Book Summary: The E-Myth Revisited
  
				 Ever wonder why most small businesses-- no matter how huge  effort they put in their endeavor--still fail?  Micheal  Gerber reveals the answers in this book.  Accordingly, the  future of small businesses revolve in only three  philosophies:  the e-myth (entrepreneurial myth), the  turn-key revolution, and the business development process.  The E-myth  The e-myth, or the entrepreneurial myth, evolved from one  very fatal assumption--  that the success of every  business is simply achieved by summing up the following:  an entrepreneur’s desire to own a business plus the certain  amount of capital he puts in plus the knowing the amount of  targeted profit.   Little did the entrepreneurs know that this assumption  spell DISASTER rather than SUCCESS.  Entrepreneurs need to  learn to focus more on the business—the people involved in  it and the phases it normally undergoes.  Knowledge on these  can save small businesses from experiencing entrepreneurial  seizure—a stage wherein an entrepreneur goes through feeling  of exhilaration, exhaustion, and despair.   Small businesses basically consist of three main characters  namely: the technician (the doer and builder), the manager  (the planner), and the entrepreneur (the dreamer, visionary).    Moreover, small businesses have different life phases.   These are: infancy (the technician’s phase); adolescence  (getting some help phase); beyond the comfort zone; and,  maturity and the entrepreneurial perspective.   The Turn-key Revolution  As implied by the term itself, Turn-key Revolution speaks of  the distinct transformations on the way businesses are  managed and should be managed. One very prominent example  is the introduction of McDonalds the idea of business format  franchise to the business world.  The business format franchise has set dramatic turn around  on the future of small businesses.  Here, the franchisor  entitles the franchisee to owning rights to his entire  business system. This format is anchored on the belief that  the real product of a business is its sales technique rather  than what it sells.  The Business Development Process  The business development process is the response to the  unending dynamism of the business world.  It equips the  entrepreneur with the necessary tools to preempt the  continuous changes happening around. The process is  comprised of three elemental stages: innovation,  quantification  
				 
				
 
				 and orchestration.   The business development program requires the following  aspects to be defined:  Your Primary Aim.  The owner’s primary aim should center  on what he really wishes, needs and wants for his life.  Defining this will push the owner to pursue his defined  entrepreneurial dreams.  Your Strategic Objectives.  This contains standards that help  the owner achieve his goals for his business.  This should  answer the question:  What purpose will this serve my primary  aim?   Your Organizational Strategy.  Business owners should learn how  to appreciate the value of organizational structures.  Some  points to consider are organizing around personalities,  organizing your company, and position contract.  Your Management Strategy.  As the owner you should recognize  the truth that the successful implementation of a management  strategy is not dependent on the people who could implement it  but on the system instead.  Your People Strategy.  This refers to the approach you take  towards your people and their work. To make people appreciate  the work they do, you should make them understand the idea  behind each of their task assignments.   Your Marketing Strategy.  Here is the stage where all attention  suddenly shifts from owner to the customer. You set aside your  personal goals first and start focusing on the customer’s needs.   Your Systems Strategy.  There are three kinds of systems in a  business: the hard systems, the soft systems and the information  systems. The hard systems refer to all those in your business  that are inanimate and has no life. The soft systems refer to  all those that could be living or inanimate. The information  systems are everything else in the business that provides you  with data relating to how the two earlier systems interact.   
  Summary By: Regine P. Azurin   http://www.bizsum.com
  "A Lot Of Great Books....Too Little Time To Read"
  Free Book Summaries Of Latest Bestsellers for Busy Executives and Entrepreneurs
  Mailto:freearticle@bizsum.com
  BusinessSummaries is a BusinessSummaries.com service. 
  (c) Copyright 2001-2002, BusinessSummaries.com - Wisdom In A Nutshell
  samantha@bizsum.com
  
			
  |