There is a lot of discussion these days about what defines a true entrepreneur and whether financial success is a pre-requisite of being an entrepreneur. Well, rather than argue moot points, let’s look at this from a practical, self evaluation perspective and see what is revealed. Below I compare and contrast being a freelancer with being an entrepreneur – I can’t wait to read your comments:
1. A freelancer is about the work. An entrepreneur is about the business…
2. A freelancer is a doer. A freelancer knows the tactics. An entrepreneur is a negotiator, a visionary and a thinker. An entrepreneur builds strategy and is constantly testing it.
3. A freelancer thinks the work is the business. An enterpreneur knows the business supports the work.
4. A freelancer is disinterested in “business controls and necessities” — including thinking, budgets, invoices, business plans — that gets in the way of the “real” work. An entrepreneur understands that without those “business controls and necessities,” it’s not a business. It’s a job.
5. A freelancer might want to grow a Client base. An entrepreneur knows a business either grows or decays, and is constantly looking for ways to keep the growth managed and within reasonable risk parameters.
6. A freelancer lives in the now with an eye to long term Client relationships that might afford some security. An entreprenuer is looking to a vision of the business, now is a reflection of what the business will be.
7. A freelancer often doesn’t invest in his or her own equipment, training, or help. Many freelancers don’t delegate low-level skills or tasks that they don’t do well, because they think in terms of cost rather than investment and best use of time and resources. An entrepreneur knows that time is money, invests in future development and the business vision. An entrepreneur will pay for skills that he or she doesn’t have knowing that it is money well spent on quality and commitment.
8. A freelancer works from day to day. An entrepreneur has a business plan.
Archive for the “Online Marketing” Category
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06
2007
Landing Pages – Our Secret Weapon?Posted by Dr. B in Educational, Online Marketing, SuggestionsLanding Pages are the weapon of choice for many marketers. A Landing Page is more than just a duplicate of your sales page renamed Here is a short laundry list of what I do when I create a Landing Page: Font Face, Color & Size: The best fonts? Verdana and Arial. Standardize on Verdana as it The text should be readable. The standard size is “2″. Text should Make the Links Easy to Find: Standard colors are: * Unvisited Link – Underline in Blue I recommend not messing around with the visited link, just have the Color Scheme: Not sure the colors to use? Look at the competition, as it is a great White Space: White space is more than just a background “color” – it is a part of Page Width and Page Height: If your landing pages scrolls vertically on a 1024×768 resolution you Page Theme: Call To Action: That’s it – we know you’ll be able to put these simple, but tested and
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04
2007
Are You Running a RevGen Machine?Posted by Corp. Communications in Educational, Online Marketing, SalesHere are 10 things I think about when a Client comes to us for help with their website. 1) Is there actually a market for your product? 2) Are you getting enough traffic? 3) Are you getting targeted traffic? 4) Is your headline effective? 5) Are you distracting your visitors from your main sales message? 6) Are you using testimonials effectively? 7) Does your guarantee take away the risk of buying? 8) Is your price too high? or too low? 9) Is your ordering system easy to use? 10) Do you have good salescopy?
06
01
2007
Marketing vs SalesPosted by Corp. Communications in Educational, Online Marketing, Sales, SuggestionsOk, I admit it. I’ve wanted to tackle this one for years and now I’m going to do it. Ready? What exactly is Marketing? (most entrepreneurs get it wrong) What is Sales? A bit of comparision: Sales effectiveness can be easily measured. Marketing effectiveness is a bit softer and thus, I would suggest to use marketing systems, strategies and tactics whose performance can be measured with metrics relevant to your business. Spend money on a good sales person and measure his/her performance but never throw money at marketing campaigns that don’t allow you to track conversion rates easily. |



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