24/02/2021
Starting a business or even getting involved as a professional when you're young can be intimidating. You might have knowledge about business from school, books or practical advice from sources online, but there's a big difference between understanding business fundamentals on paper and gaining wisdom through actual experience.
I thought of founding ALWAYS LANGUAGE CENTRE (ALC) in my career's years as an English teacher in Nouakchott, Mauritania. ALC has helped me to accumulate a wealth of knowledge and hundred of lessons, but there are some lessons that I should learn early on. Today these online programmes I have launched through ALC are known by more of 1,000 funs who want to learn foreign languages.
In this testimony I evaluate the 7 invaluable life lessons learned enduring HARDSHIP and STRESS.
1. THE RIGHT PEOPLE ARE WORTH EVERYTHING
Its almost impossible to build a successful business by yourself. Even if you're a solo entrepreneur, there will be mentors, partners, vendors and peers alongside you helping you achieve your long-term vision. So, recognize how valuable other people will open you up more opportunities, help you keep an eyes out for new contacts no matter where you are and make you more discerning in decisions like hiring and long-term deals.
Learning this lessons early will prevent you from wasting time on the wrong people and give you more time to work with the best people you find.
2. YOU'RE GOING TO FAIL AND THAT'S OKAY
No matter how much you know or how much you prepare, failure is going to be inevitable for you. Your business may become successful overall, but there will be individual strategies and campaigns that crash and burn, and ideas that fizzle out entirely. Facing failure with the realization that it is, in some contexts, unavoidable, makes it, easier to accept.
You can view it as a lesson and an opportunity to improve, rather than an end point or a sign that you should give up entirely.
3. TIME IS YOUR MOST RESOURCE.
The adage that * Time is money* is an apt metaphor to describe the power that time can hold when budgeted and used as a resource. This works in a few different dimensions. For example, the sonner you start something, the more you will have the generate benefits for yourself, and the more time you will have to work with that project.
Additionally, you only have so many hours in the day, and how you spend them has a direct impact on how much value you're able to produce. The sooner you learn this lesson the more time you will save.
4. COMMUNICATING CAN PREVENT OR FIX ALMOST ANY PROBLEMS
The power of communication can't be underestimated. Communicating proactively can prevent the development of almost any problems by explaining things clearly, setting from expectations and mitigating misunderstandings. Communicating well can also help you resolve any problem, whether it's making an apology, coming up with a mutually agreeable solution or explaining circumstances.
5.PERFECTION IS THE ENNEMY OF PROGRESS.
Because of the fast- paced business environment we live in, waiting to move forward with a new initiative because it's not quite perfect can mean the failure of that initiative. Agile, flexible, adaptive businesses that demonstrate an understanding that things can be tested and optimized while they're already producing a return on investment are the one that succeed.
You're never going to get it perfect on the first try. But be sure to balance your initiative 's " readiness" with agility and speed.
6. ALL IDEAS MUST BE ROOTED IN PRACTICALITY.
No matter how good or original or appealing your idea is, it's only a valuable as it is practical.
For example, if you have a vision for an amazing video, but you don't have the resources to produce it in an efficient way, you have to drop the idea.
The same can be said of any business idea; you may have a revolutionary new concept for an entreprise, but if there's no way to make it feasible or practical, you won't be able to move to any form of ex*****on. Sometimes, the best ideas have to be tabled due to a lack of practicality.
7. THERE IS ALWAYS MORE YOU CAN BE DOING TO KEEP LEARNING.
No matter how much you know, or jhow much you think you know, there's always more information to learn. You'll always have room to be a better leader and a better entrepreneur, and there will always be new skills and abilities to acquire. Maintaining a course of constant improvement will keep you at your best for as long as possible.
The earlier you learn thses business lessons, the more time you'll have to use them in a practical environment, and the fewer repercussions you'll face in neglecting them (whether intentionally or unintentionally). You'll never be perfect, so don't worry if you make mistakes or forget things you would have benefitted from.
As ALC Founder and Teacher I could say that there's also a difference between reading about lessons in an online article and actually experiencing them firsthand. So be prepared to do your best Learning as you go through these challenges.