Upon Arrival | Events & Incentives with Adelaine Ng
Upon Arrival is for people creating unforgettable travel and event experiences for corporate clients. This community thrives on inspiration, ideas and strategies which are needed now more than ever through challenging times. The drivers for incentive travel are still strong and it’s just a matter of finding where the success stories are. Upon Arrival aims to uncover these stories to see how the strategists amongst us are learning new ways of doing things and even discovering new destinations and experiences that might not otherwise have been considered. We talk about mindset, personal development, pivot ideas and of course, what's happening with the travel and events industry.
Upon Arrival | Events & Incentives with Adelaine Ng
Ep 46: How to know if you're wired to be a six percent entrepreneur with Robin Copernicus
Every industry is shaped by the quality of its entrepreneurs who disrupt the status quo, inspire admiration and challenge our world to be better. But how do you know if entrepreneurship is truly in your DNA, that you have a future being a visionary and trailblazer? In 2015, a global report found that 66 percent of adults saw entrepreneurship as a good career choice and more than half of the working age population felt they could start a business. But true entrepreneurs are rare.
Robin Copernicus is the founder of Vertical Liftoff, the first startup accelerator that helps founders skip investor funding. He's also the author of Minimum Viable Mockup and podcast host of The Six Percent Entrepreneur. Robin's current mission is to help startup founders build an audience and get their first paying customers without relying on pitch decks, business plans, or giving up equity to venture capitalists.
Quotes From Episode
"The thing about failure is when most founders fail, they will actually give you all different types of excuses... Such as my co-founder left me, or I couldn't raise enough money, or I ran out of money or Google shut my ads account down, or a competitor just stole all my, you know...
But the real reason that founders fail is because the founder lost motivation and got bored and quit. Because if the founder did not lose motivation, they wouldn't have given up. The reason why they've lost motivation is because they got into entrepreneurship wanting more freedom, getting out of this corporate job situation but then they realise that they're actually just trapping themselves into a new job."
"We don't need to go to investors anymore. So this whole idea of maximising the TAM (Total Addressable Market) and going out for this huge market size, this is very old-school thinking and this is what they're still teaching in entrepreneurship programs".
-Robin Copernicus
Don’t miss:
- How to identify the natural born traits of entrepreneurs
- How a side hustle can split your focus and be your disadvantage
- The three types of entrepreneurs and the chemical imbalance that identifies a true type entrepreneur
- Why an MBA sets entrepreneurs up for failure
- The real reason why most founders fail and how to fix it
- How a vertical startup can be the smartest way to launch without needing investors
Robin's recommendations:
The Hypomanic Edge by John D Gartner
Thinking, Fast and Slow by Daniel Kahneman
Robin's free 30-minute audio course on going vertical:
theverticalmethod.com
Free Quiz to see if you are a six percent entrepreneur:
visionary.wtf
Connect with Robin:
www.robincopernicus.com
Connect with Adelaine:
Email: uponarrivalpodcast@gmail.com