You Don’t Have to Be Perfect to Be A Serious Entrepreneur

Nobody is Perfect
There are folk who argue that they want perfection before success, and that sounds too much like a reason to be credible, particularly if they don’t set the criteria for what perfection means, nor do they set a cutoff point to achieve it. A lot of top earning marketers have achieved their goals without this’perfection’, and saying moral ascendancy over them won’t put food on your table.
Everyone will have their good days and bad days, and it is time to tell yourself that it’s fine to make mistakes. If a customer or buyer makes reasonable complaints, make amends and correct it. Take note of their feedback, and apply it to your later projects. That’s one additional step to’perfection’ that you could not make if you hadn’t put your product out there in the first place.
Time to Move On
Naturally it’s part and parcel of being a serious entrepreneur to learn as much as you can about your craft and to develop your skill, but if everyone spent all their time studying to be something, there’ll be no one left to do the real work. Experience is also the best teacher ; how will you know if your product is up to standards, if you do not try it in the market?
The reality is, educational study is a comfort zone that some folk do not wish to move out from. You do not want to stop improving once your product hits the market. In fact, that’s's the simplest way to see what improvements you want to make.
A serious entrepreneur should, therefore , be results-oriented : a customer or customer would be happier to see a project that’s 80% ok, than not see an one hundred pc perfect one.
It has been Done Before
How many products have you seen on the market which has been about for a while and will suddenly have advertisements that claims’NEW AND IMPROVED’? Businesses that work are willing to take the danger of small successes to get their feet wet and work their way up the market. At the end of the day, the sole way to become a serious entrepreneur is to take action. Remember that sloppy success beats perfect mediocrity.
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