A New Year’s Resolution for Your Small Business – Build the Website You Want 

It’s a New Year, and with that naturally comes New Year Resolutions. This year, we have a suggestion for a resolution that you can actually keep: making the website that you want for your small business.

Maybe you don’t yet have a website for your business (or business idea!). Or maybe you have a static website and you’ve been meaning to get around to making it more powerful, more engaging, and more dynamic.

Either way, we have a few suggestions for what to include on your small business website. In fact, we can help you get started!

Tip #1: Include Call to Action Buttons

A website is really all about connecting with your customers and potential clients. How are you supposed to connect with them if you don’t offer them the opportunity to engage? Call to Action buttons give website visitors a clear path to connection with your small business.

Tip #2: Integrate Your Website with Social Media

Social media is no passing trend. It is here to stay, and it is only going to become more integral to daily life. Connecting your website to your business Facebook and Twitter pages opens up more avenues for communication, engagement and connection with both current customers and leads. If you don’t yet have social media accounts, we suggest you go set them up today.

Tip #3: Invest in Engaging Content and Blog Posts

Nothing quite says “I care about you and I care about this business” quite like engaging content on a website. Instead of keeping the language business-like and ‘salesy’, change it up. Use personal pronouns. Make jokes. It will make a difference. In that vein, consider taking the time to keep a business blog that you update at least once a week. This can prove to be a valuable resource for your customers – and a nifty marketing tactic.

Tip #4: Do Your Due Diligence for Search Engine Optimization

 A successful website is never of the ‘set it and forget it’ variety. An engaging website, especially for small businesses, responds to the needs of potential customers. To respond to the needs of potential customers, you need search engine optimization. SEO essentially recognizes what customers are looking for and tailors your website accordingly. It is a crucial step to building the website that you need.

Making Time – Here Are 5 Things You Can Outsource as a Small Business Owner

Let’s be honest: being a small business owner can be absolutely overwhelming at time. Often it feels as if you need to take care of everything, all at once. Payroll needs to be processed, that social media post needs to go up, this invoice needs to be delivered, that bill needs to be paid.

In today’s sharing economy, and with the services offered online, the good news is you don’t have to do everything as a small business owner.

Instead, you can choose to outsource quite a few of your tasks. These should be things hate doing, can’t do, or shouldn’t be doing. This may cost money in the short term, but it can save you huge amounts of time in the long run. The end result is the freeing up of your time.

From there, you can use that freed time to connect with customers, better your product, or even create another stream of revenue. The options are pretty much without limit. So consider some of these tasks and roles that you can outsource as a small business owner.

#1: Hire a Virtual Personal Assistant

 There are hundreds of virtual assistant services available online. Depending on the service and your needs, you can hire a Virtual Assistant for just a few hours a week or full-time. A Virtual Assistant can take care of all of those annoying but necessary tasks for you: scheduling, emailing, market research and more.

#2: Leave Your Small Business SEO to an Expert 

With most people finding their information online or on social media, Search Engine Optimization has become crucial even for small businesses. Unless you run a social media or marketing company, you don’t know all that much about SEO. The good news is you can easily find someone who does know everything about SEO online. Take advantage of this expertise, and don’t try to do it on your own. 

#3: Use a Professional for the Web Design for Your Small Business Website

 Just as with SEO, you most likely have never designed a website before. Instead of spending hundreds of hours trying to figure out WordPress plugins and HTML all on your own, consider outsourcing the entire process. The experts can take care of it for you. The same goes for graphic design.

#4: Save Time By Outsourcing Content Development

 Are you a people person, but not so great at writing? Do you find yourself taking an entire day trying to come up with a compelling blog post for your small business blog? Not everyone is a writer, and there is no pressure for you to be either. You can assign copy for your website, weekly blog posts, newsletters and more to someone who is comfortable and competent at writing.

 #5: Focus on Current Customers by Outsourcing Marketing

 Online marketing can be extremely effective for small businesses, but it can also take an incredible amount of effort. If you find yourself spending too much time on building those back links, creating social media content, or fiddling with Google AdWords, it may be time to outsource all of these processes.

After all, your focus should be on the customer, right?

Small Business Trends & Predictions from 2017 – How Many Have Come True for You?

Each year holds something different for business large and small. On January 1st of this year, Business News Daily published a compilation of predicted small business trends for 2017.

Ranging from the business climate to technology, these small business trends and predictions attempted to bring some stability and certainty to the year. Stability isn’t always possible, but knowing what to look for in the coming years always helps create a little more certainty.

Below are just a handful of the forty predictions for small business trends in 2017. How many of these reflect the reality of your small business operations for this year?

#1: Businesses With a Niche Will Find Success

“Business success will come from further focusing on smaller, very specific audiences. Going extremely deep with customized messages and specialized platforms to a highly receptive and loyal audience will replace wide approach “shot gun” marketing. [We’ll see] more soft or no ask/call to action marketing focused on community building, experiences and lifestyle over product specific messaging.”

– Kyle Golding, chief strategic idealist at The Golding Group

Interested in talking with a small business website specialist? Click Here!

#2: Support Services Will Shift to a Freelance Workforce

“2017 will herald a lot of additional services and products that will enable freelancers specifically to have access to credit or additional payment options. If I were an entrepreneur with a service or product that could be tailored to freelancers, I would be looking at how best to service this growing segment of the economy. This segment will only continue to grow and represents the most disruptive segment in terms of growth and innovation.”

– Keisha Blair, co-founder of Aspier-Canada

#3: Small businesses will take advantage of easy payment options 

“[Companies] that use newer online payment options such as Square, Bitcoin currency, Apple/Google payment options, etc. have a major edge over competitors. When you’re a young company that was built to begin with on a fluid, ever-changing, Web-based economy, it’s easy to adapt. On the other hand, larger companies, even when they are willing to step out of their comfort zones, have to overhaul larger, more-entrenched payment-processing systems that have existed for years or decades.”

– Joel MacDonald, founder of EnergyRates.ca

#4: Social media will be used more and more as a platform for sales

“You can now buy through Facebook and even Instagram through third party apps. This is great for startups and those who don’t have the resources for an ecommerce store.”

– Joselin L. Estevez, digital marketing and social media director at X Factor Media

#5: Technology will offer the a “paperless office” even for small businesses

“The paperless office will be a growing trend in 2017. In the past, businesses would physically print paperwork to be reviewed, signed and scanned. In addition to hurting the environment, this causes a significant drain on employee productivity. Fortunately, new software tools are being developed that allows companies to securely manage files online. This means improved efficiency at a lower cost.”

– Sofie Knowles, web developer and co-founder of PDF Pro

The Magic of a Call to Action Button

Today we want to discuss something that often goes overlooked, especially by small businesses: including an effective Call to Action button on your business website.

Simply put, having a call to action on your website is a crucial element of marketing your small business. Even if word of mouth remains the most effective approach to marketing for small businesses, a call to action in your web presence will go a long way toward bringing in new customers.

People respond to a clear and accessible call to action. It really is that simple. Instead of making people go through the steps of emailing you directly or filling out a ‘Contact Us’ page, a call to action button allows you to hone in on why a visitor is really on your website.

There is a great deal of information on what an effective call to action looks like, as well as what a well-designed call to action button should include. To cover the basics, we address the three following questions:

  • What is a call to action button?
  • Why is a call to action button so important?
  • What should a call to action button look like?

What is a Call to Action Button?

In marketing, a call to action is a specific instruction to the target audience in an effort to provoke an immediate positive response. Translation: a call to action asks visitors to become customers.

“There’s no such thing as a successful marketing campaign unless there is a successful CTA. Conversions, revenue, business and profit – they all depend on the mighty call to action.”

~ Jeremy Smith, MarketingLand

A successful call to action looks different for every business and every industry. For a catering company, it could be as simple as downloading a sample menu. For online sales, the call to action can be to create an online account. The beauty of a call to action is that you can tailor it to your small business.

Why is a Call to Action Button Important?

Without a call to action, visitors to your business or to your website have no reason to follow up with the information that you present them. You can give potential customers all of the benefits of your business, but unless you ask them to take action then they are much more likely to just walk away.

A call to action button on your business website acts as a digital means of ‘closing’ the deal.

Ultimately, a call to action button is an important element of any small business website because it improves conversion rates. This brings in more customers or clients to your business.

What Should a Call to Action Button Look Like?

There are many different examples of what an effective call to action looks like. The copy included in your business’ call to action depends entirely on what you are trying to get your target audience to do. However, all effective call to action buttons have at least the following elements in common:

  • CTAs are simple and concise – one phrase to include on the button.
  • CTAs include action words – ‘get’, ‘download’, ‘sign up’, ‘open’, ‘try’, etc.
  • CTAs use urgent words – ‘now’, ‘limited’, ‘today’, etc.
  • CTAs speak in the first person – “Start my free trial” instead of “Start your free trial”
  • CTAs are hard to miss – the most effective buttons are the center of attention, using bright colors and bold themes to draw a visitor’s attention

What Should You Include on Your Personal Website?

These days, investing in a personal website can go a long way toward setting yourself apart from your competition. Whether you are a photographer or a freelance writer, a professional looking website is essential to drawing in potential clients and showing them that you are well established in your industry.

If you are looking to establish a personal website, it is important to know what you should include on the website (and what you should not include, for that matter). While a well made website will help you attract clients, a poorly designed and executed website will most likely turn people away from your services. Make sure you have everything that you need on the website will this list of five recommendations.

Include a Written Form of Your Elevator Pitch

If you are a freelancer, you already know what an elevator pitch is: a thirty-second description of who you are, what you do, and what your vision is. Think of your personal website as the first impression that potential clients will have. With this in mind, write up short bio that highlights who you are as a person and what you do professionally. Keep it short, to the point and engaging. While introducing yourself is probably the most important part of your personal website, it is not necessary (or recommended) to include your entire life story on the WordPress site. You can leave that for another time.

Include Samples of Your Work 

An personal website can essentially act as an online portfolio. Rather than using third party freelancer sites, you can showcase your creative work on your own website. This will make you stand out from the crowd when clients come calling. While you should not include every single piece of work you have ever completed, you should curate a portfolio that highlights the very best of what you do. This is a crucial element of a personal website for everyone from photographers to copyeditors.

Include a Professional Blog Relevant to Your Industry

This aspect of a personal WordPress site will require a little more work, but it will absolutely be worth it. The idea is to regularly update your personal website with blog posts that are relevant to what you do within your industry. You should update this blog at least once a month, though once or twice a week is better. Keeping a professional blog will show clients that you are engaged and up-to-date with your industry.

Include Testimonials From People You Have Worked With

This element of a personal website may seem like a no brainer, but it is important to mention nonetheless. Besides your portfolio, including testimonials from past clients is one of the only ways that future clients will know the quality of your work, your communication and your commitment. If you don’t have any written reviews, send out a few emails to clients asking for testimonials that you can put up on your website. A handful of positive testimonials will go a long way toward rounding out your personal website and setting you up for success.

Weedeating, Supply Side Prioritization, and the WTF Experience

Weedeating is art, and as any great artist should, I have a vision, a theory, an artist statement that guides my weedeating: controlled chaos. I like my yard to walk the fine line between expertly manicured perfection and uncontrollably overgrown wilderness. Regardless, there’s something magical about weedeating while listening to a good album or podcast – or, in this case, listening to a YouTube video.

Supply Side Prioritization

This past Sunday, instead of listening to Workingman’s Dead or Red Headed Stranger again while sculpting my front yard’s blades and weeds, I enjoyed a great presentation by Ann Miura-Ko (of Floodgate) and her subsequent conversation with John Lilly (Greylock Partners). You can find the video here (don’t worry, I just listened – I wasn’t watching a video while weedeating).

I particularly enjoyed their discussion about marketplaces that starts around 44m 50s.

Ann’s comments about marketplaces are awesome. She discusses how, when analyzing a marketplace in its earliest stages, the most important piece is not demand, it’s supply. From the trenches of building a marketplace, I will confirm this is counterintuitive but true. Ann wants to determine how effective a company is at convincing supply to come on board, how loyal the service providers are to the marketplace as a platform (rather than getting a customer and then trying to circumvent the marketplace), and how much longevity the company is seeing with the supply side (i.e., does it look like the service providers are going to keep using the marketplace).

She discusses the importance of focusing on supply, because having supply will lead to demand. It’s important to show the supply dynamic early on, because it’s the leading indicator to liquidity. In short, you must prove there are a lot of people who want to work in your marketplace.

Here’s a riddle: for an entrepreneur building a marketplace, what’s more satisfying than seeing a user request come into the marketplace, get claimed by a service provider, fulfilled, rated 5 stars, and billed. Answer: Nothing.

The WTF Experience

Since my Sunday was shaping up so nicely, I stayed on the Floodgate train and moved to the living room for some iced tea to watch Ann’s partner Mike Maples present to some Stanford students. Find that video here.

In particular, I liked Mike’s comments at ~32m about delighting your users/customers. He dubs moments of complete delighted astonishment the “WTF Experience.” At this point, he’s just finished discussing the analogy between tango dancing and the process of finding product/market fit, an “intimate back and forth.” So true. Using Lyft and Tesla as examples, Mike makes the excellent point that, “A lot of people think their product is good, and that rational customers ought to like it and buy it, but customers…need to say ‘WTF, I didn’t know that was even possible, are you kidding me?'” He calls this “actualizing your advantage in the product experience.” He adds,

“The best places to delight the customer are in the areas where you’re fundamental advantage just sings, and if you stick the landing on that, not only do you delight the customer, but it’s really hard for other people to do what you just did.”

Other gems from his presentation:

  • Read the chapter about “mastering emergent strategies” from The Innovators Guide to Growth
  • Be clear on price. It’s better to have clear high prices than unclear low prices
  • Read up on “category design” using playbigger.com as a reference
  • The purpose of a seed round is to marry Proprietary Power and Product Power
  • If you can use a seed round to create something people love that’s defensible, that was a good seed round

Find any other relevant articles, videos, interviews or otherwise? Let us know in the comments!

Feedback Mechanisms for Entrepreneurs

I’ve been finding a lot of great information on feedback mechanisms lately, so I compiled it here. Seems to work out as four rough categories.

User Feedback

Talking to users (or customers) is incredibly helpful and informative. We’re finding value on the product side, proactively asking users for their opinions of our UI, features, notification and overall experience. At this stage, pretty much every piece of user feedback helps us improve our product.

But, we’re also finding value on the messaging side. For example, we found a thread of comments on Facebook about HubRunner, where WordPress experts communicated about our marketplace. They specifically pointed out their dislike of some of our marketing messaging, and we completely agreed with them. So, we improved it.

Another example involves working to engage a specific type of HubRunner user: the marketing consultant or firm. In this case, we are reaching out to individual marketing consultants and larger firms to discuss our marketplace, to give them access and see how they engage. These conversations are helping us shape the product use case for this class of user and, tangentially, the value proposition we can transform into marketing messaging.

Partner Feedback

We’re testing our hypothesis that partnerships will be an important part of HubRunner’s growth. The trick? We don’t know how partners will want to use HubRunner – we don’t know where they’ll find value. Of course, we have assumptions about how they’ll use it, but to test those assumptions we’re engaging in conversations with potential partners. The trick? We don’t tell them how they should use HubRunner. Instead, we ask them what sort of problems they need to solve, and then we’re exploring whether or not HubRunner can solve one … or two 🙂

Advisor Feedback

It’s been really exciting to get positive feedback from our advisors – gratifying, and certainly emotionally helpful. But, we need some bad news, too. Michael Dearing has some great advice on this:

“Every big, good idea is going to be subjected to a devil’s advocate, who should be the smartest person you can find, whose job is to try to destroy the idea.”

(Note: I suggest checking out Michael Dearing’s presentation and discussion with Reid Hoffman from this past Fall – Also, you can find the notes from the session here)

(Another side note: in the video linked above, check out his comments on competition at 36m 31s)

Team Feedback

Regarding team feedback, the video linked above includes a discussion of the marketplace approach to sourcing ideas internally, which seems to work well when blended with a “benevolent dictator” in the early days. One suggestion that pops up now and again (including in the video) is to pretend your company has failed, to discuss the reasons why it failed, and then address those issues preemptively, i.e., now.

Founder Feedback

My co-founder and I have been working together for nearly a decade, meaning we’ve been together longer than I’ve been with my wife. While we’ve certainly had our disagreements, how have we managed to work together for so long? In the same video, at 47m 07s, he discusses the critical phases of iterating and building business, and also check out this video about the “cognitive distortions of founders.”

To use a specific phrase of Micheal’s, as founders, we seem to “shock absorb each other.” Where one of us is thinking more conservatively, one of us may be thinking less conservatively. The balance can be insanely frustrating at times (which is where a longstanding working relationship built on trust comes in the handiest), but the balance between founders translates into a balanced product and a balanced organization.

The bottom line?

Being open to feedback isn’t enough. We have to aggressively seek it out, ask for it, and in some cases, specify the type of feedback we want.

Did we miss any critical feedback mechanisms? Please drop a comment to give us your…feedback.

The Goldilocks Dilemma for Subscription Services

I recently came across a new subscription service founded by the self-described “inventors of the revolutionary sockscription.” Yes, they deliver fresh socks to your doorstep every month.

There are officially subscriptions for every type of product and service. Music, movies, razors, clothing, vegetables, social media management, website service, valet parking, prepared meals – everything.

But there is a major problem with some of these subscription services, one we might go ahead and call the Goldilocks dilemma.

WHY SO MANY SUBSCRIPTIONS?

Those of us who either work in, or subscribe to, these types of services (Software-as-a-service, Marketing-as-a-service, Socks-as-a-service, Razors-as-a-service, etc.) are well versed in the terminology of the subscription economy:

One the consumer side, we hear phrases like: Month-to-Month; No contract; Cancel at any time; One low monthly fee.

As providers of these services, we talk about: Productized service; Recurring revenue (Monthly, Annualized, etc.); Scalability; Churn; Customer lifetime value; Customer acquisition cost; Et cetera, etc.

In reality, most subscriptions are product-and-service combinations with business models that rely on one key input: recurring revenue that rolls in by charging subscribers’ credit cards or bank accounts each month.

Consumers are drawn to subscriptions because they offer cost control, elegant user experiences, and long lists of features (some high value, some not-so-high value). Service providers yearn to create subscriptions because they offer the predictability of recurring revenue. But in order to efficiently run and market a subscription service, all sorts of constraints must be placed on the product – and therein lies the Goldilocks dilemma.

THE GOLDILOCKS DILEMMA

Across diverse fields from cognitive science and astrobiology to economics and pricing, the Goldilocks principle refers to something that falls within some reasonable margins instead of being at either extreme (“This porridge is too hot…this porridge is too cold…ahhhh, this porridge is just right!”). In short, we are all like Goldilocks – insofar as we want things to be “just right.”

The Goldilocks dilemma for subscription services can be summed up as follows:

When you charge a group of customers the same price for a recurring service, you must factor into your pricing the fact that some customers will pay and never hassle you, while some needy customers will pay and hassle you to no end. The hassle-free customers are paying for your costs of dealing with the needy customers. And unless you have a god-like ability to know EXACTLY how many of your customers are going to be good verses bad, you’re pricing is going to be off – both for you, and for your customers.

Subscription services suffer from the Goldilocks Dilemma to varying degrees. This is mostly a function of where they fall on the product-to-service spectrum, and the cheap-to-expensive spectrum. This can be visualized using the admittedly rough and imprecise Goldilocks quadrant, and I’ve included a sample below:

The Goldilocks Quadrant for Subscription Services

As you move into the top right of the quadrant (more like a service + more expensive), you run a higher risk of encountering problems due to the Goldilocks dilemma. It’s also most common to find B2B subscription services in this area, because they’re usually more expensive.

SO, WHAT’S THE PROBLEM?

Firstly, subscription service pricing is inherently unfair. Why? Because in order to make a profit, a company must first cover all their expenses. If a company sells a sock subscription, it will lose money on the picky customers who frequently send socks back for replacement. “These socks are too thin,” they might say.” “And these socks are too thick”. And it will be the reasonable customers, the ones who pull up their damn socks and go to work, that pay for it.

Secondly, subscription services are forced to construct rigid product barriers to control their costs. Customers are sold one-size-fits-all packages, because otherwise you begin to lose the efficiency that underpins your entire business model. Put differently, it’s hard to scale if you don’t constrain your features and service. Again, this unfairly punishes the easygoing customers for the heightened service demands of customers who need more hands-on service. To continue with our metaphor, the bad customers eat all the warm porridge, and the good customers are castigated to the support forums.

Last, but not least, the Goldilocks dilemma leads to high instances of customer churn for the service provider. Because you’re selling a one-size-fits-all service that’s expensive and burdensome to service – customers will take their business elsewhere when their patience is tried too many times. Some companies never solve this problem, and they die. Many “productized” web services companies attempt to solve this problem by hiring tens or hundreds of salespeople to feed more and more meat into the grinder. The reality for these companies is that they don’t build those giant sales teams to grow, they build them to fight churn – their most important metric.

Companies offering subscription services that suffer from the Goldilocks dilemma truly do mean well. They are indeed solving a perceived problem: it’s expensive, time consuming and burdensome to hire a company or individual to provide the same type of service. It’s also hard to find the right one to hire (see our post on finding the right contractor). But in the end, for most customers, these types of subscription services almost always fall short – especially when it comes to higher margin services.

WHAT’S THE SOLUTION?

goldilocks dilemma for businesses

There are lots of ways to address the problems caused by the Goldilocks dilemma: expanded feature sets with different pricing tiers, paid consultations, premium support, etc. These strategies allow service providers to keep costs low for the customers who don’t put a burden on the support staff.

But, some services simply shouldn’t be subscriptions in the first place. If you’re looking for candidates of services that shouldn’t be subscriptions, use the Goldilocks quadrant to find them. Not surprisingly, website service is one of them. We believe on-demand alternatives will displace these subscription services – that’s why we’re launching our new instant website service app.

With the advent of businesses offering subscription alternatives in virtually every product and service market, subscriptions seemed like the way of the future. But, the rapidly emerging on-demand economy will push many subscriptions out of the way. Why pay a monthly subscription for a highly constrained service when you can get the same high quality service instantly, and only pay for exactly what you need?

Gazing at her smartphone screen instead of a bear’s porridge bowl, a modern-day Goldilocks might say, “This subscription service is too expensive…this subscription service is too limited…ahhhh, this on-demand service is just right!”

To learn about our own struggles with Goldilocks, read our Velocity Pricing post.

Book Recommendation from Twitter’s Jack Dorsey: The Art Spirit by Robert Henri

Build what you want to see in the world: make a bet that it will resonate with other people.

Only occasionally do I plow through one of the many business books piled on my shelf. They so often come highly recommended by a colleague or mentor. They are so temptingly presented on Amazon.

“Without motive, you will wobble about.” You need a common sense of purpose. Without motive, you will not do anything that is timeless.

I’m always a one-tap-order away from business strategy enlightment. A single send-to-kindle dropdown selection away from never-before-revealed secrets. Free two-day prime shipping away from the breakthrough idea that will propel our company through the profitability stratosphere.

“We are not here to do what has already been done.” Find your own path.

So, it’s refreshing to see someone like Jack Dorsey recommend a book that, on its surface, is completely unrelated to business: The Art Spirit, by Robert Henri. The first sentences of the first chapter read, “Art when really understood is the province of every human being. It is simply a question of doing things, anything, well. It is not an outside, extra thing. When the artist is alive in any person, whatever his kind of work may be, he becomes an inventive, searching, daring, self-expressing creature. He becomes interesting to other people. He disturbs, upsets, enlightens, and he opens ways for a better understanding. Where those who are not artists are trying to close the book, he opens it, shows there are still more pages possible.

Art is doing anything intensely. Art is doing anything well.

Henri wasn’t a business guru. He was an artist and teacher, and the book – published in 1923 – compiles an assortment of his ideas, philosophies and “practical musings.”

You “must pioneer beyond the mere matters of fact” – use fewer words, copy fewer things, but be longer in meaning.

On its own merits, the book is extremely interesting. But as Dorsey makes clear, it’s a very relevant and inspiring read if you keep business in the foreground as you move through the pages.

Create only what is important.

This book has helped me focus on the things that really matter. On a day-to-day basis, that means properly prioritizing my work so the right things are getting done. At the highest level, that means pursuing goals and working on projects that not only have a high likelihood of success, but that I believe will really make a difference.

Have you read The Art Spirit? Let us know what you thought in the comments below!

4 Important Lessons from Mark Zuckerberg

I recently took 30+ minutes to watch this Mark Zuckerberg interview from back in 2013. From running through walls to (…not) pushing up hills, I found some great insights worth sharing on the HubRunner blog.

Really Care About What You’re Doing

It’s interesting to hear Zuckerberg reflect on his early days of building Facebook, before he realized his company was going to succeed in connecting billions of people. He says, “someone else is going to have more resources [than you do].” In an environment where any number of existing companies with tons of money and human resources could have overpowered Facebook in their goal to connect people…they didn’t. Why not?

“We just cared way more about it than everyone else.”

It seems like classic entrepreneurial rhetoric to talk about succeeding simply because you cared about an issue more than anyone else, but when Zuckerberg qualifies his statement, it makes more sense:

“We just believe really strongly this is what we are here to do. This is what our company cares about. I care about it, the team cares about it, our culture cares about it – so, we’re just gonna keep pushing on it. And, I actually think a lot of the reason why great stuff gets built is because it’s kind of irrational at the time, so it kind of selects for the people who care most about doing it.

Keep Running Through The Walls

This point is incredibly important because it’s just so easy to get discouraged when you’re building a company and a product. Zuckerberg sums it up succinctly:

“You just have to keep running through the walls.”

In our own experience, as soon as we solve a problem or overcome a challenge, inevitably there’s another one waiting just around the corner. It’s important to get comfortable with that reality, because if each new challenge gets you down, you’ll be down all the time. So, accept that the process of building a company is going to be a constant stream of challenges, and teach yourself to thrive in that environment.

“So many things go wrong when you’re starting a company…Don’t even bother trying to avoid mistakes, because you’re going to make tons of mistakes. The important thing is actually learning quickly from whatever mistakes you make, and not giving up.”

Don’t Push Uphill

In our years as entrepreneurs, we’ve spent so much time, energy and resources pushing heavy things uphill: we’ve worked incredibly hard to sell products that not enough people really wanted, or that weren’t the right fit for the market. Instead, it’s important to think deeply about what people really need – what they really want – and to build your product accordingly.

“You can’t push uphill on this stuff.”

Instead,

“We built a lot of tools to enable people to do what they already wanted to [do]…We were solving a problem that people had, and we just needed to remove as much friction as possible.”

Build Something that Resonates

Zuckerberg talks about his focus on “channeling a community’s energy to build some kind of shared asset.” This focus helped him create early products like course graph and, later, Facebook. In the interview, he says that people building products should,

“Build something that resonates with everyone on the planet.”

Even if you’re not creating a product to be used by every person on the planet – for example, in the context of building B2B products – this insight is still useful because it helps keeps you honest. What’s the real potential of your product? What’s the potential market? Does what you’re doing matter enough, to you?

Asking and answering these tough questions can take you back to the first insight discussed above:

“You can win if you care more about an issue than anyone else.”

What We Care About

So, at HubRunner, what do we care deeply about? We care deeply about fixing the broken website industry, and you can see our earlier post, “The Problem with the Website Industry” to learn more.

What do you care about? Feel free to share a thought and a link below.