Table of Contents
Title Page
Copyright Page
Dedication
Biking and Business
Acknowledgements
CHAPTER 1 - Who Am I?
CHAPTER 2 - Why Am I Writing This Book?
CHAPTER 3 - Roadside Distractions
CHAPTER 4 - The In-Between
CHAPTER 5 - The Tragedy of Strategy
CHAPTER 6 - What is Navigation?
1. The Ultimate Destination
2. The Milestones or Legs of the Trip
3. The Ride Plan or Road Map
4. Communication
5. Roles and Responsibilities on the Road
6. Riding Skills
CHAPTER 7 - Finding My Ultimate Destination
CHAPTER 8 - It’s My Ride
CHAPTER 9 - Meeting Life at the Crossroads
CHAPTER 10 - Figuring It Out
Part 1: Present Personal Vision
Part 2: Future Personal Vision
Part 3: Present Business Vision
Part 4: Future Business Vision
CHAPTER 11 - Your Economic Engine
CHAPTER 12 - Planning Your Ride
Preparation
Getting Started
Asking the Questions
Answering the Questions
The Tactics (Work to Be Done)
CHAPTER 13 - The Work to Be Done
CHAPTER 14 - Communication The Fuel of High Performance
Group Meetings
Cruise-By Meetings
One-on-One Meetings
CHAPTER 15 - Harnessing the Power of the Pack
Team Building
Talent Inventory
The Management Team
CHAPTER 16 - Sharpening Your Skills
Professional Development
How to Begin the PDP
Mentoring
Books
Other Learning Opportunities
CHAPTER 17 - Your Role as Road Captain
Crash and Burn
The Importance of Style
Connecting with Your Team
Personal Touch
Forks in the Road
Copyright © 2009 by Dwain DeVille. All rights reserved.
Published by John Wiley & Sons, Inc., Hoboken, New Jersey.
Published simultaneously in Canada.
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Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data:
DeVille, Dwain, 1955-The biker’s guide to business : when business and life meet at the crossroads /
Dwain DeVille. p. cm.
Includes index.
eISBN : 978-0-470-52213-4
1. Success in business. 2. Leadership. 3. Communication. I. Title.
HF5386.D468 2009
658.4ʹ09-dc22
2009007399
eISBN : 978-0-470-52213-4
To Merrick and Bessie: You taught by example and instilled a work ethic that’s served your boy well all these years. I wish you were here to see the result.
PREFACE
Biking and Business
Statistics show that of the 1.3 million motorcycles sold annually, over 300,000 are purchased by executive-level businessmen and businesswomen. They make up one of the largest segments of biking today: the business biker.
So if you’re one of the millions of business bikers, you’ve picked up this book because you get it. You understand the rush and sense of freedom biking gives you. It’s a total escape. As Leo Keily, CEO of Molson Coors, once told me, “I’m now landlocked in Colorado, so to me it’s an instant sailing trip where I go to clear my head.”
And while riding a motorcycle is a great way to clear the mind after a long day or week in the office, this book is not just about that. This book is not only about how I use my motorcycle to escape business, but also about how I’ve taken the lessons learned from a lifetime of riding and applied them to building a successful business, as well as a successful life.
To that end, this book is written for the biker and nonbiker alike who are struggling to find the right balance in business and life. For too long, entrepreneurs have accepted that their business performance and their personal lives were an either-or proposition. Like far too many entrepreneurs, I struggled to find the key to having my company work for me instead of me always working for it. Although it took a while, I created a process that allows me to perform at the highest level in business without my success coming at the expense of my personal life. I just happened to do it with the help of my bike.
The first time I straddled a motorcycle with the intent to ride, I was 16, and in a lot of ways I’ve never gotten off that bike. In fact, aside from family and friends, the only thing I love more than the great game of business is riding my motorcycle. Over the years motorcycling has been an integral part of my life story and continues to be a source of enlightenment and happiness. I’ve also come to understand that the skills and abilities it takes to be successful on a bike also come in handy when building a successful business.
To start with, both biking and business are equally thrilling and serve as vehicles to take me where I want to go, one physically and the other economically. Also, achieving excellence in each requires many skills, not the least of which are awareness, timing, and a keen ability to sift through the background noise and bullshit around you.
To be sure, a car can take me there, but what’s the fun in that? In my car I’m talking on the phone, listening to the radio or a book on tape, and thinking about a million things, such as “Am I there yet?” But on my motorcycle I’m a major part of getting there. Senses totally in the moment, I’m shifting, constantly looking out for those crazy cagers (car drivers) and other road hazards. I’m literally riding the ride!
Nonriders immediately focus on the dangers, but there’s so much more to riding and the benefits offset the risks. By hopping in the saddle and exposing my relatively unprotected body to the outside world, I literally inject myself into the environment around me as I roll along. I fully experience the sounds, take in the 180-degree view, feel the air, smell the rain right before it hits, and know that it and the bugs begin to sting at 50 miles per hour. Riding releases my senses and is the essence of truly being alive.
And the same holds true for me as an entrepreneur, because there’s no greater ride than that of business. Getting out there and exposing my relatively unprotected product or service to the marketplace allows me to still feel like that 19-year-old kid just starting out; I’m ready to ride the twists and turns of the marketplace and chase the possibilities of the day.
I’ll admit there are inherent risks in both biking and business. As we’ve all seen, if not ridden properly, each can and will cause severe damage. And if that level of risk wasn’t enough, when I started out in both endeavors, my well-meaning family and friends, who feared for my bodily and financial safety, literally said to my face or behind my back that I was destined to wipe out or fail totally. To which I simply shrugged and, like any good biker or entrepreneur, went on down the road.
As a biker and entrepreneur, I know the risk and it is always with me. But riding a motorcycle scared is a fast ticket to the hospital, and for a lot of the same reasons, you damn sure can’t run a company scared. Those who do know this—the champions—get that it’s not about overcoming fear but about understanding and embracing it.
In order to truly succeed at both biking and business, I must accept many things, the first of which is reasonable and controllable risk. For me, risk goes beyond simple thrill seeking—reasonable and controllable risk is my way of life. It’s my drug, my mistress, and my salvation all rolled up into one. It fits me like a $10,000 suit and I cannot fathom life without it.
Where others see risk, I see potential and innately understand that the reward at the end of the day corresponds to the amount I am willing to risk in order to achieve success. I don’t simply do business—I grab it by the handlebars and ride it for all its worth!
And I’m not alone. Like bikers, entrepreneurs are today’s cowboys and we are a bold lot. We’re independent, adventurous, strong willed, and downright intolerant of fences—it’s in our DNA. When we walk into the room, we’re the alpha dogs exuding the confidence that lets everyone know we mean business. Our self-assurance comes from a burning desire to carve our own path and a belief deep down in our soul that we have a better idea and the ability to go for it.
And we know each other when we meet. There’s no secret handshake, just a revealing look in our eyes that tells the other we understand. That we’ve both felt the highs and lows of getting where we are today and paid our dues without reservation. At some point in the beginning of our careers, we have awakened at 2:30 A.M. on a Friday in a cold sweat trying to figure out how to meet that week’s payroll. And at some point, we have viewed our bank balance not as a safety net but as a down payment on a really cool new venture.
A great example of this is a biker and former client who I’ll call C.J. We came together at a difficult time when his extremely competitive industry was radically shifting due to rapidly changing technology.
He joined a group of CEOs I worked with on a monthly basis and over the course of six months set about strategizing and writing a bold new business plan for his company. It was extremely innovative and showed tremendous forethought and promise. After completing the plan, he made about 30 copies and began handing them out to anyone who would read it for feedback.
One day during our meeting, a fellow CEO asked, “Aren’t you afraid that other people may take your idea and implement it?” Not missing a beat, C.J. looked that person dead in the eye and said, “Maybe so, but at the end of the day they still have to beat me at it.”
That’s biker attitude. It’s that subtle swagger that comes when you possess the supreme confidence that where your competition is good, you’re better. It comes from being comfortable on the edge and knowing how to execute your plans in such a way that no one can stop you.
And that’s why I believe biking makes me a better businessperson. Aside from the thrill of not having a safety net, it’s my way of maintaining an edge as well as a proper perspective on business and life. More than just a metaphor for how I live, biking allows me to approach business full out and understand its edge, which is where the real jazz is.
As John Paul DeJoria, a biker and the CEO and founder of John Paul Mitchell Systems and Patron Tequila, told me, “The difference between successful people and unsuccessful people is that successful people do all the things unsuccessful people don’t want to do.”
So saddle up alongside me and I’ll show you, step by step, how I grab business and life by the handlebars!
ACKNOWLEDGMENTS
My sincere thanks to all the mentors I’ve met along the way. Your lessons left an indelible impression on me, and without your touch, my ride would have been far different.
And undying gratitude to Christine for showing me what, Brett for showing me how, Chris for showing me why, and Shannon for helping me put it all together, stay focused, and cross those finish lines.
Had I missed any one of you on my journey, none of this would have been possible.
CHAPTER 1
Who Am I?
If ever there was a gym rat of business, it would be me. I absolutely love working and getting involved in any kind of selling or production. My earliest memories as a kid growing up in the 1960s were of spending my summers hanging around at and eventually working in the cotton gin my dad managed in our hometown of Opelousas, Louisiana. My mother worked (which was not so common in those days) for the largest privately owned department store in town. She managed the ladies’ department while also serving as its buyer, a position that filled our evenings with the talk of business and, in particular, management. It was during these discussions about my parents’ trials, tribulations, and successes that I first learned of miscommunications, backroom politics, “stupid management decisions,” and employees who “didn’t get it.”
Right or wrong, my mother and father’s insight and perspective on business framed the way in which I tend to approach and learn about it. Little did I know at the time how much those nightly lessons would fuel my hunger for business. I became extremely anxious to jump in and play the game myself. So when the time came, instead of following everyone else my age and pushing for that MBA, I decided to strap on the pads and start earning my chops in the business world.
And that’s why, one month after graduating high school, I packed everything I owned onto my Honda 350 motorcycle and moved from my hometown to the big city of New Orleans. My first position was as a hand in the oil fields, and a year and a half into that job, I witnessed a scenario that rang a bell in my mind, altering my path and changing my life forever.
On one particular day, our crew was working on a job for one of the major oil companies and, honestly, doing a very poor job of it. So when their representative showed up on the job after his three-martini lunch and began berating my supervisor and everyone else within earshot, I was hit with my first of many epiphanies. As I sat there on that stack of pipe in the 95-degree heat that is New Orleans in the summer and watched this guy totally lose it, I asked myself a fundamental question: How is it that this drunken idiot in his short-sleeved shirt and tie made it into a position of authority? Hell, I can do that—and probably do it better—so why am I wasting my time here?
It wasn’t long after witnessing this encounter that I cut my hair, bought a suit at Sears, and ventured out to carve my own path in the business world. I got myself hired by a national small loan company as a collector. I rose quickly through the ranks, became assistant manager, and then waited another six months to make manager, simply because I was not 21 years old yet and the company couldn’t bond me until I was old enough.
So right after my 21st birthday, I was promoted to the position of branch manager, and I began to learn firsthand what it was like to run an office and manage a staff. It was a great time in my life; together with my staff, I began to win award after award for productivity, which only served to intensify my ambition and feed my hubris. In fact, I began to grow an ego the size of the Crescent City and quickly became a handful to manage myself. But under the subtle guidance of my district supervisor and mentor, I also began to learn. As with anything, some lessons came easily and naturally, but others were tough. Of all the important lessons he taught me, probably the greatest lesson of all was that knowledge isn’t power until you apply it. The key to ultimate success is to apply what you’ve learned effectively. I quickly realized that I needed to check my oversized ego at the door in order to apply what I had learned through others.
This important lesson stayed with me as through the years I worked with company after company, in management position after management position. (I was, and continue to be, a restless wanderer.) I learned by doing, reading, listening, and watching—all the while, stretching my limits. Combined with my natural biker instincts, this constant need to grow allowed me to absorb all that was around me, while continuing to ask the tough questions that cut through the bullshit and see the real game.
My road eventually led to a career in banking where I really earned my business chops by helping to turn around distressed banks and work through mergers for the better part of 15 years. John, my first boss in that world, was a no-nonsense bank president who wasn’t a biker but should have been. He was the major turnaround guy in a company of turnaround guys. Tough as nails, focused, and determined, John personally taught me how to take an organization on the verge of collapse and turn it into a winner. This was no easy feat; we had to transform failing banks while retaining the same group of bankers that ran them into the ditch in the first place. After all, banking is a very conservative industry, and no banker in his or her right mind is going to leave a position in a sound institution to join one on the verge of collapse.
I began my apprenticeship in the mid-1980s under John’s supervision. I was recruited to help restore a small bank in Houma, Louisiana, where the principal industry is oil, which was in the tank, so to speak, hitting an all-time low price of $11 a barrel. (The good old days, eh?) Having assumed control one year prior to my joining the institution, the bank was a distant third in a three-bank race and was losing ground quickly.
What made the challenge even more interesting was the state of the economy; there was little to no economic growth from which to turn a bank around. So we became predators, and through John’s guidance and leadership, we became the only bank to show solid growth by literally taking business away from the other two.
I watched as John spent much of his time doggedly communicating his vision to everyone in the organization. He set a clear course and made sure that all the employees in the organization knew their roles and, perhaps more importantly, understood how their efforts were contributing to the overall cause. John’s communication style was relentlessly straightforward and at times forcefully so. He let nothing slide; even though you might not have always liked his delivery, you always understood the message. That was a critical lesson I took with me going forward: Everything in business is dependent on clear and consistent communication.
And it was with John in mind that I coined my favorite and most often-used saying: “Communication ain’t always pretty, but it’s always communication.”
After that two-year master’s level course in turnaround management, I eventually left Louisiana for merger-frenzied Florida. It seemed that every bank was either buying or being bought by another. Hell, in the eight years I remained in the business, the bank name on my business card changed five times without my ever really changing employers.
That job was a blast, though, and I remained in constant turnaround mode—getting office after office out of trouble and having the time of my life. Utilizing all the tricks that John had taught me, I focused on identifying and recruiting great talent, placing these people in the right spots, and then relentlessly communicating our mission and their role in it. Unfortunately, all good things must come to an end, and as luck would have it, at the age of 38, the frenzy died down and my banking career fizzled—simply because I began to get very bored.
That was also around the time when my midlife “passage” kicked in and I began to wonder what else was out there for me beyond banking. Midlife is generally known as the time when you stop the presses, take stock of who you are and what you do, and reconfigure where it is you want to go. It’s when you tend to ask for a do-over or, in my case, an entirely new direction.
So I shunned conventional wisdom, left the false security of corporate America, and went off to explore a new game that eventually led me to build my consulting business.
Now, I wouldn’t necessarily recommend that you leave a successful 15-year career to go off and begin your own company while hitting that midlife stage but it can be one hell of a ride. I also have a sneaking suspicion that I’m not the only person who’s done so. Along the way I won a few, lost a few, and some got rained out. I went through the requisite divorce, experienced a number of spiritual awakenings and epiphanies, and learned several hard-ass lessons that lent true credence to the old saying “that which does not kill me will make me stronger.” And each trial, whatever its end result, turned out to be a treasure trove of lessons that has given me the balls to not only go out on my own but survive and thrive in the biggest, baddest game there is.
My current career started 15 years ago when I was recruited out of banking to join a small firm that ran CEO peer group roundtables, the type where six to eight entrepreneurs from different industries come together one day a month in order to discuss an issue that they’re facing and have everyone help resolve it. Early on, these very real issues seemed larger than life and left me feeling a bit intimidated. After all, it was one thing to read about these topics in a book or magazine interview, but I was actually there in the room, contributing to major decisions. It was a total rush for a business junkie like me, and more than once I had to remind myself that they were actually paying me to be in the room and not vice versa! It quickly became apparent, however, that the issues weren’t much different from those that I’d faced during my career in banking or heard discussed at my parent’s kitchen table. So once I got past my awe over what this group of CEOs had built, I found them to be regular folks who are just wired a bit differently than the rest of us.
It also didn’t take long for me to recognize that I needed to create my own niche and not simply join another pack. And so, seven months into that gig, I left to go my own way and launched my very own firm. Today I serve as Navigator to a select group of successful companies while growing my own organization.
Working with these entrepreneurs intimately on a day-to-day basis gives me the opportunity to see and experience firsthand how decisions are made and how issues are dealt with—and to witness the many ways in which these professionals handle the daily fear associated with being the leader of a company. Every day I have the privilege of riding with the big dogs, and I love every minute of it. I feed off their sheer drive and determination to succeed at this level, while also sharing their fear of failure, a fear fueled by an overriding sense of responsibility to the company and their employees. Therefore, the main thing that brings us together is their want and need to find and maintain the right focus.
I’ve carved out a reputation as the “anti-consultant” because of the way I approach my Navigation Process. I tend to help established winners achieve their definition of success by getting them to focus more on living than on business, because, as I’ve previously stated, at the highest level, excellence in business and life show up as two sides of the same coin. Both must embody your true passions and support each other, as greatness only comes when you embrace the fact that your business is a true extension of who you are, while making apologies to no one for it. Your business is the very essence of why you do what you do.
So on the pages that follow, I’ll share my story, along with a few others that will help you get to where it is you want to go safely and on time. As Bob Parsons, CEO and founder of GoDaddy.com so aptly put it, “We’re not here for a long time; we’re here for a good time.”
CHAPTER 2
Why Am I Writing This Book?
There’s an old biking adage that says there are two types of riders in this world: those who have laid it down (wiped out) and those who will. The possibility of wiping out is a fact of life and something we, as successful entrepreneurs and bikers, readily accept. I wish I had a dollar for each time someone, upon hearing that I’m a biker, tells me of the wipeout that caused him or her to never get back on the bike. The former biker always looks at me with eyes that plead for understanding that, in my case, never comes because I don’t understand that approach. I merely chuckle, shake my head, and walk away.
My somewhat cold response doesn’t come from denial of my own vulnerability or from disinterest in others’ troubles, but from a difference in attitude. Although we bikers never think that a similar wipeout or misfortune will happen to us, when it does (notice I didn’t say if ), our mettle as riders is truly tested and we come face to face with the ultimate decision: Do I get back on the bike or not? My experience as both a long-term biker and a successful entrepreneur has shown that the way in which you face that moment of truth affects not only your ability to ride, but your ability to conduct your business and life. For me, how you handle this decision speaks to your passion and whether or not you’re “all in,” as my poker-playing friends would say.
I say this from experience, having had my own share of severe wipeouts. In each case, I faced that moment where I questioned whether or not to get back up and onto the bike. And each time, I elected to do so, believing that wipeouts are part of life’s tuition and we waste an all-important lesson if we refuse to learn from these misadventures as we continue along on our journey.
On the pages that follow are the lessons I learned when it was time for me to get back on the bike and continue to build the type of business and life I dreamed of when I was starting out. To be sure, there are some who simply don’t belong on the ride and this book isn’t for them. Instead, this book is for those of us who understand that success is more choice than chance, and who want to know and understand not only why we laid it down but how to get back up—and excel when doing so.
Walk into any bookstore and you’ll find dozens of books on how to run your company more successfully; across the store are just as many on how to live your life more fully. (I know; I’ve read most of them.) What makes this book different is my fundamental belief that at the highest level there’s little to no separation between our lives and the businesses we’ve built, that for an entrepreneur to be successful, both components must be dealt with together. They are two sides of the same coin, and it’s time we stop apologizing for it.
For entrepreneurs, business and life come together to form one long road trip with many exits along the way. Each exit has its own siren song and glittering road signs filled with promises of fulfillment and excitement. The Biker’s Guide to Business will help you navigate this road; not only will you figure out which direction to take, but you’ll discover which exits will allow you to enjoy yourself while achieving success.
Success no longer means a total trade-off between your personal and professional lives; your relationships and interests don’t have to suffer in order for your business to grow. Nor do you have to wait for the inevitable wipeout to learn the lessons that will allow you to make your visions of success a reality. You can have it both ways, but only if you understand a few fundamental techniques that are easily mastered and implemented.
Just as the lessons and methods taught at riding school can ensure a lifetime of safe biking habits, the tools and insights that fill these pages can help you excel, as they have helped me and the hundreds of successful entrepreneurs with whom I’ve worked. The motorcycle as metaphor is not simply a clichéd reference to risk and bravado; it’s a vehicle that teaches straightforward techniques that will keep you upright and turn your ride into one where you achieve success in both business and life.
The Biker’s Guide to Business also serves as an alternative to the hundreds of business books out there based solely on theory and observation. As a voracious reader of these kinds of books, I’m too often subjected to the opinions of writers who have passively observed others rather than actually accomplishing something themselves. Though well-meaning, their hindsight and armchair quarterbacking are gained from the sidelines. While there’s some value in these recitals, I, along with many others, yearn for the true stories of real business leaders. I want to feel their pain, taste their fear, and understand with clarity how they overcame their obstacles.
Many authors have made their marks by simply regurgitating on paper what they’ve seen from afar, and I’m damned tired of it. The entrepreneurs with whom I work and hang out want to hear from someone whose ass is on the line day after day, facing issues that fly by at the speed of life. We want to hear from business leaders who have laid it down in a big way, and to see how they reacted. So if you’re looking for a run-of-the-mill business book based on theory and observation, this ain’t it.
Yes, there are also books written by successful former entrepreneurs that are extremely valuable. The principal issue I have with these romantic recollections from those who have made it is not with the validity of their stories; on the contrary, there’s true value in their words. However, the passage of time often causes them to forget or to gloss over many of the little things that are crucial to helping someone else overcome similar problems and find success in today’s fast-paced business world. Rarely do we find a book with stories and lessons from the front lines of the business world. Accordingly, we are forced to spend valuable time digesting and testing theories or recollections that have little meaning in the real world. And the reason we’re at the mercy of these casual business observers is that most entrepreneurs are too damned busy being entrepreneurs to take the time to write about it.
When the rubber meets the road, we want and need real in-the-saddle experience that can be used now. We desperately require lessons from people and companies just like us as we move forward. With all due respect to Jack Welch (for I am a true fan) and the thousands of other writers who have penned their stories, what works in a behemoth like GE doesn’t necessarily transfer to a company of 10, 20, or 100 people. The Biker’s Guide to Business is specifically for entrepreneurs, and my overarching goal is to let you know that you’re not alone in your day-to-day struggles. There are tons of others out there just like you who have not only survived but are still in the saddle riding that dream for all its worth.
I consider myself to be a typical entrepreneur; I started my business 15 years ago, survived the early stages, fought through the middle years, and am now looking to maintain that ever-elusive state of high performance in order to profit from all of the fear, heartache, and sweat it took to get here. On the pages that follow are the lessons gleaned over these 15 years, lessons that come from my own experience as well as those of the companies I work with every day. Some are raw, straightforward, and intensely personal, but in the end, each and every one proves that business is business, and every situation shares certain similarities.
But, you may ask, if I’m still fully engaged in this great ride of business and life, how can I take the time to write about it? As you might guess, both my consulting business and the writing of this book are full-time jobs. But what makes this book doable at this time is the extensive catalog of experiences I have and the stage of business and life in which I find myself. I need no further research, for I’ve either already lived it or am in the middle of it. I need to conduct few interviews, because for years I’ve worked alongside the people whose stories fill these pages.
I’m also writing this book to honor all of my clients, mentors, and business associates who have insisted that I share the trials and successes we’ve experienced and shared over the course of my career. They told me that if they’d had the benefit early on in their careers of one-tenth of the insight I am now able to share, they’d have reached their goals faster and achieved more over the course of their professional lives.
Therefore, it’s my sincere hope that the stories and methods that follow will help you arrive where you want to go safely and successfully, because life is a fast-moving highway that should be ridden with gusto!
CHAPTER 3
Roadside Distractions
I’ve been riding a motorcycle for over three decades, and the fundamental skill that keeps me safe and upright is my ability to avoid roadside distractions. These can be hazardous to your health, and experienced riders know to keep their eyes in constant motion and their head on a “swivel” in order to see potential problems; once the problems are recognized, they also know not to fixate on them. This is because when you’re on a bike, where you look is where the bike is going to go—so if you focus on something like a pothole or telephone pole, you’ll probably hit it.
This seemingly simple skill is one of the hardest things for a new rider to master, as it differs greatly from the skills needed to drive a car. However, even the most skittish riders will eventually grasp it after spending enough time in the saddle. This ability also correlates to the speed with which you can safely roll; you tend to ride more slowly early on, because your reactions aren’t quite as quick as they will be later on. The more miles you spend in the saddle, the more you understand your abilities, and you can begin to safely increase your speed as your instincts improve. That said, whatever your experience level, taking your eyes off the road will, at the very least, slow you down, and doing it at the wrong time can also begin a devastating chain of events from which you may not recover. So knowing what to focus on and at what speed is absolutely necessary to enjoying a safe journey.
In business, there are also roadside distractions that, depending on your level of experience, will either slow you down or run you off course. I speak from hard experience, and will discuss some of these distractions later in this book. However, right now I want to focus on overcoming a certain mind-set that is adopted by most entrepreneurs who are just starting out in business: the “do what it takes” attitude, which compels them to focus on distractions.