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Are You Ready to Be the Boss?

More than six million new businesses launched in the U.S. in 2015, according to the Kauffman Index. Given that volume, it’s certain that some of these new businesses were rolled out by people who had never led a company before. Budding entrepreneurs devote considerable time to developing products and business plans, but they may not adequately prepare to become a boss.

That can be a serious problem since leadership competency is a critically important success factor, and not everyone is a natural at it. My co-founders and I discovered the challenges involved in running a company when we rolled out our startup a year ago. Here are a few tips we learned about being the boss:

1. Divide responsibilities. You and your cofounders are ultimately responsible for all decisions when you start your own company. There’s no one else who can resolve an impasse. That’s why it makes sense to divide operational areas up and assign ultimate authority of each to one person. We call them Direct Responsible Individuals (DRIs) at my company, and it’s a great way to make the responsibilities manageable. DRIs are in charge of listening to input from everyone and then making final decisions.

2. Become a jack-of-all-trades. At a large, well-established company, there are specialists to handle every task: HR people for personnel issues, travel experts to coordinate trips, etc. At a freshly minted startup, you won’t have that luxury, so you’ll have to learn to manage many different functions — and quickly. Along the way, you’ll pick up a wealth of knowledge and experience that can come in handy when you begin to expand your team; you’ll have firsthand knowledge of what each role requires.

3. Listen to customers. When you’re busy running a company and rolling out a new app, product or service, it can be easy to focus so intently on executing your business plan that you forget to hear what your customers are saying. As the boss, it’s your job to observe how customers use your product and, if necessary, adjust your strategy if you find that their usage doesn’t exactly match your expectations. Stay flexible and be prepared to tweak your approach to meet customer needs.

People who are launching a new startup have a lot to think about, including product development, fundraising and marketplace factors. These are undeniably important issues that are worthy of much consideration. But it’s also critical to prepare for your new role as the boss.

To make sure you give your startup the best chance for success, designate areas of operational responsibility, be prepared to handle a multitude of job functions and don’t forget to listen to your customers. When you keep these key success factors in mind, you’ll be ready to be the boss.


About the Author

Arvind ParthibanArvind Parthiban is the CEO & co-founder of Zarget, where in addition to conceptualising the company vision and piloting the course of action to meet their objectives, he currently heads product marketing, presales and sales operations. A former employee of Zoho where he headed the product marketing for ITSM suite of flagship products, Arvind gained valuable insights into the SaaS industry and all things ‘Marketing’. Arvind draws from his vast wealth of experience to power the business units forward.

Empowering Women Leaders

Women leaders need to work harder, longer and smarter to achieve the same or similar objectives as their male peers – seriously? We hear this same refrain over and over to the point that many women actually believe it.

There is no data to support this premise. Girls and boys are born with similar intelligence. Society has delivered these differences.


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About the Author

Robbie HardyRobbie Hardy spent 20+ successful years in the corporate sector before finding her true calling in the entrepreneurial world. She is author of the new book Upsetting the Table: Women Mentoring Women.

For more information visit www.RobbieHardy.com.

Find Out if Your Message Attracts or Detracts

You are broadcasting messages every day, both verbal and non-verbal, and they tell others what you and your company think of yourself and the world. If you are not aware of the messages you are sending, others are and one’s perception has impact on your strategy’s bottom line.

Your company culture is vital to attracting, retaining, developing and advancing talent. So how do you discover what it is you are “saying?” A little self-examination should start with knowing what your beliefs, attitudes and biases are about yourself and others.

This quiz will help you explore behaviors based on what you believe (consciously or unconsciously), how you show up and recognize some views and behaviors that hamper success. Select the most correct answer for you.


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About the Author

Rosalie ChamberlainRosalie Chamberlain is the author of Conscious Leadership in the Workplace: A Guidebook to Making a Difference One Person at a Time and the owner of Denver, CO-based Rosalie Chamberlain Consulting & Coaching. A thirty-five year organizational culture and eighteen year coaching veteran, she specializes in maximizing talent and productivity within organizations.

Demystifying the Workplace “Unicorn”: The 5-Hour Workday

The five-hour workday isn’t just this mystical “unicorn” you’ve heard about around the water cooler. It’s real, and it can work for your team.

Why is 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. the magic time? It’s been used for so long that it’s become immortalized in song. While the traditional 40-hour workweek remains the norm, you’ve changed the way you work.

What used to take all day — making phone calls, waiting for the mail, driving for hours to buy supplies — can now be done with much greater efficiency.

Being an entrepreneur requires you to be efficient and productive. But filling the traditional eight-hour day by churning out more work just means you’ll burn out or run your health into the ground. It’s almost impossible to produce high-quality work for eight hours straight.

I think you can do a better job in five hours.


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About the Author

Stephan AarstolStephan Aarstol is the author of The Five-Hour Workday: Live Differently, Unlock Productivity, and Find Happiness. He is CEO and founder of Tower, a holistic beach-lifestyle company, which includes Tower Paddle Boards, Tower Magazine, SunglassesByTower.com, and a direct-to-consumer surf- and beach-lifestyle company at TowerMade.com .For more information, please visit www.fivehourworkday.com and www.towerpaddleboards.com and connect with Stephan on Twitter, @stephan.aarstol.

Communication and Leadership Tactics to Take Your Career to New Heights

As a career Wall Streeter and mountaineer, I learned over the years that mountains are not climbed alone; neither are careers. Each depends on the generosity you’re willing to extend to your colleagues, known as the Law of Reciprocity. It’s a universal understanding to explain that in order to create success, extend help to others along the way. They in turn will assist and inspire you to reach your career summits.


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About the Author

Chuck GarciaChuck Garcia is the author of A Climb to the Top: Communication & Leadership Tactics to Take Your Career to New Heights. He is the founder of Climb Leadership Consulting and a Professor of Organizational Leadership at Mercy College.