NumbersCoach_Logo_Endorsed_UnderLogotype_2
  • Numbers Coaching
    • The Numbers Navigator®
    • Case Studies
  • About
    • Trillium-Numbers Coach Story
  • Resources
    • Blog
    • Numbers Coach TIPS
    • Podcasts
    • Numbers Coach Tools
  • Numbers Coach University
  • Contact
  • Search

Traits of Successful Entrepreneurs

September 8, 2021 by greenmellen

Did you know that 20 percent of new businesses fail in their first year, 50 percent don’t last beyond five years, and 66 percent are gone before 10 years?

Lasting entrepreneurship involves so many factors – it’s not just being an industry or functional expert, or putting hard work into a great idea. External inputs such as economic, market, and industry conditions play a role. And so does plain old luck.

What tends to drive a business to succeed, or not, is its founder(s). And many serial entrepreneurs seem to have a skill set that balances industry and business knowledge, ideas, intuition, the ability to build relationships and close a deal, and willingness to embrace risk.

Entrepreneurs are much like someone who goes up in a plane, and jumps right out without hesitation. But starting a business, like sky diving, is not for everyone. And though there is not one “successful entrepreneur” mold, here are some qualities I have noticed that many profitable self-starting-business owners exemplify:

  • Discipline. Successful entrepreneurs limit distractions and stay focused on making tangible progress each day to drive their business forward. This builds momentum and both internal and external confidence.
  • Confidence. Entrepreneurs also display an uncanny confidence in their product or service from the onset. They absolutely believe their product or service and that it will succeed.
  • Creative. Being creative doesn’t mean an entrepreneur continually invents products or services. It does mean they can think of ways to solve a problem either better, faster, or cheaper than others. Just one of those traits is enough, but two or more of the three are even better.
  • Open-mindedness. This skill helps with the entrepreneur’s ability for agile problem-solving needed in a startup environment. Successful entrepreneurs are open to new ideas and truly listen to others.
  • People skills and empathy. An entrepreneur has learned to inspire, persuade, and communicate articulately their vision. The can also soundly judge others’ characters.
  • Business thinker. An entrepreneur understands motivation and emotion, and they consistently view every situation as a business opportunity or risk, and ensure that the path they take is executed upon to drive beneficial results.
  • Competitive spirit. Finally, entrepreneurs are competitive. They’re not cutthroat, because they know that people generally want to buy from and work with people who wish the best for others. But they do embrace the truth that competitiveness and ambition go hand-in-hand. They also realize when it’s time to move on to the next project.

How does this list make you feel? Motivated? Tense?  Exhausted? Bored? If you’re feeling motivated, you may have an “E” (entrepreneur) personality. You may have what it takes to start a new business venture and see it through to prosperity. More importantly, you may have what it takes to have a fulfilling career as an entrepreneur.

Let us know how we can help you design your entrepreneurial business for financial success!

Mike

Filed Under: Blog, Employer Tips, Human Resources, Leadership, Personal Development, Productivity Management Tagged With: entreprenuership, leadership traits, starting a business, success habits, successful characteristics, successful people, traits of success

The Art of Attracting Outstanding Employees

July 15, 2021 by greenmellen

We’ve all had those absolutely outstanding employees:  well-qualified, quick to learn company operations and culture, exhibit great attitudes. They do what they say they will do, on time and with high quality.

Sometimes it can feel like we just fall into this type of employee. But there are ways to make the “fall” more likely. And since a company is only as good as its employees, attracting outstanding prospective employees is worth the effort.

There are many ways to attract and find great employees. The following are some I have found effective.  Try them out to create an ideal applicant pool.

  1. Go where the best go. Use events – even online – to observe and identify qualified people. Join relevant associations, talk with your customers, look on LinkedIn or other social media sites. Approach potential candidates with appreciation and ideas.
  2. Align your hiring process with your company’s culture and vision. This may seem obvious, however, the saying goes “hire for attitude, train for skills” is important. If the person does not have the traits that align with your culture and the norms you expect of all employees, then no amount of skill can make up the difference.
  3. Hire a good recruiter or staffing agency. Recruiters often follow people through their careers and will know when people are thinking about changing companies – giving you early access to the best candidates.
  4. Participate in the community. Sponsor a nonprofit or charity event. Offer scholarships or internships to local students.
  5. Write a realistic and detailed job description. Include job title, salary range based on seniority, and responsibilities. Try to tell a story about the company so people will get an idea of the work environment and company goals.
  6. Establish relationships with trade schools, colleges, and universities. It’s a win/win for companies who want access to the best candidates entering the workforce and schools who want outstanding career services programs.
  7. Foster a positive, modern, environmentally-responsible, and attractive workspace – wherever it might be. During these days when many desk employees are working from home, that might mean investing in fresh collaboration software, encouraging a daily stretch break, or offering perks like a small home office stipend or shipping an oxygen-releasing houseplant to each employee. For employees going into the office, give some thought to amenities like access to healthy, free snacks and coffee, relaxation areas, and ergonomically correct furniture.
  8. Offer the best benefits you can afford. Many companies use their benefit offering to attract and retain their employees. This could include paid vacation and sick time, mental health days, flexible work times, job-sharing, work-from-home, 401k, profit sharing, casual days, health, life, disability, dental and vision insurance, and tax-free health spending accounts to name a few. Paid gym memberships, parental leave, and student loan and tuition assistance are also gaining popularity.
  9. Ask your highest-performing employees for referrals – because like attracts like. They have first-hand knowledge of your business, plus networks of similarly-talented friends and business contacts. Hiring employee referrals can help build morale and be an opportunity to offer a referral bonus.

This list may seem overwhelming, but there’s no need to tackle them all at once. Test one or two at a time to see which resonate with your business, industry, and the roles you hire. I expect you’ll discover happier, more effective employees – and outstanding candidates.

Filed Under: Employer Tips, Human Resources, Leadership, Numbers Coach TIPS Tagged With: company planning, employee engagement, employee management, employee wellness, hiring employees, leadership, leadership traits, traits of success

It’s Decision Time

July 10, 2020 by greenmellen

The average adult makes about 35,000 decisions a day. Sounds like a lot, doesn’t it?

According to Psychology Today it’s not. And if you think about it, it makes sense: people make many decisions without thinking of them as decisions. (Which pen do I take out of the pen holder? Do I have time to review the report before the meeting?) With all of these opportunities to change the course of our day, our career, our life, it’s a good idea to explore ways to improve decision-making.

The results of a study published in the journal Cognition indicate that not all times of day are created equal when it comes to making decisions. The study tracked 184 chess players who made about 40 “complex human thinking decisions” during a 3- to 15-minute chess game. The results are interesting.

To summarize, study subjects made the decisions most favorable to their game when they were playing between the hours of 8 a.m. and 1 p.m. After 1 p.m., players made decisions more quickly (presumably they were in a post-lunch slump or tiring as the day was progressing), and their decisions were less favorable to their game.

Bottom line: make important decisions in the morning. Sort of. When you sleep and when you get up matters too. If you are a morning person—you know, the early to bed, early to rise type—then your best decision-making time is the morning. But if you’re a night person, then your “morning” is during the five hours after you rise for the day. So, relax: if you don’t get out of bed until 9 or 10 a.m. , then you haven’t missed your prime decision-making hours.

A lifehacker.com article by Adam Dachis also supports the morning person/night owl concept, recommending that people identify when they’re most able to make good decisions and then resolve to make important decisions during that span only. Creativity coach Mark McGuinness advises people not to worry too much about little decisions, because they generally don’t have a long-term impact on your life.  For example, what clothes you wear on a particular day or what you eat for dinner doesn’t change the direction of your life. (Although, should you wear neon orange cowboy boots with your suit and purple fedora to the office, the boss may question your judgment.)

McGuinness also recommends weighing the pros and cons before making big decisions. And don’t ignore your gut. He says it’s best to take more time (if possible) to land on a decision when your logical side disagrees with your instincts. In other words, intuition matters.

Should you follow this advice? Determine the best time, and then think it over. It’s your decision.

Filed Under: Employer Tips, Human Resources, Leadership, Numbers Coach TIPS, Personal Development, Productivity Management Tagged With: CEO leadership, leadership, leadership characteristics, leadership strategy, leadership style, leadership traits, success habits, successful characteristics, successful people, time management, time management systems, traits of success

If You’re Happy and You Know It. . . You Likely Have Good Friends

January 29, 2020 by greenmellen

The key to happiness (along with the location of the Fountain of Youth) has eluded humans since the beginning of time.

Some keys to happiness have now been uncovered as a result of one of the world’s largest longitudinal studies of people’s health and happiness. Launched by Harvard University in 1938, the study followed then-college sophomores into old age. With fewer than 20 of the original subjects still alive, the results were released in 2015.

The study subjects were in several groups. The first consisted of sophomore students at Harvard, who graduated during WWII. The second group consisted of boys from some of the poorest neighborhoods in Boston. Additional groups were added over the years, including some of the men’s spouses and children.

The study had three primary takeaways about the keys to happiness, as outlined below:

  1. The most consistent factor in the lives of happy and healthy people is forming and maintaining close relationships with others. People who have meaningful connections to family, friends and their community tend to be healthier, so they are likely to live longer than those who do not.
  2. The quality of relationships is much more important than the quantity. Having a few good, supportive, close friends is much better than having a plethora of acquaintances or shallow relationships. And relationships that are full of conflict are not healthy. Robert Waldinger, a psychiatrist and professor at Harvard Medical School told The Harvard Gazette, “Good, warm and close relationships…have the ability to buffer us from some of the slings and arrows of getting old.”
  3. Good relationships are good for your brain. In addition to being good for physical and emotional health, the study also shows that people with meaningful relationships tend to have sharper and longer memories.

To have positive and close relationships, the article suggests trading some screen time for “people time,” and working on existing relationships by trying a new activity. Something as simple as taking walks together can revitalize a relationship. Another suggestion is to contact a friend or a relative with whom you have lost touch: reconnecting with people from the past is often very emotionally rewarding.

Virginia Tech gerontologist Dr. Rosemary Blieszner provides advice about making new friends: “Be sure to take the time to get to know one other. Share some personal information gradually, as you get to know each other. Find activities you both enjoy, and be sure to let the other person know you’re interested in getting together again.”

Advancements in medicine and science are enabling people to live longer and longer. The key to making the most of our longer lives is learning how to be as emotionally, mentally, and physically healthy as possible during these bonus years.

Filed Under: Human Resources, Leadership, Numbers Coach TIPS, Personal Development Tagged With: employee wellness, leadership characteristics, leadership traits, success habits, successful characteristics, successful people, traits of success

Buffett’s Advice for Financial Success

September 21, 2018 by greenmellen

The “Oracle of Omaha” has created an impressive following of people and his investing results have proven the test of time.  Below are some simple bits of wisdom that I believe are timeless.

  1. Never lose money.  Buffet’s rule # 1 is to not lose money.  And his rule #2 is to remember rule #1.  Keep in mind if you lose 50% of your investment, then it takes 100% return to get back to even.
  2. Get high value for low price.  What he means is value is what you pay for.  Make sure that you are paying the right price for the value in the product, business or investment that you are buying.
  3. Build healthy money habits.  Habits are what drive our behavior.  It’s been said that finance is 80% behavior and 20% math.  If we don’t change poor behaviors with our wallet then we can’t expect to find success with money or building a business.
  4. Avoid debt and, more specifically, avoid credit card debt.  Credit card interest rates can be as high as 18% and more.  If you have to roll over your credit card balance regularly, then you can’t afford spending on it.  In effect, you are trading your future for your present satisfaction.
  5. Keep cash on hand.  Come up with what your minimum cash balance needs to be.  Is it 3 months or 6 months of expenses?  “Cash is to a business as oxygen is to an individual: Never think about it when it is present, the only thing in mind when it is absent,” said Buffet.
  6. Invest in yourself.  Your biggest income producing asset is yourself.  Improve your skills to make yourself more valuable to the market.  Unlike other assets and investments, “Nobody can tax it away and they can’t steal it away,” said Buffet.
  7. Learn about how to manage money as a part of the investment in yourself.  Not everyone enjoys this subject, however, there are simple methods to follow that help you win with money.  Spend less than you make. . . save 15% into a low cost index mutual fund. . . it’s not how much you make, it’s how much you decide to spend.
  8. Trust a low-cost index fund. Expenses matter when it comes to returns on your investments.  Consistently adding to your investments each month or quarter exercises an important “money muscle.”
  9. Give back on a regular basis.  Giving of our “time, talents, and treasure” to our community and nonprofits is a natural law of human nature where we want to help others in need.  Giving produces psychic benefits for the giver and it helps society move forward.
  10. Invest for the long term.  Investing not only with dollars but in ourselves is a long term game.  Building true financial security takes time.  As Buffet said, “Someone’s sitting in the shade today because someone planted a tree a long time ago.”

Together these pieces of advice can help take us on the journey to financial security.  The advice is simple and timeless.

Let us know how we can help you achieve financial success in your business!

Filed Under: Business Growth, Business Planning, Employer Tips, Financial Metrics, Financial Modeling, Key Performance Indicators, Numbers Coach TIPS Tagged With: financial education, financial freedom, financial independence, financial leadership, success habits, successful characteristics, traits of success

Prioritization: The Foremost Rockefeller Habit for Success

September 12, 2018 by greenmellen

There is a belief that the best way to improve your work productivity is to emulate the habits of someone highly successful. John D. Rockefeller, who founded the Standard Oil Company in 1870 and ran it until 1897, is one of the true titans of American business. And so, the book Mastering the Rockefeller Habits by Verne Harnish made its way onto my reading list.

As the book documents, Rockefeller’s approach to running a growing business was really quite simple.  He identified three underlying habits that he considered essential to good business management:

  1. Setting priorities for the organization.
  2. Collecting and analyzing sufficient management data.
  3. Establishing an effective organizational rhythm.

Of the three key habits, setting priorities is first, and arguably the most important.

Setting Company Priorities

Rockefeller developed a list of the Top 5 priorities of his business for the upcoming year and the next quarter.  He also ranked those top priorities in order and set a clear Top 1 priority from among his Top 5. He communicated these priorities throughout his company and encouraged employees to set personal priorities that aligned with and supported the company’s priorities.

It seems to be common sense to solve the problem at hand before moving to another challenge, but not every team or employee has the discipline to follow through to completion of a difficult task. Rockefeller’s managers provided the discipline needed to make sure the top priority was completed before the second priority was undertaken.

As productivity tools go, Rockefeller’s Top 5 priorities list is one of the most widely used in American business history.  As an example of the effectiveness of the tool and how soon it came to be appreciated by others, Harnish relates the story of a management consultant who was summoned to the office of Charles Schwab in the early 1900s. At the time, Schwab was the CEO of Bethlehem Steel, and he was looking for ideas to improve the business.

The consultant told Schwab how he could improve Bethlehem Steel’s bottom line by using a simple productivity tool. It was Rockefeller’s Top 5 priorities list.

The consultant told Schwab to start each day by writing down the top 5 things he wanted to accomplish for the company’s benefit. They had to be prioritized from 1 to 5, with 1 being the objective likely to have the greatest impact on the business.

Schwab was instructed to work only on priority 1 until it was completed. If it was not accomplished by day’s end, it remained the top priority the next day. Under no circumstance could he move to priority 2 without completing priority 1.

The consultant told Schwab to implement this principle and afterwards pay him whatever he felt the advice was worth. If it didn’t work, Schwab owed him nothing. A period of time elapsed and one day the consultant received a check in the mail from Mr. Schwab. The check was written for $25,000, which was a great deal of money in those days – something over $600,000 in today’s terms. That’s how beneficial the borrowed productivity tool was to Bethlehem Steel, which became a world leader in its industry.

Rockefeller knew, and Schwab learned, this: Management of any business, large or small, needs to clearly establish and communicate to employees important priorities that will help the company make progress towards its vision.

How well have you identified and articulated to employees your company’s priorities? If you’re not sure, give Trillium Financial a call at (404) 353-2148 and we’ll help find the answer.

Filed Under: Blog, Business Growth, Business Planning, Employer Tips, Human Resources, Leadership, Personal Development, Productivity Management Tagged With: leadership characteristics, leadership coaching, leadership habits, leadership style, leadership traits, success habits, successful characteristics, traits of success

What Should A CEO’s Role Be?

November 3, 2015 by greenmellen

by Tim Fulton, Vistage Group Chair

I was asked recently to describe the role of the Chief Executive Officer (CEO) of an organization. As I considered the question I realized that there were at least six that came to mind. I am sure there are more. Here are the six roles of a CEO I described:

Casting Director

I believe that staffing a small business is much like casting a movie or a play. No matter how good a screenplay is, if the cast is not strong, the production will be a flop. Small businesses are the same way. You can have a dynamite business plan, but it’s the people who make it successful.

Jim Collins, author of Good To Great, said it best: “You must get the right people on the bus, wrong people off the bus, and the right people in the right seats.” This may be the most important role of the CEO.

Scorekeeper

I attended my son’s baseball game recently and encountered a very interesting (and frustrating) situation. The game started and it became apparent right away that nobody was operating the scoreboard. No record of balls & strikes, runs scored, or outs recorded. Initially, this did not seem to be a big deal. However, the game progressed, innings passed, & runs were scored. As spectators, we were totally in the dark. We didn’t know who was winning or losing, what stage the game was in (inning), or even what the batter’s count was. The players were just as ignorant about the status of the game as we were because they depended upon the scoreboard as much as we did. Where was the scorekeeper?

How many small businesses are run without a scorekeeper? I believe that there are many. Employees work hard, just like the baseball players, never knowing the results of their efforts. Just as it doesn’t make sense for the baseball scorekeeper to only keep score for himself, it also doesn’t make sense for the business owner to keep his own score and not share the results with his key stakeholders.

Designer

I often share the story of a sculling coach whose team was unable to win any races until he took the time to lift the racing boat out of the water and discovered that the boat had a fatal design flaw. I believe that it is the role of the CEO to oversee the design of his/her business and than make sure that periodically that design is reviewed to make sure it is still working.

Michael Gerber, author of the best-selling book The E Myth, suggests that while designing our business we should assume that it is the first of ten thousand (10,000) locations. What does that mean? I interpret that to say that we should seek out a design that can be replicated and one that ensures the highest level of consistency of performance. Gerber also suggests that we should design our business as if we were designing a game. The game has rules. There must be a way to win the game. The game must be fun. We shouldn’t design a game for our employees that we are not prepared to play ourselves.

Chief Fun Officer (CFO)

Have you ever seen a business that was having fun that wasn’t also very successful? I believe that the two go hand in hand and that ultimately the CEO is responsible for making that happen. Let me be clear: I do not believe that the CEO should do this at the expense of his ability to lead. The CEO does not need to also be the CEY…Chief Executive Yuckster; responsible for making everyone laugh.

The CEO should make sure that employees have the opportunity for fun as it contributes to their performance. Examples of this might be celebrations (birthdays, anniversaries, etc), toys in the workplace (ping-pong, foosball etc.), or just looking for opportunities to be light-hearted. Laughter or even a smile can do wonders in a high stress/high performance work environment.

Storyteller

Leadership guru and Vistage speaker, Don Scminke, shared a leadership model with one of my groups that really made sense to me and my members. He suggested that the results we seek from our employees are a direct result of their work behavior. Their behavior is driven by their beliefs. Their beliefs are a result of the “story”. What story you ask? Our story. The story of your business. There exists a story within every business. Sometimes more than one. The story might be a positive one, thus resulting in great organizational results. Or the story may one of doom and gloom, and hence, performance suffers.

I believe that the CEO is responsible for developing the right story for their business and then communicating that story at every opportunity. In fact, each CEO should have three stories to tell at any given moment: a story about the past, one about the current situation of the business, and maybe most importantly, a story about the future. Consider this, as a young child; how did we learn about life? Most of us did through stories. Not just stories from books, but also stories from our parents, our grandparents, and our friends. At an early age, those stories most certainly impacted our behavior and most likely still impact our lives as adults. Stories are very powerful communication tools…

Race Car Driver

I believe that so much of what a successful CEO does today is managing velocity. Customers want everything faster. The pace of business today is much quicker than ever before. Hence, the CEO needs to be able to accelerate his/her business accordingly. Vistage speaker Ole Carlsson suggests that “the CEO must have his hand on the gear shift at all times prepared to up shift or downshift at any given moment”.

Likewise, the CEO must know when to pull his car over for a quick pit stop when necessary. That’s time to fuel up (cash infusion), check the tires (employee performance reviews or 121 meetings) and check under the hood (planning meeting). One speaker said recently that “changing a business is like changing a flat tire on a car…doing 60 miles an hour”. Not even a racecar driver would attempt that feat.

What have I left out? I’m sure there are several more traditional CEO roles that you find yourself in at times. Which role are you most comfortable in? Which role are you most uncomfortable in? What role is most needed in your organization today? Sometimes it’s better to be asking the right questions than always looking for more answers.

Filed Under: Business Growth, Employer Tips, Human Resources, Leadership, Numbers Coach TIPS, Personal Development Tagged With: financial leadership, leadership, leadership coaching, leadership habits, leadership style, leadership traits, successful characteristics, traits of success

  • « Previous Page
  • 1
  • 2
NumbersCoach_Logo_green-gray_stacked

Proud Supporter of

Screenshot 2025-09-09 150120

Get Financial Tips Delivered To Your Inbox

Protect your business' financial health with our monthly financial tips.

Contact Info

P.O. BOX 250
Decatur, GA 30031

404-353-2148

info@numberscoach.net

© 2026 Trillium Financial, Inc
Privacy Policy | Accessibility | Terms