This letter was written in response to a moderator's
comment in an e-mail digest. It was originally published September
26, 2001. To put things in context, here is the comment this letter
is in response to:
I've long thought that it's a sad thing when pornography businesses
are thriving on the Internet, while businesses such as [name of
business omitted] struggle to stay alive. Not a very positive commentary
on our frail species.
I read our moderator's
comment bemoaning the perceived success of "porn" versus
the perceived non-success of [name of business omitted] - and
chuckled to myself.
There are days I stand
at the front door of my brick and mortar store and watch the "successful" drug dealers in the
parking lot of the bank across the street. Their business has its
expenses and no matter how lucrative it may seem, it is just not
a kind of business I want to run. There was a time as well, people
gawked and were amazed by the "successful" dot-comers
and all the perceived wealth and prosperity they seemed to own.
To all good things must come an end. When we spend too long looking
at whom we believe to be successful, we forget about our own endeavors
and the investment we must make. When you look at your bottom line,
remember why you chose this path. Money is the first reason for
most businesses, but I have found that it is not usually the first
motivator and hardly the only reason for going into business.
Maybe the Internet moves information faster than any prior form
of communication, but it is not going to change human nature and
therefore the laws of business. It still takes 9 months from conception
to birth for a human. It still takes 24 hours for the earth to
revolve around its axis. It still takes 29 days for the moon to
revolve around the earth. Even though the communication moves faster
or differently, the human synapse still works like it always has.
Like a match being struck for the first time, dot-comers burned
through some cash real fast and made a bright light - most burned
out before lighting anything sustaining.
If money is your motivator
and you think Porn is the successful way to get it, go into Porn.
If you read that statement and do
not instantly want to start a Porn site, then there must be other
motivators to your on- line business. I know of ways to make my
companies more profitable, and I choose not to. I have a plan,
and I have a guideline of what these companies are, and to waiver
from that plan is not in my best interest. If they don't make money
with the plan, then I'll close them. I may look to consciously
change the plan, but changing a business model is a serious endeavor.
If you haven't done
so already it is time to take a personal inventory. Why am I
in business? Why am I in the business I am in and what
does it pay me that I'll miss (include money or the lack thereof)?
If I close my business tomorrow, how will my life be better? Now
you have a REAL balance sheet, not one based solely on money. When
it comes down to it, even if we are salesmen, we are humans first
and we make human decisions. "... the only right is what is
after my constitution, the only wrong what is against it."
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