November 6th, 2010 by Rich Christiansen
Want to really focus your team and get amazing results?
Set a really big goal and then form a Catalyzing Statement around this goal.
Catalyzing statements hook people emotionally and are the driver that propels individuals towards a challenging goal.
About a month ago I heard Rick Sapio give several examples. I would like to share his and then give a fun one that I ran across in Japan this week.
Fed Ex – When It Absolutely Positively Has To Be There Overnight — If you want a GREAT laugh, watch this FedEx Commercial
Microsoft Bill Gates – I picture a world with a PC on every desktop and in every home – 1975
President Kennedy – We will put a man on the moon and return him safely to earth before the end of the century.
These catalyzing statements go FAR beyond placing a goal. They emotionally charge us and align us. They emotionally allow us to seek and believe and go forward.
A good example of this is Bill Gates. Prior to making the unifying statement the goal was clearly set to have Microsoft be the largest software company in the world. Great goal, but where is the emotion and the emotional buy in. It came when he stated ” I picture a world with a PC on every desk and in every home.” That inspired us, we visualized this and indeed it enabled the goal.
This past week I have been in Asia. I was able to spend a bit of time in Japan and visited a company in Tokyo called Fujita. From the instant I entered this business I knew it was different. The tone, the conduct of the staff, and the presentation of the board room was simply different. They were focused and clearly were on a mission. There was not the usual motion that I frequently experience in Japan. Indeed the meeting I had was successful and at the end of the communication I could not help but poke a bit. I asked the individual I was meeting with to explain more about the company, the founder, and the history. His answer gave it all away. With out a second of hesitation here was his response:
“Fujita’s vision is to bring American culture to Japan”.
Wow, now that is powerful. That is a hairy, big, audacious, and crazy goal. “Bring American culture to Japan!”
You see they are not in the hamburger or movie business. They are not selling clothing. They are not in the import / export business. Those things are simply vehicles.
They are going to change Japan from eating sushi to Big Macs, and guess what…they did.
What I did not tell you earlier is Fujita’s founder Den Fujita is responsible for bringing McDonalds to Japan. He was also responsible for bringing Toys R Us and BlockBuster to Japan.

As I have considered this, I realized that this type of statement not only motivates us and inspires us, but also allows the company to change and extract us from the weeds when necessary.
Next time you set a big goal, create a catalyzing statement! Hang on because it will rock your world with what happens if done properly.
Posted in Aim, Bootstrap Business, Buzz Your Business, Chapter 10: Motion or Momentum?, Chapter 11: Climb High, Sleep Low, Chapter 12: The Heart and the Head of the Entrepreneur, Chapter 13: Fire, Chapter 13: Fire Fire Fire Aim, Chapter 14: Act Big Behave Small, Chapter 15: Building A Killer Team, Chapter 16: The Holy Grail, Chapter 17: Embrace Accountability, Chapter 18: Dancing With The Devil, Chapter 19: No Exit Strategy?, Chapter 1: GRIT, Chapter 2: Juice to the Light Bulb, Chapter 3: Power Tools, Chapter 4: Got Gas?, Chapter 5: The Rules, Chapter 6: Boring!, Chapter 7: Fish & Partners, Chapter 8: Avoiding Cow Pies, Chapter 9: I Never Want to be a Doctor, Fire, Garrett Gunderson, Introduction, Name of Book, Presentations, Publishing, Rewards, Rich Christiansen, Ron Porter, Types of Capital, Validate the Channel | No Comments »
October 14th, 2010 by Rich Christiansen
In 1989 I helped make my first $2MM business mistake. I keep this box on my life-trophy shelf to remind me never to make this mistake again.
So what was it we did?

Rich Christiansen $2MM Channel Lesson
We did what so many eager engineering types do–we built a way cool, exciting, leading-edge technology (digital power line transmission) and then tried to sell it.
We just knew the customers would buy these by the bucket loads. We would go to the trade shows and got mobbed, so certainly this was going to be a barn burner. Everyone told us we were so smart and this was the coooooolest technology ever.
NOT! Cool technology does not necessarily mean purchasing customers. In 1990 the company went belly up!
I would rather have purchasing customers and profit than some cool little box sitting on my shelf reminding me not to be stupid again.
Better to sell it first and build it second, than to build it first and then try to sell it.
Today I did a BootStrap Business lecture at an Entrepreneurial Launch Pad event.
I love meeting with eager individuals who are on those tender first steps of venturing out into the brave cold and exciting world of creating a business. However, there is one thing that makes me want to scream every time I see it and indeed I saw it today.
Make sure someone is going to buy it before you build it.
Its All about the channel!
Build It and they will come…NOT!
Save yourself a couple of million $ and let my box be the reminder. Don’t build your own.
Posted in Aim, Bootstrap Business, Buzz Your Business, Chapter 10: Motion or Momentum?, Chapter 11: Climb High, Sleep Low, Chapter 12: The Heart and the Head of the Entrepreneur, Chapter 13: Fire, Chapter 13: Fire Fire Fire Aim, Chapter 14: Act Big Behave Small, Chapter 15: Building A Killer Team, Chapter 16: The Holy Grail, Chapter 17: Embrace Accountability, Chapter 18: Dancing With The Devil, Chapter 19: No Exit Strategy?, Chapter 1: GRIT, Chapter 2: Juice to the Light Bulb, Chapter 3: Power Tools, Chapter 4: Got Gas?, Chapter 5: The Rules, Chapter 6: Boring!, Chapter 7: Fish & Partners, Chapter 8: Avoiding Cow Pies, Chapter 9: I Never Want to be a Doctor, Fire, Garrett Gunderson, Introduction, Name of Book, Presentations, Publishing, Rewards, Rich Christiansen, Ron Porter, Types of Capital, Validate the Channel | No Comments »
December 10th, 2008 by Sharon Larsen
It’s safe to say that until now, Rich has never had a project that took two years to complete. We have learned, though, that the process of publishing a book moves like cold tar.
Early in the publishing process, Rich and Ron engaged with a large publisher, who shall remain nameless. The publisher was excited to work with us but wasn’t sold on the concept. They latched on to one specific principle of the book and wanted Rich and Ron to write a book focused solely on that principal. For nine months, the publisher came back to Rich and Ron with action items, each of which they nailed. After all the publisher feedback, the final outline was very different from the book they had intended to write, however. It focused exclusively on the Zig Zag principal – just a small part of the current book. At this point, all the signals from the publisher were positive and all that remained was to endure the formality of the Review Board (capital letters added to inspire awe and reverence).
In the end, the Review Board decided to give Rich and Ron a ‘soft turn-down’ because although they loved the concept, there was one problem: Rich and Ron were not famous enough. Despite their admitted admiration for the proposed book, the publisher was only accepting famous authors at that point. Result: nine months of wasted time, energy, and momentum on the outline of a book that had zig zagged from its original purpose.
Seth Godin recently argued that disseminating ideas is more difficult than actually coming up with those ideas. We’ve experienced that firsthand during this publishing nightmare. You’ll experience this same nightmare as you start your own business if you have the ability to come up with great ideas, but don’t have the skills – or partner with someone who has the skills – to market those ideas.
All this is behind us now, though. We’ve chosen a publisher and the manuscript is off. Look for the Bootstrapped baby to be born in 3 – 4 months!
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