

codereviewbook-smChris Brogan commands $22,000 for a single day of consulting in an industry (social media marketing) where all the information you need is already online and free. Joel Spolsky makes millions of dollars off bug tracking — an industry with hundreds of competitors and little innovation. My company Smart Bear sells the most expensive tool of its kind. How did we earn this powerful authority, and how can you earn this overwhelming advantage?
I’m a great example of someone who wasn’t an authority on anything, but built that authority over time to the point where now my company (Smart Bear) is untouchable as the leader in both revenue and ideas in the area of peer code review.
Not only was I not an expert on code review prior to building a code review tool, I wasn’t even an expert on software development processes generally! I didn’t give lectures, I didn’t have a blog, I didn’t have a column in Dr. Dobbs magazine, and most interesting of all, I didn’t even know “code review” was going to be what made the company successful!
Unfortunately all this “authority” crap takes years of expensive effort, and even then success is probably due as much to luck as anything else, so is it worthwhile? Yes, exactly because it takes years of effort and a little luck.
Authority cannot be purchased. You can’t raise VC money and then “have authority” in a year. A big company cannot just decide they want to be the thought-leaders in their field. Even a pack of hyper-intelligent geeks cannot automatically become authorities because it’s not about how well you can code.
But how does authority convert to revenue? Here’s one tiny example:
I give talks on peer code review at conferences. My competition pays thousands of dollars for a booth, then spends thousands advertising to attendees begging them to come to that booth, then gives sales pitches at the booth to uninterested passersby who are also being bombarded by other pitches and distracted by the general hubbub.
Whereas, because I’m a known authority on code review and software development, I get to talk for an entire hour to a captive, undistracted group of 100 people, self-selected as interested in code review. After the talk typically 5-20 people want to chat one-on-one. Some head straight to the booth to get a demo; for many I give a private demo of the product on sofas in the hallway. It’s not unusual to get $10,000-$50,000 in sales over the next three months from people who saw me at that talk.
That’s just one example!  Now add to that: What’s the effect of a blog that tens of thousands of people read? What’s the effect on sales of my writing the book that’s the modern authority of code review?
Authority is expensive and time-consuming to earn, no doubt. But it’s also an overwhelming, untouchable competitive advantage.
(P.S. I’m hoping that the authority I’m slowly earning from this blog will help when I launch my next venture. That’s not why I blog, but I certainly will leverage it when the time comes!)
(P.P.S. I apologize for blatantly abusing the word “authority,” considering I just lambasted everyone who does things like that.)

The Dream Team

The tech startup world is littered with famous killer teams: Gates & Allen, Steve & Steve, Page & Brin, Fried & DHH.
In each case, the founders were super-smart, had complimentary skill sets, worked together well (or well enough to get to important success milestones), and as a team represented a unique, powerful, and (in retrospect) unstoppable force.
Of course that’s easy to see in retrospect, and retrospect is a terrible teacher, but the principle can work for any startup, especially when your goals are more modest than being the next Google.
Take the success of ITWatchDogs, the company I helped bootstrap and eventually sell (before Smart Bear). The elements of our Dream Team were obvious from the start:
  • Varied skillsets. One experienced startup/business/salesman (Gerry), one proven software developer (me), one proven hardware developer (Michael).
  • Common vision. We agreed what the product ought to be and that the ultimate goal of the company was to sell it.
  • Insider knowledge. Gerry had done another successful startup in the same space, I had deep experience with the language and tools for embedded software, and Michael had decades of experience building inexpensive circuits and processors.
Of course a Dream Team doesn’t guarantee success but itsignificantly reduces the risk of the startup, and furthermore is difficult for the competition to duplicate.
This is especially true when someone on the team is already successful in their field, e.g. with a massively successful blog or a big startup success under their belt or a ridiculous rolodex. Since those are the kinds of competitive advantages that can’t be bought or consistently created, having that person on the team is by proxy a killer advantage.
P.S. This is the primary competitive advantage in a new startup I’m working on right now (to be announced soon), so shortly you’ll see another example of this theory and — better yet! — you and I both will witness over the subsequent months whether or not this really resulted in a killer advantage! (Yes of course I’ll share details!)

(The right) Celebrity endorsement

Hiten Shah’s third company is KISSMetrics. On the surface, it’s yet another “marketing metrics” company. This is a crowded, mature market with hundreds of competitors in every combination of large/small, expensive/mid/cheap/free, and product/service/hybrid.
But Hiten has something none of those competitors has: Investors and mentors who are celebrities in exactly the market he’s targeting. Folks like Dave McClureSean Ellis, and Eric Ries, all of whom not only help via conference call but actively promote KISSMetrics on their blogs, Twitter, and personal appearances.
How much advertising will it take for competitors to overcome Hiten’s endorsements and exposure?  Even if a competitor also wanted celebrity endorsement, these guys are taken, and in any field there’s a limited number of widely-known and respected authorities.
Many competitors have more features than KISSMetrics has. I can see the sales pitch now…
The customer objects: “Gee it would be nice to have all those features,” and Hiten responds “Well not really, because Dave, Sean, and Eric all say that those features are actually distractions and don’t add to your bottom line. Our features are the right ones, as evidenced by these 20 companies that have shown increases in revenue.”
Just on the basis of these advisors, Hiten will get hundreds if not thousands of customers. You can’t buy that kind of jumpstart, not even for millions of dollars, because it’s not about faceless leads who saw KISSMetrics in an ad, it’s people who trust Hiten because of his association with other people they already trust.
P.S. If you’re raising money, investors love to see a co-founder or even just an advisor who has been successful before. The VC game is more lemming-like than most care to admit.

Existing customers

…or as Frank Rizzo says: Open your ears, jackass!
Everyone you’ve ever sold to (and those who trialed but abandoned) possess the most valuable market research imaginable, and it’s the one thing a new competitor absolutely will not have.
This is kind of a cheat, because everyone says “I listen to my customers,” which (nowadays) is just as bullshit as “We’re passionate,” but it’s true that if you’re actively learning from your customers andyou never stop moving, creating, innovating, and learning, that puts you ahead of most companies in the world.
As a company becomes successful it gains momentum, which means that it’s going in one direction with one philosophy. Like physical momentum, change becomes harder to affect. It’s logical; for example at Smart Bear we have 35,000 users, so making a drastic change to the user interface or typical workflow would mean too much retraining, even if the end result is better.
Even “cool, agile” companies like 37signals are trapped.They’ve been so clear and confident in their philosophy of “do less,” they cannot go after markets where “less” is not more but, actually, just less. For example, with more than a few sales people in a traditional sales organization it’s impossible to use Highrise — the folks-of-many-signal believe pipeline reports and geographic domains and integrated campaign management are unnecessary complications, but actually it’s Highrise that is unnecessary.
Of course the world is changing, and in particular your customers are changing. Normally this leaves room for the next competitor, but if you’re already entrenched you can leverage your existing status, insider knowledge, and revenue stream as long as you’re willing to change too.
You have more money, you’re better known, you have existing happy customers to help spread the word, you have employees to build new things, and you have more experience with what customers actually do and actually need, which means you should have the best insight.
Any new competitor would kill for just one of these advantages. If you’re not using them, how silly is that?
Zoho made exactly this argument to explain why they’re not terribly worried that Microsoft is now a direct competitor:
Companies don’t get killed by competition, they usually find creative ways to commit suicide. Office 2010 will be the end of Zoho, if we stop innovating, stop being nimble and flexible in our business model. Then again, if we stop all that, Zoho will dieanyway, no Office 2010 needed to do the job.
37signals is trapped inside their self-imposed philosophy, but you don’t have to be.

Go git ’em

Imitation might be the sincerest form of flattery, but it’s still sucks when someone does it to you.
Of course you can still battle it out in the marketplace, but you needsomething that can’t be duplicated, something they could never beat you on, then hang your hat on that and don’t look back.
Don’t despair if you don’t have an unfair advantage yet. I didn’t either when I started Smart Bear! But I built toward having some, and eventually earned it.
What else? What other competitive advantages can’t be easily copied, or if they are copied it doesn’t matter? Leave a commentand join the conversation.

Wednesday, December 23, 2015

How to Build Your Own Business Website with WordPress

If you already have your WordPress site set up skip to Part 2 here »
What We Will Be Building: We will be putting together a basic, fully-finished, business website starting from scratch. I chose a fake company,Paulina’s Pet Grooming for this example. Which means, in this course I’ll show you how to:
  1. Pick and purchase a domain
  2. Set up hosting
  3. Install WordPress and a Theme
  4. Add content and set up your site (part2)
Who This Is For: This course is for the ultra-lean startup or small business who needs a basic website but cannot afford, and/or doesn’t have a lot of time to build a website.
There are some small costs involved with having any website. In order to have a domain like the one you’re currently visiting: tylerherman.com you have to pay a small yearly fee. There is also a fee for hosting your website. If you are on a budget you can get hosting and a domain for as little as $120 for a year. $120 for a website isn’t too bad in my opinion.
We won’t be building a website full of every bell and whistle you can think of and it might not be an award winning design, but it will be presentable, professional, and most importantly, have the content you want to make available for your customers.
Why WordPress?
I chose WordPress for this course because it was the easiest CMS I found that non-web savvy people could get installed and work with. There is lots of free web-site-o-matic software out there that let people build a website using their system. The problem being 1) it only works on their hosting so you don’t really have control of your own site and 2) when it comes time for you to have a designer come in and add to or improve the site, they won’t be able to use that software, and likely ask you to start over.
WordPress is one of the most widely used applications for building website and it isn’t difficult finding a developer/design comfortable working with it. So if you need help expanding or improving your site you can find it. Plus, WordPress has tons of Themes and Plugins available so you can customize your site quite a bit without having to mess around with the code.
What Are the Requirements: You won’t need any coding or design skills for this. If you are able to make a purchase online or use an online app like Facebook or Flickr, you should have enough knowledge to finish this course.
You will also need access to an email address and be required to remember several user names and passwords, you will be creating during this process. Even if you have an email account already, I recommend creating a Gmail account with Google. It will come in handy.
A nice tool for storing passwords, which I use is LastPass. It is a cloud based services that stores your usernames and passwords securely and gives you easy access to them when you are online.

This video goes over the step I’ve outlined below. You can use one or both, whatever helps you learn easier.

Selecting a Domain

The first step in the process is choosing a domain. I’m sure you are pretty familiar with seeing these already. Some examples: amazon.com, whitehouse.gov, craigslist.org and so on. To obtain a domain name you have to purchase it from a domain registrar. You will essentially be leasing the domain for one or multiple years for a small fee ($4-$20 per year).
There are many Domain Registrars available. You may have seen the commercials for Godaddy.com. Feel free to register your domain with whatever company you wish but for this demonstration I’m going to register with Name.com. I like them because they make the process simple, and don’t try to upsell you with a bunch of additional products you don’t need.
Step 1: Create an Account
Start by heading to Name.com and create an account. Keep your username and password somewhere you won’t lose it as you will definitely need it later.
create an account an register domain name
Step 2: Select a Domain Name
Now use their search feature to locate the domain name you wish to purchase. You can purchase multiple if you’d like but only one is necessary. A general rule is to try to get a .com domain for your business but they are getting harder to come by. Some other popular suffixes for business sites are: .net, .co, and .biz.
search for and select a domain name to purchase
What if the domain name I want isn’t available? I wrote a quick guide tochoosing a domain name which should help out.
Step 3: Purchase
Now that you have your domain name selected you just have to make the purchase. That was easy right?
Before leaving the site you may want to bookmark this page, or leave it open in a browser tab, as we will be coming back here shortly.

Setting up Hosting

Now that you have your domain you need to find a host for your website. A host is a company you pay to store your website on a server that is made available to the world. When someone types in your domain name into their browser, it will send a request to the host server and allows you to download the site to view on your desktop or smartphone or whatever you happen to be using.
There are literally thousands of hosting providers. For these sites I recommend Bluehost. They offer decent hosting at low prices and are one of the largest hosting providers around. They also have a pretty clean and simple website to navigate, making the process easier for you to set up your first website. And of course they have a 1 Click WordPress Install, which we’ll be using.
bluehosting for wordpress install
Step 1: Purchase a Plan
You will be both purchasing a hosting plan and creating an account in the step. The cheapest plan is all you will need to get started. You get a price break for purchasing multiple years of hosting up front. If you plan on the site being around take advantage of it.
Head to Bluehost and click on the green “Sign Up Now Button”.
bluehost signup button
Next under “I have a Domain” enter the domain name you registered earlier.
enter your domain name
Enter your contact information. Make sure to enter a valid email address.Bluehost will send you important information you will need for later steps.
enter your hosting contact information
In the package information select one of the cheap packages for the amount of time you want which are 12, 24, and 36 months. Make sure to uncheckthe two check boxes below that: SiteLock Domain Security and Site Backup Pro. You don’t need either of them.
select your hosting package
Now just continue through until checkout.
Step 2: Point Your Domain at Your Host
It may take a little bit of time before your account is set up. You will receive a couple emails confirming your order and then later (2 to 24 hours), a new email will be sent to you with your Account information. This email will have all the information you’ll need to set up your site, including the name servers. So if you are at this step and waiting on your Account Email, you can take a break or start writing content for your site to kill time.

Pointing Your Site to Bluehost

Assuming you received your email from Bluehost, Open a new tab in your browser and head to Name.com.
Log in to your account and click on Accounts.
name.com account sign in
You will see the domain you registered earlier. Go ahead and click on it. In the top left corner you can see where you can enter the name server information. If you are hosting with Bluehost the names servers should be: NS1.BLUEHOST.COM and NS2.BLUEHOST.COM. You can double check this in your email.
setting up your name servers
Delete the current information and replace it with the name server information you received in your hosting email.
nameservers setup

Installing WordPress

We are going to use the 1 Click WordPress Install to get you up and running with your new website. That same email from Bluehost has the url to your Control Panel and the username and password. When you log into the control panel you might be a little overwhelmed. Don’t worry you won’t have to deal with 95% of this.
Find the Site Builder heading and click on the WordPress icon.
Site Builder on Bluehost
Under: Where would you like WordPress installed?, select your domain name.
Ignore the other steps and just click Complete at the bottom of the page. It may take a minute or two to install. You now have a WordPress website installed! There will be a link to your new website, a link to your Control Panel where you will make changes to your site and most important, your Control Panel username and password. Make sure to keep this somewhere safe, as you’ll need it every time you log into your website.
Well let’s get to it. Click the link to your Control Panel and enter your username and password.
WordPress Control Panel
You can now visit your website by typing your domain name into your browser. It will look like this:
the WordPress starter theme installed
There are lots of places we could start, but we’ll get going with choosing a Theme first.

Selecting a Design (Theme)

A theme is basically the design or skin that will lay over top of your site. This is a very important step.
There are many themes to choose from in a variety of styles but not every one will be ideal for your business site. WordPress was originally created as a blogging platform and many of the Themes are more for blogs than business sites.
Here is a list of some free WordPress Themes that work well for business sites.
There are also some Premium WordPress Themes that work well too. The premium themes tend to have more features and most have a pretty nice looking design. The costs tend to be around $25-$100 per theme. You don’t have to use a premium theme but I thought I’d give some examples if you were interested in purchasing one.


You can watch the video of me going over the steps or keep reading. I go over the same steps in both places although in the video I select a different theme.
Selecting a Theme: The left hand side for your WordPress Control Panel has a navigation menu where your site is configured. Look underAppearance > Themes to select a Theme.
how to change your WordPress theme
At the top of the page there will be a Current Theme (what the site is using) and Available Themes below (those installed but not being used currently).
To install a new theme just click the tab called Install Themes. Just below that there is a set of blue links. Click on Featured to see a list of some Themes to choose from.
Find a theme to install
If you find a theme you like, click Install. When it is installed, click Activate and it will now be the Theme your website is using.
For this example we are going to stick to the default theme, TwentyTen. If the video I choose the Responsive Theme. Both themes are slightly different, as will be any thing you select, but the basic setup should be the same.

Setting Up Your Website

In the next part we will be setting up your pages, the Setup for the Theme, installing Plugins and using Widgets, adding content and basically turning an empty shell into a website.
If you’ve found this tutorial helpful and know some other small business owners who need a website be sure to share it with them.
You can begin Part 2 here »

Tuesday, December 22, 2015

9 Lessons Monopoly Teaches You About Personal Finance by GUEST CONTRIBUTOR · 14 COMMENTS


Children around the world grew up playing Monopoly, and many more adults still get together for some friendly – and sometimes not so friendly – competition. But is there more to it than that? Is Monopoly more than a way to pass a few hours, and are there lessons we can take from a monocle-wearing millionaire, for use in our own personal finances?
Of course there are, because the history of Monopoly is rooted in the state of the global economy, with the game first being played to raise morale during the Great Depression because in Monopoly anyone could become a property mogul and a financial genius. Therefore it is important we learn the lessons Monopoly has to teach, and apply them to our own personal finances so that one day we can all wear monocles. I’ve outlined nine.

1. Life is What You Make It

The first rule of Monopoly is that everyone starts out with the same amount of money – a healthy $1,500 – and we all start from the same place at the Go square. From there the game can be anyone’s and it is the person who takes the greatest advantage from their opportunities who can triumph over their opponents.
For example, the player who rolls first has an advantage over the other players and the player lucky enough to roll a double has the advantage of a free turn and if that player is not you, you simply need to acknowledge that life isn’t fair. Maybe your parents didn’t start a savings account for you when you were born, perhaps you have lost your job because of cutbacks at work, but it is how you deal with the roll of the dice which matters.
Plus, as Monopoly will prove, there are both good and bad surprises in life and you can just as easily end up in jail as you can win a beauty pageant, as long as you accept these surprises for what they are, and find a way to excel regardless by doing what works for you.

2. Seize Opportunities

In a game of chance like life you will eventually have an advantage turned your way and you need to make sure you seize that opportunity and make the most of it. If you do get the first roll of the dice you have the first chance to buy up as many properties as you can and you have a free run to avoid a lot of rent payments early on.
The fact is there are probably a lot of lucky breaks which come your way in life, but you’re not in a position to take advantage of them. That is why you need to always be looking for ways to expand your experience and knowledge base, so that you can recognize opportunities for what they are, and you have the confidence to act on them. While you don’t need to become an expert on everything, look at ways you can build on your skills within the sphere of your current experience so that if an opportunity does present itself, you can show you are prepared and turn that luck into skill.

3. Build a Strong Asset Base

Ultimately it is the player with the most properties who will gain a monopoly control of the board and this is an important lesson to apply to your personal finances because building a strong asset base will allow you to earn a passive income. Other players will pay you rent and with good assets you can make improvements and ask a higher rent.
In real life, if you have real assets, you will be able to live off of the passive incomefrom them. Instead of relying solely on your wage, look closely at your assets and what they can do for you. You may be able to make improvements to what you already have, like upgrading a house to a hotel in Monopoly, so it’s not always trying to overextend yourself to buy more property.

4. You Need an Emergency Fund

Out there on the Monopoly board you never know what a chance card is going to throw your way – you could be required to pay for improvements on your hotels, pay taxes or school fees, or advance to the nearest railroad and pay twice the rent.
If you don’t have the cash then you’ll have to mortgage or sell your assets and in life there are a lot more emergencies than on the Monopoly board. Plus, you have just learnt the importance of your asset base, so rather than selling assets to pay for emergencies, make sure you leave some money tucked under the corner of the board for a rainy day.
David’s Note: Luckily, MoneyNing readers already know this. You did setup an emergency fund already right?

5. Take Time Out

In the real world we’re all doing our best to avoid going to jail, but in a game of Monopoly, a stink behind bars can come as a welcome reprieve from rental payments at every turn. Back in the real world remember that you need a reprieve too, whether just for a minute or one day or one week, it is important to step back from the grind and remember why you’re doing it all – and to see whether your efforts are having an impact.
Taking some time out gives you a chance to refocus on your goals, approach obstacles with new enthusiasm and look at savings or investment strategies which aren’t working, and find a way to fix them.

6. Shortcuts are Not the Answer to Success

The luck of rolling a double is rewarded with another turn, but if you try and take a shortcut through the game by rolling three doubles in a roll, you will land yourself in jail. Then you’ll find yourself stuck behind bars, unable to expand your property portfolio and in some versions even forfeit rental income.
Similarly, stop looking for shortcuts to financial stability and wealth and acknowledge that you have to work hard and you have to plan to be successful. You’ll need to make the most of opportunities which come your way and while a double roll will get you ahead, don’t be greedy because you might just land yourself in jail.

7. Budgeting

To be a successful Monopoly player, you will learn to budget and plan your purchases so you know how much money you have, and how much you’ll need to get around the board again. Monopoly budgeting can also teach vigilance in your personal finance because if you just depleted your cash reserves, you will be treading on thin water until you pass Go.

8. Small Steps Can Make a Difference

If you can’t afford to invest in a four bedroom home with a high rental income, that doesn’t mean you are not ready to enter the property investment market. If the lower income neighborhoods of the Monopoly board have taught you anything, you will know that even the cheapest property on the board with houses and then hotels on the land can still sting your opposition with $450 in rental payments just as they are passing Go.
Therefore, don’t be discouraged from investing or saving just because you have to start out small. Even small investments can see big capital growth over time.

9. Work On Your Relationships but Don’t Rely On Those Relationships

As you make your way around the board you will soon realize your chances of landing on three properties in a series are quite slim. This is where you need to be able to cultivate the relationships with your fellow players to negotiate, sell or swap to secure a set and move onto the construction of your houses.
In the real world you also need strong relationships with trusted professionals and advisers – an accountant, a lawyer, a financial planner – as these people can help a small business grow or be the answer to your next employment opportunity.
However, don’t forget the lessons you learned from a big brother who aimed to send you bankrupt every time you played. While relationships are important, you can’t always rely on them. Ultimately the success of your personal finances comes down to you, so build a diverse asset base and a healthy emergency fund. While you can utilize the services of other if you want to, there is no better alternative than being self sufficient.
This is a guest post from Alban, who helps run Home Loan Finder, a home loan comparison website.

Monday, December 21, 2015

HOW TO BE PRODUCTIVE




Here a nifty little chart to help you navigate at a glance


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