Tell Me Your Value Equation
Every company feels like it has what it takes to make a difference in its customer’s lives. No matter what product or service they offer their clients, all companies feel like they can do it better than anyone else. So what makes one company stick out from another? Is it how much money that company makes for its own bottom line or is how much it helps its customers? When it comes to investing and getting behind a startup company or an entrepreneur, the real question is what is your value equation? That’s according to silicon valley’s legendary entrepreneur Rob Ryan.
What Sets Entrepreneurs Apart?
Rob and I spoke about his experience with helping entrepreneurs, which is his main focus now since retiring from running his company. In 1999, Rob sold Ascend Communications, which helped create and build the entire infrastructure of the Internet, to Lucent Technologies for about $24 billion. To this day, this deal still holds the record as the the biggest merger between technology companies. Rob is now the Chairman and co-founder of Hero Club, which is an organization dedicated to training and developing entrepreneurs. However, Rob told me that one of the main things he looks for when trying to determine the true value of a company is not how much the company itself is worth, but how much value the company brings to its customers.
What Is the Value Equation?
This is what Rob calls the value equation and he says a lot of companies can’t really accurately answer this question. Many companies speak about what they do well and how their product or service is different, but they aren’t really explaining what their value is. For Rob, he’s looking at how much you can really help your customer, not yourself. Rob shared an example with me regarding the question, how much money can you make or save your customer? He said if a company were to answer him that its product or service could help save it’s customer $800,000 a year because it’s capable of the doing the following things…then he knows he has a good one. He said that is a company he is going to explore deeper.
Do You Know Your Value Equation?
Rob said that he has a lot less interest in the companies that can’t really answer that question or that haven’t take the time to determine what their true value equation is. In fact, the answer to that question is so important to Rob that he told me that “the people that have actually taken the time to explore and work with their customers and know where the customer’s pain is and how much that pain is costing them, that would be the one question I would ask if I only had one question to ask.” Therefore, as far as Rob is concerned, if you want to set yourself apart as an entrepreneur or a startup company then you need to know your value equation. That means you need to know what the real value is that you bring to your customers and how to explain what that value is.
How Long Does it Really Take to Prepare Business Taxes?
How Long Does it Really Take to Prepare Business Taxes? For most people, just hearing the words business taxes is enough to cause uneasy feelings, but for business owners the thought of doing their own business taxes can be a nightmare. Filing individual tax returns can be hard enough but the process gets even more…
Tax Topics Business Owners Need to Know
Being the owner of a small business can be very rewarding, but very challenging at the same time. One of the biggest challenges small business owners face is dealing with taxes. There are countless items to keep track of and monitor with small business taxes, but these are some of the most important issues to…
Top Tax-Saving Moves Used By High Net Worth Individuals
One of the biggest complaints certain groups or individuals have against the wealthy is that they can take advantage of too many tax breaks and loopholes to lower their tax bill. So what are some of the top tax strategies that high net worth individuals use to keep their tax rates down, and could anyone…
Should University Donations Trigger Tax Breaks for the Wealthy?
Universities big and small receive donations from many different sources, including wealthy alumni. However, not all donations are created equal and because the wealthy donors get a huge tax break for their significant donations, some wonder if that is really fair. For example, Nike co-founder, Phil Knight, recently donated $400 million to Stanford, where he…