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\nAbout the book
\nThe only person you need to start and run a highly profitable and sustainable company is you
\nWhat if the real key to a richer and more fulfilling career was not to create and scale up a new business, but rather, to be able to work for yourself, determine your own hours and become a (highly profitable) and sustainable company of one? Suppose the better-and smarter-solution is simply to remain small?
Company of One\xa0is a refreshing new approach centered on staying small and avoiding growth, for any size of business. Not as a freelancer who only gets paid on a per piece basis, and not as an entrepreneurial start-up that wants to scale up as soon as possible, but as a small business that is deliberately committed to staying that way.
By staying small, you can have freedom to pursue more meaningful pleasures in life, and avoid the headaches that result from dealing with employees, long meetings, or worrying about expansion.\xa0Company of One\xa0introduces this unique business strategy and explains how to make it work for you, including how to generate cash flow on an ongoing basis.
\nSource: Penguin Books
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\nAbout the Author
\nPAUL JARVIS is a veteran of the online tech world, and over the years he has had corporate clients such as Microsoft, Yahoo, Mercedes-Benz, Warner Music and even Shaquille O'Neal. These days, he teaches courses online and does consulting from his home on a remote island off of Vancouver.
\nSource: Google Books
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\nIdea #1 \u2013 Start small, define growth, keep learning
\nFirst, you need to be clear on what a company of one is, and isn\u2019t.
\nThe most important thing for a company of one is knowing what constitutes \u2018enough\u2019. Enough revenue, enough customers, enough profit. This was demonstrated in the book when Paul met a friend surfing who told him that he\u2019d made enough money to now take the rest of the year off to go climbing.
\nThis clarity on \u2018enough\u2019 meant the friend\u2019s business fit into his lifestyle. Knowing what is sufficient will aid your decision making and in turn build, and retain, your resilience and autonomy in your business.
\nThe overall aim is to become smaller, smarter, more efficient and more resilient. Many companies solve problems by doing MORE. Throwing more money or people at a problem, which generally results in more problems in the long term.
\nA company of one ultimately has small as an end goal, it\u2019s a company that questions growth, rather than chases it.
\nA couple of notes;
\nFreelancers aren\u2019t technically companies of one, although this is a good model to start with. As they are usually still trading their (finite amount of) time for money, this doesn\u2019t provide the efficiencies or resilience required for a company of one.
\nContrary to the name, a company of one mindset doesn\u2019t have to just apply to companies of one person. The book gives the example of Buffer, which had ~70 employees at the time of the book being written, who have rejected typical start-up style growth goals and work with a mindset of better, not bigger.
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\nIdea #2 - The company of one mindset
\nThe question should always be \u2018how do I make my company better, not bigger\u2019. It\u2019s a focus on stability, simplicity and independence. This might mean avoiding external funding and favouring internally generated / organic growth when it\u2019s self-sustaining, not just spending in the hope it will fuel growth.
\nThere was a painful example in the book of Pets.com who paid $17m for an advertising campaign in 2000, a year they made just $8.8m in revenue. They were over-spending in the hope it would fuel growth.
\nThis same mindset also requires rejecting unnecessary overheads such as fancy offices.
\nAnd only when you find yourself at capacity of work (which will happen at some point), is it the time to consider sourcing additional help. This could be in the shape of employees (if sustainable) or contractors/freelancers. Raising prices is another very effective way of bringing work back to sustainable levels. The bonus of raising your prices is that it forces you to focus on becoming better not bigger, to justify the new prices.
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\nIdea #3 \u2013 Be fascinating
\nI love this idea. A company of one is more likely going to be a small fish in a big pond, and therefore needs to stand out. It needs to be more like pistachio ice cream, and less like vanilla ice cream (which often happens as companies grow).
\nRetaining your independence and creative control by staying small, means you can make best use of this approach; identifying what makes you quirky, unique and fascinating and using this to stand out. Amplify these traits in your business and don\u2019t be a \u2018one size fits all\u2019 type of business / service / product.
\n\u201cDon\u2019t just ask consumers to pay attention to your business. Instead, start doing the kinds of unique and unusual things that attract attention in order to make your business distinct.\u201d
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