Ending Soon! Save 33% on All Access

Are You Ready to Launch? Here's How to Find Out Veteran venture capitalist Jason Green on the importance of a minimum viable product and assembling a top-notch team.

By Jason Green

Shutterstock

Q: I'm at the edge of taking the leap and launching my business, but I'm worried I'm not ready. How can I make sure I'm prepared?

- Moolah-Lea Ramasamy

A: While preparation is very important, it is no substitute for experience.

When feasible, I encourage young entrepreneurs to create a minimum-viable product and expose it to potential users as quickly as possible. Your first users will provide feedback -- both good and bad -- that you can learn from and incorporate into your next iteration. It is critical that you remain open to customer feedback and pivot quickly to keep improving. Often times, your earliest users will uncover things that you would have never thought of in a business plan.

Related: 3 Tips to a Speedy Launch

Then, I'd also suggest making sure your team is ready for action. This is one of the biggest pitfalls I see. So, I cannot stress enough how important it is to choose the right partners and employees. The team is always the most important asset a startup has and one bad apple can derail an organization.

It's critical to consider these questions when choosing a partner or new hire:

1. What kind of culture do I want for my company? How does that culture fit with the company's goals?
2. What kind of personalities do I work with best? How do those personalities fit with the culture I want to create?
3. How do I find and retain the types of employees that excel within this vision?

Related: Failure to Launch: Why New Products Don't Make It

As an entrepreneur, you ultimately have to create a vision for a product or service and inspire your team to execute on that vision. Early employees are vital to a company's success and they need to be selected thoughtfully.

Have a question for YoungEntrepreneur's experts? Leave a comment below and tune in next week to hear from our new Ask the Expert contributor.

Jason Green has more than 15 years of venture-capital experience under his belt. As the founder of San Mateo, Calif-based Emergence Capital, he invests exclusively in early- and growth-stage tech companies, manages $575 million across three funds and is actively seeking new investment opportunities. Green has led early investments that became market-leading public companies like SuccessFactors, DoubleClick and Ask Jeeves.

Want to be an Entrepreneur Leadership Network contributor? Apply now to join.

Business News

Now that OpenAI's Superalignment Team Has Been Disbanded, Who's Preventing AI from Going Rogue?

We spoke to an AI expert who says safety and innovation are not separate things that must be balanced; they go hand in hand.

Franchise

What Franchising Can Teach The NFL About The Impact of Private Equity

The NFL is smart to take a thoughtful approach before approving institutional capital's investment in teams.

Employee Experience & Recruiting

Beyond the Great Resignation — How to Attract Freelancers and Independent Talent Back to Traditional Work

Discussing the recent workplace exit of employees in search of more meaningful work and ways companies can attract that talent back.

Business News

Scarlett Johansson 'Shocked' That OpenAI Used a Voice 'So Eerily Similar' to Hers After Already Telling the Company 'No'

Johansson asked OpenAI how they created the AI voice that her "closest friends and news outlets could not tell the difference."

Business Ideas

Struggling to Balance Your Business and Your Relationship? This Company Says It Has a Solution.

Jessica Holton, co-founder and CEO of Ours, says her company is on a mission to destigmatize couples therapy so that people can be proactive about relationship health.

Marketing

Marketing Campaigns Must Do More than Drive Clicks — Here's How to Craft Landing Pages That Convert Clicks into Customers

Following fundamental design principles will ensure that your landing pages lead potential customers from clicking on an ad to completing a purchase.