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10 Tips for Launching Your Startup

  • December 11th, 2008 /
  •  Chris Schultz

Will Donaldson is putting together a really interesting project with the Tulane Entrepreneur’s Association. He’s interviewing different business people and soliciting their knowledge for a book that TEA is compiling. I (finally) got mine back to him today. Here it is:

1. I’ve got a good idea for a new startup. How can I go about determining the market for it?

Start with the market. The best ideas for startups come from people who are intimately familiar with a market through personal work experience. They see a problem, and they know what it would take to solve it. Some of the biggest mistakes I’ve ever made came when I thought of a great idea that I could build, but I didn’t think about whether anyone wanted it. Ask yourself: Is your product a vitamin or a painkiller? Vitamins aren’t nearly as successful as painkillers.

2. What are some cost effective ways to start spreading awareness of a new product?

Robert Stephens, founder of Geek Squad, says “Marketing is a tax you pay for being unremarkable.” While I don’t fully agree, it sure helps to make a great product and solve a real problem. The most cost effective way of spreading the word about your product is to develop an audience through social media and blogging. I’ve had success being transparent about product development online and talking about what I’m doing. Don’t think of it as marketing, think of it as a conversation about what you are building. People want to root for you, so share your story. But they don’t want to be pitched to, so be yourself, be genuine, share the ups and downs. Specific outlets I use to get the word out cost effectively are: my blog, video posts on YouTube, Twitter, & Facebook.

3. For a beginner, how can I use the internet to make this job easier?

The internet can make you 10x more productive than you are now. Read Getting Real by 37 Signals, the bible for the productive web worker. Collaborate virtually with your team through tools like Basecamp and Skype (see all the tools that we use), don’t meet in person unless you need to. I am amazed when I see people who open their email once a week and don’t use the internet to do anything but shop. Get efficient and comfortable working online and you will eat their lunch in business. You’ll be amazed how much work you can get done.

4. What about allocation? Say I can only dedicate between $5,000 and $10,000 to the marketing for a new project, what are the must-haves? Is there a way to methodically choose what’s best?

For allocating a marketing budget, you need to figure out who you are trying to reach, where they are, and your goal. Christopher Skinner taught me about the five phases of the customer journey: awareness, consideration, inquiry, purchase, re-purchase. A marketing strategy should consider each step and move the customer through it. If you are marketing a product that people are searching for (consideration), then run a Google Adwords PPC campaign. If you have a product that they have never heard of and you need to build awareness, maybe a Facebook campaign targeted at your demographic makes sense. The most important thing about any online campaign is to track everything. You can truly calculate ROI online in a way that isn’t possible offline. If you aren’t doing it, you’re not using all the tools available to you.

5. What about setting up a website? What should I look for?

Setting up a website is a great first step for your business. To get started for free, build a blog using WordPress or a site using Synthasite or SnapPages. I know a small business in New Orleans that has had a web developer working on a website for them for 2.5 years, who knows what they’ll pay for it when its completed. They could build one for themselves in one hour using these services for FREE. The biggest thing to keep in mind when building a website is content creation and setting a goal. What do you want a user visiting your website to do? What action? Sign up for a newsletter? Buy something? Call you? Design an experience that makes it clear for the user what to do. I see so many websites that are content heavy with boring blah blah blah content about the company. Who cares. Talk to your customer, not about yourself.

6. Does CPC marketing make sense?

Cost per click (CPC) marketing is extremely effective and powerful. It can take a while to learn, but it is immediate. Unlike SEO, you can get traffic to your website right now, if you are willing to pay for it. I helped Tom Fischmann of Dash Dudes launch a CPC today. He sells a product for $19.95. Let’s say his cost per click for keywords is 10 cents. Then let’s say one of every 30 visitors to his site buys his product. His cost-per-conversion is $3 and he’s selling a $20 product. He’s laughing all the way to the bank. CPC is something that you can really dial in and generate quality traffic if you take the time to optimize a campaign.

7. How do I start a PR strategy?

I believe you should be your own PR agent. Every dime I’ve personally spent on PR has been a waste. Now, some would beg to differ, but I think you are your own best advocate. People want to hear from you, the CEO, not a PR firm. The best PR strategy I can give you doesn’t cost a dime. Blog. Twitter. Get yourself out there, have a voice. Be interesting. Be opinionated.

8. Are there any rules of thumb that you think people don’t readily know about email marketing?

Email marketing is one of the most overlooked methods of marketing. As hard as you work on your website and as much great content as you write on your blog, there is nothing more powerful than showing up in 1000 inboxes. Think about it, how much time do you spend on email. And if email newsletters are from people you care about or are interested in, you’ll read them. My beliefs are: text only – don’t use images, short and concise, clear call to action, always have an easy unsubscribe method. Don’t spam people, if someone opts-off your list, don’t put them back on.

9. Where should I look for more guidance?

The web is a treasure trove of information for anything you want to learn. Spend 30 min reading the top three articles you find for “SEO 101” and you’ll be as armed to optimize your own site as 50% of the SEO firms out there. There is so much in business that people are happy to charge you thousands of dollars for, but you seriously can do it yourself.

10. What am I missing?

Go for it! Launch a business. There is nothing more satisfying than seeing your name on a business card with CEO under it. There has never been a better time to launch a business efficiently and effectively. You will have ups and downs, you will fail more than you succeed. Keep at it. Starting a business while I was in school getting my MBA was the best decision I ever made. I financed my first company on Stafford Student Loans. You can too.

Is this helpful to you? Something I missed or something you disagree with? Hit me up in the comments.

  • categories: All /
  • tags: Entrepreneurship, tips, tulane, tulanemba
  1. Dec 11, 2008 at 8:12 pm

    Will Scott says:

    Chris,

    Great post.

    Clearly I’ll take exception on the PPC vs. SEO suggestion. I say PPC until your SEO kicks in because in the long term you’ll have lower total cost per conversion with SEO.

    I would add: learn to express yourself well in writing, we see more traffic from our articles, online PR and blogging than any other medium. If you, as the entrepreneur, aren’t comfortable writing find someone on your team who is.

    Good content goes a long way and the bar is set pretty low online.

    Will

  2. Dec 12, 2008 at 12:38 am

    Scott says:

    I would say affiliate marketing is an important consideration since it can leverage other peoples time, money and network. Great for getting into niches markets or languages that you can’t reach.

    I would also like to recommend a tool called SharpForge. Basecamp is a great tool but lacks the ability for dispersed team members to easily share files and get access to the latest version of any file.

    http://www.sharpforge.com/Web-Collaboration/Benefits/Document-Versioning

  3. Dec 12, 2008 at 12:26 pm

    Jessica says:

    Chris, thanks for another great post, and for keeping us motivated and inspired. I agree with you 100% that it’s all about getting yourself out there, being interesting, and providing value. Interesting point about not outsourcing your PR–I’ve never heard that before, will definitely keep it in mind. Good advice.

    Thanks for everything you do for the local startup community. Keep up the awesome work!

  4. Dec 12, 2008 at 12:39 pm

    Chris Schultz says:

    Hey guys – thanks for all the comments.

    @will scott – SEO probably is a very good investment for question #4, the limited budget marketing strategy. You should at least have your site presented correctly for the terms you are trying to rank for. And you’re right, just producing content and getting articles out there will build your link quality.

    @jessica – Not outsourcing your PR isn’t hard and fast rule, but I feel that its something that you should be doing yourself at a startup. Different rules apply for larger companies. PR essentially means personal branding at our level. No-one else is going to be able to build your personal brand for you.

  5. Dec 12, 2008 at 12:46 pm

    Will Scott says:

    @Chris Schultz, @Jessica,

    I didn’t mention it before but I totally agree regarding PR. We’ve found that many companies who are purporting to be PR companies can’t even write a press release, let alone get exposure for one.

    And content we write for SEO Purposes will often get a better pickup. In fact, we’ve seen SEO specific press releases make it into print unedited and I recently had a conversation with a City Business editor thanks to one of our article writers.

    I think PR, like much of traditional marketing, is a relationship exercise. As the demographic of marketing changes (most true in online marketing) the places where relationships are made changes as well.

    Surely there are good PR firms out there but I’d bet they’re positioning themselves as something else, “engagement enablers” perhaps.

  6. Dec 12, 2008 at 1:21 pm

    Online PR - Making A Positive Contribution | Website Promotion is Not Voodoo says:

    [...] friend, and a very smart local entrepreneur, Chris Schulz wrote an interesting piece entitled 10 Tips for Launching Your Startup in which he makes a pretty bold statement relative to PR (that’s public relations, not [...]

  7. Feb 02, 2009 at 9:54 pm

    Is Your Competition Winning in The Customer Engagement Cycle? | Website Promotion is Not Voodoo says:

    [...] have been intending to post on this since before my friend Chris Schultz wrote his “10 Tips for Launching Your Startup” in which he brushed on the core concept, the Customer Engagement Cycle: A C I P R [...]

  8. May 02, 2009 at 7:16 pm

    Customer Engagement Cycle - ACIPR | Website Promotion is Not Voodoo says:

    [...] have been intending to post on this since before my friend Chris Schultz wrote his “10 Tips for Launching Your Startup” in which he brushed on the core concept, the Customer Engagement Cycle: A C I P R [...]

  9. Jun 11, 2009 at 11:18 pm

    Stanford Rosenthal says:

    Nice post Chris.

    I feel people always think there’s more to SEO than there really is. Build your site with proper markup and be smart about your headlines – that’s it. People think I don’t know what I’m talking about when I say that.

    An interesting overlap is that social networking can really help your SEO. Cross-posting your videos and microblog to every service available is a great way to fill up a SERP (Search Engine Results Page).

  10. Jun 12, 2009 at 9:01 am

    Chris says:

    Thanks Stan – you’re right, its not as hard as people think, and it has a tremendous impact.

    That’s a good point about getting your stuff out there anywhere you can publish it. Great tip.

    Chris

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