By Kim Castle
Last week I was exercising in the canyons of Southern California by climbing hundreds of stairs. I love being away from my business because I’m free to expand for at least 60 minutes.
Out of the blue an idea for a completely new product came into my mind and it wouldn’t leave. It grew so strong it drowned out the Black Eyed Peas blaring from my IPod.
It started out soft like a tickle and before I knew it my thoughts weren’t my own.
I started seeing the product and how it was constructed; all the way down to what color the stitching was and where the logo would go.
I got excited about how there wasn’t a product like this on the market and how it would radically change the way people did something.
My heart soared with the charity that would benefit from the overflow of the millions of dollars it would generate. In my mind, I even started contacting people that could connect me to manufacturers in China.
Before I knew it, I wasn’t climbing stairs... I was soaring. I was high off an idea — from the fumes of a gas.
If you’re an entrepreneur you know the high I’m talking about. You may even be an “idea junkie”. You know who you are. It’s okay — awareness is the first step.
You also know the pain that often comes along with it; especially the pain of not making it real fast enough and getting people to buy it as quickly as possible before the next idea comes.
When speaking to entrepreneurs around the world about branding, I often refer to the “idea” of a business like a gas — like air. It’s “there” in feeling, but it doesn’t have form. It’s the translation from the idea into tangible form that traps so many and prevents them from ever getting beyond the high.
Here are four ways that just the “idea” of your business could cost you everything and what you can do about it.
• It’s not real — until you make it real. Without getting your idea out of your mind and into a tangible form it’s just a possibility; only serving you in the moment that you think of it. There are many ways to make it tangible even at the beginning.
Example: One client of mine, before she worked with me, would pay thousands of dollars to have her book jackets designed BEFORE she even wrote the book. Just beware, while this does get the idea out of you into a form you can touch, it’s done so with great risk. Without first establishing the core of idea from the inside, that outside influence could take you away from what the business or product really is. That’s why the way we approaching branding is vital in the beginning of a business or product development.
• It’s so flexible — there's nothing there. Without putting up walls (or mental blinders) by establishing what an idea for a business really is and what it is not, you are at the mercy of the hundreds of potential business ideas that your brain is feeding you daily (each one is more exciting than the last). Trust that each idea carries with it a great potential. But they are just an idea until it’s impacting a customer’s life.
This is why the entire first half of our brand creation process doesn’t even involve the customer. We focus on creating the door and house that they will walk into and want to stay there. What your idea is, is a solid half of the relationship you have with your customer.
• It’s worth nothing — until you add interest. While you have experienced the idea, just having it is not unique. At the same exact time, someone else could be having the same exact thought. After all, we all feed from the same pond.
What makes it unique is what drives your need to create it. People don’t just buy because they have nothing else to do. They need a reason to choose one thing over another. It’s the very same reason that drives you to take action on just a thought.
• It means nothing — until it means something to someone else. People can’t buy your idea unless they can connect to it in a way that impacts their life.
Think about what it would be like trying to sell someone air. It’s the same as selling them your idea. It needs to be clearly translated into a tangible and emotional experience, if you truly want to move beyond the feeling it gives you.
That said, your ideas do have great value at the start of a business. Without ideas, you’d have nothing to act on. But ideas are just the spark to get you started. They feel so great because it takes a lot of fuel to create something out of nothing. That fuel is excitement. That's why this is stage one of the eight stages of business development. You need this spark to get you into action to make something out of nothing.
By harnessing that excitement with form, foundation, reason and connection, you’ll have what it takes to share your idea “high” with the world. And they’ll gladly pay for it...again...and again.
***
Kim Castle is an internationally known speaker, columnist, author, and co-creator of BrandU® where she guides entrepreneurs around the world to experience clarity all the way to the bank™ by systematically growing their business from idea, to brand, to consist sales in the market. Do you have what it takes to created a successful conscious business find out with BrandU's Conscious Entrepreneur Experience. www.BrandU.com/freecee


Good post. For many of us ideas flow but the execution never happens. I have come to realize that a fear of failure is often the culprit. I look at all these young, successful online marketers, for example, and see that they just jump right in with their ideas and don't worry about failing. When they fail they pass along their wisdom and move on or move forward to fix and/or tweak the failure. Therein lies the key...don't be afraid to fail! Even misdirected action is better than no action!
Thanks for the kick...
RStevens
Hi MaryEllen,
I loved this newsletter and most importantly the piece on taking your kids pictures...why? For two reasons...first of all I like to snap pictures of my grand kids, too. I'm not good at getting down on their level...guess it's a grandma thing, but this trip to visit them, I'm going to start...and I will send you a picture:)
Secondly, as I thought about what you were saying I saw a similarity I could apply to my business. I've been working my nutritional business for over 13 1/2 years and sometimes I tend to forget where I've come from.
When you mentioned to get down on their level and look at it from a different point of view, the light bulb lit up and I realized...I need to remember what it was like to feel like they are feeling.
Thank you for renewing my passion, my drive and rekindling why I got started to begin with!
Carla
Dear Carla,
You just made my day. I love that you took the tip for taking better pictures and applied it to you biz. Thanks for sharing this with our Working Moms Only community!
Cheers,
ME
Kim Castles post is perfect and something I can totally relate to.
It's always good to be reminded about following through on those
high flying ideas.
thanks!
Dear Kim,
thanks so much for sharing your realistic experience about the flood of ideas. I would love to see more posts about harnessing those ideas, and better yet filing them and reviewing them. I thought this was just the curse of a women entrepreneur having so many thoughts buzzing around in your head.
Your story about crystallizing the idea and putting up "walls" made me think of a few better ways to take ideas and analyze them, then shelf or chase them further until at least I can see if walls are realistic, or made of paper.
Sharon