Aristotle coined the saying, “We are what we repeatedly do. Success is not an action but a habit.” By his logic, if you study and mimic the following three habits of successful IT startups, you can improve your odds of not only surviving but also earning rank among the elite.
A company’s net profit margin indicates how well incoming funds are managed against overhead and operating costs. Accounting activities, including tax prep, bookkeeping, and payroll, collectively represent a net profit margin of 18.4% — enough to make or break even the most promising IT business.
Roughly 75% to 80% of startup failures can be attributed to three mistakes:
Those who have succeeded financially did not do so by starting out with the most capital. More likely, they recognized the current or potential significance of investor relations and prioritized market research, business
Prepare For Venture Capital Opportunities, including a professionally-designed presentation of the following:
Note: when pursuing venture capital funding opportunities, timing is everything. These types of investors are known for taking big risks to reap big rewards. While this can be a good thing for some startups (fortune favors the bold), it can also capsize the business without the proper foundation in place, including legal representation.
The proverbial “leap of faith” may have its advantages in certain situations, but using it as the momentum to start your IT business should not be one of them. There’s a reason why most founders of successful IT start-ups are “seasoned”.
Statistically speaking, a 60-year-old startup founder is 3x more likely to succeed than a 30-year-old founder.
One potential explanation is that more seasoned start-up founders have spent a lifetime developing the skills and experiences needed to build a competitive business. This isn’t to say that young entrepreneurs shouldn’t go for glory, but it does suggest that start-up founders should take every opportunity available to gain new experiences, learn new skills, and achieve higher levels of qualification. The start-up game is won through strategery, not spontaneity.
Ultimately, the fate of this year’s IT start-up population will boil down to financial management, business savvy, and economic recovery. However, just because your company lives and breathes IT, this doesn’t mean it’s impervious to the damning impact that rapid changes in technology can have on internal operations and service delivery. If a fish can suffocate in water, an IT startup can fail due to technical inefficiencies. Look for IT management software that offers simplicity, a range of integrations, and the operational tools you need to automate and streamline processes across core business functions and expand and extend capabilities.