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Why you must run a 'dhanda' before starting up

May 25, 2016 09:16 IST

It helps to gain some work experience and life skills before starting your own company says Anuraj Jain.

Startup

Have you ever tried selling vada pav or samosas in high school or college just to earn some pocket money?

Ever attempted newspaper vending to make a few extra bucks for a "fun trip"?

What about working for a company without pay just to learn various skills?

How about running your own enterprise (small or big) and dealing with the ground realities of business?

If the answer to most of the above mentioned questions is "no", then you should seriously rethink your decision to embark on a new start-up.

With the funding environment tightening in the last few months, one important learning from recent failures is that founders should run a company with a view to becoming profitable in, at least, the medium to long term, rather than just chasing senseless models with deferred monetisation strategies.

Every penny being spent on the business (whether bootstrapped or funded by a VC) should have a return in mind.

This still does not guarantee success (due to various external factors) but it does protect you from potential downside.

Here are some of the reasons why it pays to be a businessman before you become a founder or co-founder of a start-up:

Risk appetite

Business is all about taking risks. It is a journey through ups and downs with the vagaries of the real world.

When you run a business, you are responsible not only for your own fate but also several other families.

Business hones your risk-taking capacity and prepares you for uncertainties in life.

Patience

It takes a lot of patience to keep your cool during a crisis.

Once you have gone through several crests and troughs, your behaviour becomes more predictable and you can understand how people behave during crisis situations. Your tolerance level goes up!

"Fall seven times and stand up eight." -- Japanese proverb

Network

One of the biggest benefits of running your own company is that you get to meet a lot of people who help you build your network in all spheres of life.

The adage, "It's not what you know but who you know," is true to a certain extent in business and the same holds true for start-ups as well!

"The richest people in the world look for and build networks, everyone else looks for work" -- Robert Kiyosaki

People management 

Business owners hire employees in their companies right from housekeepers to directors, and they learn how to manage staff to get the best out of them. People management is one of the most important skills acquired when you run a business.

Fund management 

In a dhanda business, there is no VC money to support the first couple of years and founders are on their own to raise money from their friends, families or acquaintances.

Their single point agenda is to become profitable and use those profits to grow the company.

This inculcates a frugal and cost-conscious attitude in the entrepreneur and helps him to tide over crisis situations when he is finally running his own start-up.

Local regulations and operating environment 

Laws and regulations differ across countries and even across states within a country. It is only when you actually get down to starting an entity that you will know what it takes to do it.

Initial hiccups and dealing with issues such as taxation, labour laws, legality, fundraising, etc set the tone for your future, so that you will be able to replicate the same when the stakes are higher.

In a nutshell, it's a big help to have some 'real life' business experience before venturing into the start-up world, as it will help you look at things from a more practical angle.

You cannot get that perspective just by devouring thousands of articles and viewpoints from different businessmen across the globe.

As someone rightly said, 'To get to heaven, first you have to die!'

The author Anurag is co-founder and COO at KredX, an online bill discounting platform.

Lead image used for representational purposes only. Image: Unsplash/Pixabay.com

Anurag Jain