5 Ways to Maximize Your Resources, According to Entrepreneur's Editor in ChiefOwn your time -- and everything else!

ByJason Feifer

雷竞技手机版

This article is excerpted from Entrepreneur magazine editor in chief Jason Feifer's monthly newsletter, The Feifer Five. Each month, he sends out five insights to help you think more entrepreneurially.Subscribe here.

Here's an overused word in business:resources. What does it mean exactly -- everything around us? Anything we want? Here's my answer: Resources are the things that can help us achieve our goals, and while most of us could list off many of the resources around us, we don't actually spend the time figuring out how to maximize them. Resources are really two things: There's what you take at face value, and there's what you can get by using them creatively.

So let's start using them creatively. Here, five ways to start.



1. Don't seek mentors. Seekmentorship.

I love the entrepreneurship community's focus on mentors, but I think it's also bred confusion: So many young people ask me how to find a mentor, or they ask someone tobea mentor, as if "mentor" is an official job title. As if it's something you sign a contract to begin.

我说:是的,有时候人们开发n explicit mentor-mentee relationship. Great! But the best mentors may never know they're your mentor. They may just be someone you've gotten to know -- maybe a current or former colleague or boss or professor, or someone you respect who you met somewhere, or emailed with. And every six months or so, you suggest coffee to catch up, and ask them some questions. Maybe you don't have one person like this, but have a series of them -- people for different parts of your career. A leadership mentor. A negotiation mentor. A skills mentor.

If you ask them to be a mentor -- like, an official thing -- they may worry they can't provide what you need. But if you just let it flow, if they become invested in you, then you've achieved what you need.

Multiple people have over the years told me they consider me a mentor. I had no idea! I just thought we were staying in touch. I just liked talking to them. How awesome is that? The world around you is full of mentors. Knowledge is everywhere.



2. There's no excuse for making excuses

"The common demonstrator of failure is excuses." That's what Jon Taffer, host ofBar Rescue, told us when we spoke forhis March cover story in雷竞技手机版. Here's a man who's filmed 155 episodes of a TV show about helping small businesses, and runs a consulting firm helping giant companies make major turnarounds. "Whenever I ask someone, "Why is your bar failing?' I get a million excuses. They say it's Trump. They say it's the euro. It's construction on my street. It's wintertime. It's this. It's that. Theyneversay they're failing because ofthemselves. Not once has someone ever looked up at me and said, "I'm failing because ofme.'"

This is the flip-side of the entrepreneurial deal. We make things happen for ourselves, and that means we enjoy the rewards ourselves -- but it also means we must own the downside. I'll go a step further: It'sgoodto own the downside! We can't control the weather, politics, or the economy, but wecancontrol what we do ourselves. When something's in our hands -- when we can feel it, shape it, control it -- that's when we can do our best work. I love Taffer's message because it's empowering: When we stop making excuses, we can start doing. Anddoingis what entrepreneurs do best.



3. Own your future -- don't rent it

As a guy in media, I was haunted bythis taleof what happened to a once-booming content site called LittleThings. The quick of it: "LittleThings, which started as a pet supplies e-commerce site, became a poster child for astonishing audience growth, topping 50 million uniques in three years by sharing inspirational stories on Facebook." Its founder once explained the success this way: "As long as you constantly pivot within the Facebook ecosystem, you'll be fine."

Then Facebook changed its algorithm in a way that LittleThings couldn't adjust to. Here's what happened to its traffic:



Shortly after that: Death.

Digiday(which supplied that graph above) summarized the story this way: "Live by the algorithm, die by the algorithm". True enough. But let's go larger, and say this: "Live by someone else's terms, die by someone else's terms." If we don'town our relationships-- to our customers, our audience, our fans, our partners -- we're simply renting it from someone else. And that leaves us exposed.

This isn't news in the media world; everyone in my industry is freaking out about how much control we've ceded to platforms. But I hope entrepreneurs in other industries are thinking about this too. Do you have a direct line to your customers? Are you making sure those relationships are maintained and ever-growing? Can you do more to stay in touch? LittleThings is a warning to everyone: Own it, or lose it.



4. Never underestimate the inexperienced

Here's something I wanted to yell at someone recently:You won't get destroyed by your nearest competitor. You'll get destroyed by someone you never saw coming!

Want to hear about who doesn't understand that? A young entrepreneurrecently tweeted关于如何使废弃千禧年的刻板印象d. Millennials are grown up now, he wrote, and they're leaders. I retweeted it; he's absolutely right. Someone replied to us both: "Wow! A whole 10 years of experience?!?! They must be geniuses by now".

我想回答:哟,假的,你下timate youth at your own risk. You underestimate the power of fresh eyes. In fact, if you've been doing the same thing for so long that "a whole 10 years" sounds like a short amount of time, my guess is you've gotten slow. You've gotten comfortable. You're not seeing things clearly. You're not open to new opportunities. You're not prepared for the competition. And you don't stand a chance.

Want to know what to do with millennials? Learn from them. (Are you a millennial? Go learn from someone even younger.) Either work with the next generation, or ride out your final days in ignorance until someone takes everything away from you.



5. Spend time like you spend money


It's always flattering (and still a little jarring) to see people quote me on social media. And this line in particular, froma recent column of mine, has shown up quite a bit on Twitter and Instagram.

There may never be time for everything, but there is always time for plenty.

Why does it resonate? Because we're busy people. We don't have time for everything -- it's literally impossible. But if we prioritize properly, wecanhave time for the things that matter.

As I say in the column, I don't want to work nonstop -- that only ends in burnout -- but I want to make sure I'm using my time as wisely as possible. So I started measuring time in terms of outcome. I'd ask myself:What do I get for this hour spent? What can I show for it later?Time with family and friends has an obviously valuable outcome: My relationships are stronger. But other times, my options might be watching a game, scrolling through Twitter or writing this newsletter.

So I started to think about what I'd rather say I did in a week. Watched the game? Read the tweets? Or wrote a new newsletter for many people to read?

Now I have my answer. (I hope you thought it was worth it! ?)

Enjoy this newsletter? Don't forget tosubscribe!

Jason Feifer

Entrepreneur Staff

Editor in Chief

Jason Feifer is the editor in chief of雷竞技手机版magazine and host of the podcastProblem Solvers. Outside of雷竞技手机版, he is the author of the bookBuild For Tomorrow, which helps readers find new opportunities in times of change, and co-hosts the podcastHelp Wanted, where he helps solve listeners' work problems. He also writes anewslettercalled One Thing Better, which each week gives you one better way to build a career or company you love.

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