Category Archives: Business Tips

Why we upgrade

If you ever sit down with one of us at a meeting, you’ll likely notice we are using the latest Apple devices. Beside the fact that we think Apple can do no wrong (sort of), we believe that using the newest, most reliable equipment is good for both us and you. And when we say equipment, we mean more than the newest iPad, but lets talk about the iPad. 20130512-215614.jpg

If you’re looking for a tablet, we recommend the iPad. It’s the pioneer of the tablet industry, setting the standards. It works well with all other Apple devices (great for us), and even plays nice with Google, for you gmail users. We enjoy the simplicity of the design and the reliability of the software. One of the greatest things we like is that if it does need to be fixed, we can hop down to our neighborhood Apple store for repair or replacement. Kind of nice.
We also use the newest MacBook Pros for our work. These computers are powerhouses. Ours are saddled with 16GB or ram, the latest Intel processors (i7 for those interested), and 750Gb hard drives (that’s a lot of storage). These computers allow us to never be dragged down by slow reaction time. We thrive on our speed of response, and if we have to wait for our computers, we’re wasting our time and yours. Not acceptable.
We also keep our cameras up to date. We use a variety of cameras like Canon T4i’s and GoPro Hero 3′s. these cameras are not extremely expensive, but they’re very versatile. We love them and think they put out great products.
All this great hardware only works well with updated software. So, go update that software.
If you have any questions about technology, especially Apple products, hit us up. We’re happy to help!

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Managing Customer Service via Social Media

When Brie Weiler Reynolds noticed that her customers were discussing their service concerns on social media networks, she realized her company had better start responding to them there as well.

“We started getting comments and questions from people on LinkedIn and Facebook,” says Reynolds, director of content and social media for FlexJobs, a Boulder, Colo.-based online job-search firm. “They were using social media for things you’d traditionally contact customer service for, so we figured if that’s how they want it, that’s how we’ll give it to them.” Today FlexJobs uses Facebook, Twitter, LinkedIn, Pinterest and YouTube to publicly inform, serve and connect with customers on a daily basis.

 

The transparency of communication on social platforms lets companies showcase their devotion to helping customers, fostering brand loyalty and authenticity among a widespread audience. Still, research suggests there’s room for improvement. In a recent study by PR and marketingfirm Cone Communications, 46 percent of respondents said they’d like to be able to solve problems and receive product or service information via new media, but only 14 percent said they’re “very satisfied” with their experiences with companies or brands online.

“Social customer service presents a great opportunity for active listening and reacting to your customers,” says Andy Smith, co-author of The Dragonfly Effect: Quick, Effective, and Powerful Ways to Use Social Media to Drive Social Change. ”When you listen to and create discussions about the problems they’re having, you can progress toward becoming the person or having the product that addresses that problem.”

Patton Gleason, president of Richmond, Va.-based NaturalRunningStore.com, says social media helps him build relationships with existing customers; they in turn promote his online store to new audiences when they share the information they’ve received on their own networks.

Gleason doesn’t just respond to customer questions with a quick tweet. Several times each week, he creates and posts personalized videos to help customers solve specific problems. For example, he assisted in diagnosing and addressing the source of a runner’s calf pain by requesting and examining an uploaded photo of the bottoms of the runner’s shoes, then responding with video suggestions.

“If they have questions about shinsplints or the difference between two shoes, I can actually show people what’s happening or [give] a comparison of those shoes,” he says. “Not only can they see the products, they can also see the person behind them, which is a powerful way to connect.”

Shared content–positive and negative–fosters brand authenticity, according to Reynolds. She embraces negative posts as an opportunity for FlexJobs’ 17,000-plus social media followers to see that the company cares about resolving problems. “It helps people [who are] on the fence about signing up see that we respond quickly to people and don’t shy away from problems,” she says. “They see firsthand that if they were to join and have a problem, we’d treat them the same way.”

Reynolds adds that social customer service has the unique ability to turn negatives into positives in a very public way. “If someone posts a negative comment on [our Facebook] Timeline–they don’t like the site or understand why they should pay for membership–oftentimes our fans swoop in and support us by explaining why they use the site and why those posters should give it another shot,” she says. “What could be better than our customers solving our customer-service dilemmas with us?”

 

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Saving Money as a Startup

Saving MoneySara Sutton Fell, founder and CEO of FlexJobs in Boulder, Colo., knows that coupons and deal sites aren’t just for consumers. Over the course of a year, Fell saved about $2,500 by using sites like RetailMeNot.com and CouponCabin.com to cut costs on everything from customer gifts to office equipment.

“It’s something many people do as consumers, but something I think a lot of businesses overlook,” she says. By simply typing in the name of a computer seller and the words “coupon code,” she was able to save $800 on computer monitors for her company.

Frugal business expert Shel Horowitz, author of Grassroots Marketing: Getting Noticed in a Noisy World, advises startups to be relentless in their search for savings. Here are five simple ways to do exactly that.

1. Buy used. Very few businesses need expensive new furniture, filing cabinets or other fixtures, Horowitz says. Often used-furniture stores, auctioneers selling business assets or even Craigslist posts offer big savings on used office furniture and equipment.

2. Skimp on overhead. ”I see a lot of people going into a fancy office or retail location when they could get by with something much simpler, and that puts enormous pressure to generate revenue faster than they are likely to,” Horowitz says. While launching from the garage or kitchen table won’t work for every business, he advises holding off on committing to expensive real estate leases until necessary, especially if your customers don’t frequent your place of business very often.

3. Get help as you need it. Horowitz suggests visiting online special-interest forums in marketing, sales and other areas to read discussions and get ideas. He also suggests hiring talent only as you need it: “If you find someone who knows what they’re doing, it might be a good idea to hire them on a consulting basis for a few hours. That way, you get the advice you need without committing to a full-time salary.”

4. Barter. Bob Syracuse, co-owner of Pizza Plant Italian Pub in Williamsville, N.Y., remodeled his restaurant and purchased advertising through a barter group. He estimates he trades about $20,000 worth of food and services per year, saving an average of $4,000 per year in the difference in value between what he receives and the actual cost of what he barters. “We still have to pay sales tax, which we would pay anyway. We also get a 1099 for anything we’ve purchased, but from that, we can deduct the expenses of what we have provided,” he says.

5. Be frugal. Shopping around for the best price is smart business, Horowitz says, since every dollar saved is a dollar that can be reinvested in your company. That fuels growth and leads to more opportunities and cash-flow flexibility.

This article was originally published in the March 2012 print edition of Entrepreneur’s StartUps with the headline: Squeezing the Shoestring.

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How to get Customers for Your Start Up

Editor’s Note: This is the first of three excerpts from The Startup Owner’s Manual, a recently published step-by-step guide for building companies.

There are a million-plus apps for sale on mobile app stores and an infinite number of commerce, social and content websites, so the mere fact that you’ve launched a new one doesn’t make it a successful business.

Building your product is the easy part. The hard part is getting customers to find your app, site or product. It’s a daunting, never-ending challenge to build customer relationships, quite literally, one customer at a time.

Let’s get started with the first two steps for “getting” customers: acquisition and activation.

In the acquisition phase, customers learn about a product before they buy. With web/mobile apps, the effort focuses on bringing as many customers as possible to the company’s “front door”– the landing page. There, they’re introduced to the product and hopefully buy it or use it.

The second phase — activation — is when the customer shows interest through a free download or trial, a request for more information, or a purchase. Customer should be considered “activated” even if they don’t purchase or register, as long as the company has enough information to re-contact them (whether by e-mail, phone, text, etc.) with explicit permission to do so.

Unlike the door-to-door salesmen of yesteryear, your job on the web is to “pull” customers to you rather than to push your product at them.

Your first step in customer acquisition and activation is understanding how people buy or engage with your product. Here’s how it happens:

Step one: People discover a need or want to solve a problem. They say, “I want to throw a party,” or feel lonely and decide to find a hot party or a dating site. Then what?

Step two: They begin a search. Overwhelmingly, in this century, that search begins online. It often happens at Google.com, but it can happen on Facebook, Quora or hundreds of other special-interest websites from Yelp to Zagat to TripAdvisor.com.

Step three: They don’t look very hard. In fact people often only pay attention to the first few things they uncover (how often do you search beyond the first page of results on Google?). You must make your site, app or product as visible as humanly possible, in as many of these places as possible where your customers are likely to begin the search.

Step four: They go where they’re invited, entertained or informed. You don’t “earn” interest from your customers with hard-boiled sales pitches or bland information. You earn it by providing inviting, helpful or entertaining information in lots of formats (copy, diagrams, white papers, blogs, videos, games, demos, you name it) and by participating in the communities and social media your customers are likely to be.

When it comes to acquisition, you can use free or paid tactics. Free is obviously the best cost, and includes public relations, viral marketing, search engine optimization and social networking. After you get the free acquisition programs going, you should start to test paid tactics, such as pay-per-click advertising, online or traditional media advertising, affiliate marketing and online lead generation.

You’ll want to run some quick and simple acquisition tests to gauge customer reaction. Try controllable, inexpensive, easily measured tactics:

• Buy $500 worth of AdWords and see if they’ll drive customers representing five or 10 times that amount in potential revenue to the site or app and at least get them to register. Monitor performance and drop ineffective ones.

• Use Facebook messages or Tweet to measurable audiences to invite at least 1,000 people to explore the new product. If none of the messages work, the product or offer may well be the problem.

• Buy an e-mail blast list of targeted customers for $500 or $1,000. Send at least two versions of the offer and expect to generate at least three times the potential revenue to at least sign up, if not purchase.

• Find traffic partners, which are typically contractual relationships with other companies that provide predictable streams of customers or users to your company while you provide either customers or fees to the partner.

For web/mobile businesses, activation is the choke point — the make-or-break place where customers decide whether they want to participate, play, or purchase.

Quick activation tests include:

• Capture the customer’s e-mail address and get permission to follow up with further information. Follow up with 1,000 customers and expect at least 50 or more to agree to activate.

• Offer a free trial, download, or white paper or a significant discount to 500 or 1,000 customers. Try this with at least three different offers, hoping to find at least one that generates a 5 percent or greater response rate.

• Call 100 prospects who don’t activate immediately. See if the phone calls generate enough of a response-rate improvement to warrant the cost. Three times the response rate is probably needed.

• Try free-to-paid conversion: Offer a seven- or 14-day free trial of an app, service, or web/mobile product. Or offer the use of some but not all of the site or app’s features.

Monitor the results of all tests and, when you’re not satisfied, revise the program and test again.

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You Can’t Afford to Neglect Customer Service on Facebook

Your business’s Facebook Page is every bit as important as a face-to-face encounter with a customer. But some well-known retailers fail to provide adequate customer service online.

STELLAService, a New York City-based firm that rates online retail businesses for their customer service, went undercover and posted service-related questions on 20 retailers’ Facebook walls or in the comments section below the page owner’s own status updates.

Some retailers removed the customer question from their wall without ever commenting, and another five questions remained unanswered for at least two days. Only seven businesses took the time to answer questions posted within 48 hours.

Eliminating or ignoring customers’ service-related questions posted on your Facebook Page is unprofessional at best and significantly damaging to your brand at worst. Such practices ensure only that the issue will remain unresolved and the customer will grow only angry. What brick-and-mortar company would allow an employee to walk away from a customer who has just asked them a question? None that I’m aware of, but that’s exactly what some retailers are doing online.

Related: Only You Can Prevent Cringe-Worthy Customer Service

Businesses and brands that choose to correspond actively with their customers on Facebook will rise to the top when it comes to gaining customer loyalty. Those who ignore service and support-related issues posted on the world’s most popular social utility should seriously reevaluate their social media strategies.

Here are some tips on how to effectively manage your business’s Facebook page:

Respond quickly. Reply to queries and complaints in a timely manner to make sure other customers don’t see you left someone hanging.

Be proactive. Respond to customer questions as status updates – they are more visible than comments to wall posts. Doing so can potentially prevent an onsluaght of questions or complaints over the same issue.

Share your wins. Customers post positive comments, not just negative ones. Share that information internally among the customer service and tech support team members. Everyone could stand to hear good news, especially if all they usually hear are complaints.

How do you make sure customer questions and complaints on Facebook are addressed adequately? Let us know in the comments below. 

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7 Ways to All But Guarantee Success

The darkest days of the Great Recession are over, so we are told, but I’m finding that sales have increased only slightly for some small-business owners, while revenue remains deeply depressed for many. While some customers are loosening up their wallets a little, it is clear purchasing habits have changed.

Deep economic changes have occurred, and business will never be the same.

Entrepreneurs — whether they’re an unemployed person striking out on their own or a seasoned veteran trying to get the mojo back again — must do things differently in order to survive. Everyone must change, especially small-business owners.

Luckily, what have not changed are the business fundamentals, those management traits that successful entrepreneurs almost all possess: tenacity, commitment and vision, and basic business skills.

New strategies are required, however, strategies designed to work in a changing business climate.

I’ve had a chance to develop and implement these strategies first-hand during the recession and its aftermath — and have employed them myself. Not only have I consulted with many businesses over the years, but I’ve had a hand in running over 57 businesses of my own. I have a good idea of what works and doesn’t work today, learned in the front lines of hand-to-hand small-business combat.

Here are seven tips that will help to ensure your business is a success:

1. Have a written plan. Without a plan, it is merely a dream. It doesn’t have to be a book, but you need a few pages outlining specific objectives, strategies, financing, a sales and marketing plan, and a determination of the cash you need to get things done. Writing it all down is a crucial first step.

2. Don’t marry your plan. Every great military general in history has known that even the best-laid plan sometimes has to be thrown in the fire when the bullets start flying. Adjust, confront and conquer.

3. Keep your ego in check and listen to others. Advisors are crucial because you need people to bounce ideas off, inspect what you’re doing, and push you to greater accomplishments, holding you accountable for what you are committing to do. Always be good to your word and follow through on commitments, even when difficult and challenging. This isn’t about you; it’s about the business. Don’t take things personally and stay out of emotion. Do not let your ego take control.

Related: Four Tips for Working Out Your Business Debts

4. Keep track of everything, and manage by the numbers. Create written systems for everything, because you will reap benefits from them later on. This is how you train your employees and retain consistency. Know your numbers and check them daily and make all decisions based on what they tell you. One of the most important calculations is cash flow pro forma. Determine how much cash you need to do the business, and do not start without the required cash on hand.

5. Delegate to employees and avoid micromanaging them. A manager’s job is to delegate and then inspect progress. So don’t be a control freak. Keep business organization flat. If you delegate effectively, you will get more and better then you expect. Have an actual written training and orientation plan so your employees know what is required of them. Use an incentive-based rewards system, and maintain a no-problem attitude about issues that crop up.

6. Use the Internet. It is incredibly powerful and very cost efficient, but it takes time and some skill. It is about creating a community, using social media networking such as Facebook, YouTube, Twitter and blogging to build rapport with your market. You need to get on the train and do it, because your competitors are.

7. Reinvent your business. It is net profit, not gross revenue, that you want to focus on. Separate yourself from your history and create a new competitive advantage, be it a focused niche or super service, but not by discounting.

Above all, have fun. Being an entrepreneur is your choice, so make it work. It can be done. You can survive, emerge and succeed in this downsized economy, if you follow the right path.

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Researching Your Business Idea

Market ResearchSomewhere between scribbling your idea on a cocktail napkin and actually starting a business, there’s a process you need to carry out that essentially determines either your success or failure in business. Oftentimes, would-be entrepreneurs get so excited about their “epiphanies”-the moments when they imagine the possibilities of a given idea-that they forget to find out whether that idea is viable.

Of course, sometimes the idea works anyway, in spite of a lack of market research. Unfortunately, other times, the idea crashes and burns, halting a business in its tracks. We’d like to help you avoid the latter. This how to on researching your business idea is just what you need to keep your business goals on track.

The Idea Stage

For some entrepreneurs, getting the idea-and imagining the possibilities-is the easy part. It’s the market research that doesn’t come so naturally. “It’s a big red flag when someone outlines the size of the market-multibillion dollars-but doesn’t clearly articulate a plan for how the idea will meet an unmet need in the marketplace,” says Aaron Keller, an adjunct professor of marketing at the University of St. Thomas in neighboring St. Paul and a managing principal of Capsule , a Minneapolis-based brand development firm.

That kind of full-throttle approach can cost you. “Entrepreneurs are often so passionate about their ideas, they can lose objectivity,” adds Nancy A. Shenker, president of the ONswitch LLC , a full-service marketing firm in Westchester, New York. “Rather than taking the time to thoroughly plan and research, they sometimes plow ahead with execution, only to spend valuable dollars on unfocused or untargeted activities.”

Market research, then, can prove invaluable in determining your idea’s potential. You can gather information from industry associations, Web searches, periodicals, federal and state agencies, and so forth. A trip to the library or a few hours online can set you on your way to really understanding your market. Your aim is to gain a general sense of the type of customer your product or service will serve-or at least to being willing to find out through the research process. “For example,” says Shenker, “if you don’t know if your product will appeal to the youth market, make sure you include a sample of that population in your research efforts.”

Your research plan should spell out the objectives of the research and give you the information you need to either go ahead with your idea, fine-tune it or take it back to the drawing board. Create a list of questions you need to answer in your research, and create a plan for answering them. “Utilize experts in planning and conducting research sessions,” Shenker advises. “They can recommend what type of research is most appropriate, help you develop statistically valid samples and write questionnaires, and provide you with an objective and neutral source of information.”

The type of information you’ll be gathering depends on the type of product or service you want to sell as well as your overall research goals. You can use your research to determine a potential market, to size up the competition, or to test the usefulness and positioning of your product or service. “If, for example, the product is a tangible item, letting the target audience see and touch a prototype could be extremely valuable,” notes Shenker. “For intangible products, exposing prospective customers to descriptive copy or a draft Web site could aid in developing clear communications.”

Analysis

When working with firms on brand development, Keller first looks at a business idea from four perspectives: company, customer, competitor and collaborator. This approach allows Keller to scrutinize a business idea before even approaching the topic of brand development. Here’s what he looks at for each of the four issues:

1. Company. Think of your idea in terms of its product/service features, the benefits to customers, the personality of your company, what key messages you’ll be relaying and the core promises you’ll be making to customers.

2. Customer. There are three different customers you’ll need to think about in relation to your idea: purchasers (those who make the decision or write the check), influencers (the individual, organization or group of people who influence the purchasing decision), and the end users (the person or group of people who will directly interact with your product or service).

3. Competitor. Again, there are three different groups you’ll need to keep in mind: primary, secondary and tertiary. Their placement within each level is based on how often your business would compete with them and how you would tailor your messages when competing with each of these groups.

4. Collaborators. Think of organizations and people who may have an interest in your success but aren’t directly paid or rewarded for any success your business might realize, such as associations, the media and other organizations that sell toyour customers.

Another approach is to research is SWOT analysis, meaning analysis of the strengths of your industry, your product or service; the weaknesses of your product (such as design flaws) or service (such as high prices); and potential threats (such as the economy). “[SWOT] enables you to understand the strengths and flaws, [everything] from internal information such as bureaucracy, product development and cost to external factors such as foreign exchange rates, politics, culture, etc.,” says Drew Stevens, a St. Louis professional speaker and consultant who works with entrepreneurs in researching and marketing their ideas. “SWOT enables an entrepreneur to quickly understand whether their product or service will make it in the current environment.”

Whatever your approach to evaluating your idea, just be sure you’re meeting the research objectives you’ve outlined for your product or service. With those goals always top-of-mind, your analysis will help you discover whether your idea has any holes that need patching.

Checking Out the Competition

Assuming your research process has helped you uncover your competition, you now need to find out what they’re up to. Shenker advises becoming a customer of the competition, whether by shopping them yourself or by enlisting the help of a friend. “Visit their Web site and put yourself on their list,” she says. “Talk to your competitor’s customers, too-ask them what they like or don’t like about your competitor’s product or service. If you conduct formal research, include a question like ‘Where do you currently go for that product or service? Why?’”

Your aim is to understand what your competition is doing so you can do it better. Maybe their service is poor. Maybe their product has some flaws-something you’ll only know if you try it out yourself. Or maybe you’ve figured out a way to do things better, smarter, more cost-effectively. Find your selling point. It’s going to be the core of your marketing program, if and when you’re ready for that step. It’s also going to be what sets you apart and lures customers your way.

• Entrepreneur Assistoffers a collection of free business planning and productivity tools, letting you access free business books, bookmark your favorite articles, schedule events and reminders and share documents to assist you in your idea evaluation and market research process.

• How to Create a Marketing Plan , will help you strategize your marketing efforts.

• The U.S. Census Bureauhas the stats and demographics you need to know.

• FirstGov.gov is a well-designed, easy-to-navigate portal to the government online. Click on the tab that says “Businesses and Nonprofits.”

• Your local Chamber of Commerce can be an indispensable resource for local information for your new business.

• The Encyclopedia of Associations by Gale Group can be found in libraries, and is an essential tool for locating your industry’s associations. Also search on Google, and be sure to check whether the association has a trade publication.

• At TSNN.com , you can access a searchable database of trade shows worldwide.

• Entrepreneur’s Top Colleges listing can help you find a local school that offers entrepreneurship studies.

• Two of the greatest resources known to entrepreneurs are theSmall Business Development Centers (SBDCs) and SCORE (Service Corp of Retired Executives) . Each SBA service offers free and low-cost help to small-business owners and entrepreneurial wanna-bes, and should have a local office near you.

After all this-the idea stage, analysis of the idea, competitive analysis-you might find that your idea (and not your competitor’s, as you’d hoped) is the one with the holes. Does that mean you need to scrap the whole thing and resign yourself to life as an employee? “Not always,” says Keller. “Sometimes it just needs to be reworked or retooled.”

That can be disheartening if you’ve already spent X amount of hours in the idea stage, plus X amount of hours on market research-only to find that you’re not quite ready to get started after all. But taking the time to refocus your energies and determine why your idea needs some tightening is the best predictor of future success. “No entrepreneur wants to hear that his ‘baby’ is flawed, but only by listening and reacting to feedback can he give his idea a chance for success,” notes Shenker. “Ask yourself, ‘Is this a weakness that can be overcome?’ If you can’t create true value for your customer and your business, then it’s time to pick another idea to pursue.”

Remember, though, that many ideas simply need some fine-tuning. Before you panic and start flipping through your idea books again, closely consider whether you can make this idea work. After all, there was a reason you thought of that idea in the first place. Some ideas that seem like they’ll be total duds after doing a little research end up being great successes. “Ideas that seem like a flop are always interesting to me,” says Keller. “Sometimes you look into an idea and find it was just luck-but many times, you find the original founder had some clear insight into the potential. That insight was his or her focus, and it seemed to lead them to success.

“I’ve seen many people launch ideas that I thought were beyond foolish,” Keller adds, “but then I learned more about the idea, the customer and the vision-and realized the true risk being taken.”

When Your Idea Is Ready to Go
The market research you’ve conducted thus far ought to be a good indicator of where you need to go next with your idea. One key factor to consider is pricing. You want to do it competitively while also considering what the market will bear. For products or services that have a close competitor, Keller advises pricing with respect to the competitive position. “Higher-priced positioning requires an idea with enough relevance and importance to customers to overcome the gap between your idea and the nearest competitor,” Keller says.

The beauty of being in business for yourself is that you have the option to make changes at will-so if a pricing structure isn’t working, you can alter it. “Price high to start-you can always drop the price down,” says Keller. “You can never go up.”

Shenker adds that you need to be sure your product or service is delivering enough value to command the price you set. If possible, test different pricing offers as you go, and determine what works best.

When you’re ready to get started, be sure you’re selling where your target market is likely to buy. “Your marketing plan and budget should include a well-crafted distribution strategy,” notes Shenker. If you’ll sell over the Internet, budget for media to drive new customers to your site. If you’ll sell via retail distribution, you might need workers with industry experience to help you reach your target market.

Remember, too, that you can always seek help in this long, arduous process of bringing an idea to fruition. The Internet, your local library, the U.S. Census Bureau, business schools, industry associations, trade and consumer publications, industry trade shows and conferences, and new-product development firms can be invaluable sources of information and contacts. “It’s just a matter of seeking knowledge from as many sources as possible,” notes Keller. It’s also a matter of putting your ego aside and being willing to create a business that will not only survive, but thrive. “If you have an idea, don’t be afraid to refine it, retool it, rethink it,” adds Keller. “The more you do before you launch, the less you’ll have to do [afterwards], and the less painful the lessons tend to be.”

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