[Complete] Title: “SMALL
BUSINESS BIG MONEY: How To Start, Grow And Turn Your Small Business Into A Cash
Generating Machine”
Author: Akin Alabi“An ant has no quarrel with the boot”
-Loki,
The Avengers, 2012.
The author gifted me a softcopy of the first sixty-three
pages and my first impression was that the title is unpretentious. You know
what you’re in for. I bought the book two months later.
The book opens with rave reviews from successful contemporary Nigerian entrepreneurs across all business sectors. Essien, Njoku, Nzimora etc all praised the teachings served by someone with actual practical experience in the challenging Nigerian business landscape.
A table of contents highlight the book’s seven chapters before a long foreword by ROK’s Jason Njoku primes you for the pages ahead. The foreword posits the book is a distillation of the vast knowledge of an ‘unfiltered entrepreneur’ (I loved that) who deeply understands the idiosyncrasies of the Nigerian market.
1. “BEFORE YOU QUIT YOUR JOB TO START A BUSINESS”
The first chapter alludes that the allure of being an entrepreneur is particularly strong upon reading the biography of a successful
entrepreneur. In what will set the tone for the rest of the book, the author
strips the lush, fleshy stories to their underlying ugly bones rife with
challenges and at times, failure.
The chapter (mostly) debunks myths about the entrepreneurial journey
– proffering the sort of thinking that should guide someone intent on starting
a business and ways to improve existing ones.
2. “HOW TO DECIDE ON THE KIND OF BUSINESS YOU SHOULD DO”
This chapter counsels against approaching entrepreneurship
with rigid, preconceived ideas, without factoring market variables into the
equation.
‘Do not create a product/business and then look for
customers.’
Rather, look for what people want and create a business around
it. The book’s Macchiavelian pragmatism starts to manifest here; what with
quotes like “forget the ideas you
currently have, and let the demands of a market influence the kind of business you
do”
The author craftily leaves a piece of advice for punters (patrons of
his most successful business) by reminding them betting is more entertainment
than investment. That was a nice touch. The chapter talks about how he chanced
on sports betting, how he built and sold an information product around it, saw
a viable market for betting in Nigeria, and finally; building Nairabet.
He discusses some business ideas, but you’ll end up not
memorizing a single one because more than the highlighted ideas, the chapter
has one purpose: HOW TO THINK. The culmination of the chapter is to “sell people what they want to buy…not
necessarily what they need to buy”
It is explained plainly. {If I told you plainly, would you
read the book?}. I will not told you
3. “HOW TO BECOME NUMBER ONE IN YOUR MARKET PLACE”
Laptops.
Which brands come to mind? Exactly. Those, this chapter tells us, are called the “evoked set”.
There is an interesting tale of how Dr Sunny Ojeagbase, the
author’s mentor, leveraged on his observation, in the 80s, that people flipped
straight to the sports section of newspapers. He took this as a cue to start
the first sports paper in Nigeria.
This is a chapter devoted to disseminating knowledge about
pioneering, about disruption [(by innovation) if pioneering is no longer an
option], about uniqueness AND noisemaking about your uniquery. In essence, this is a chapter dedicated to ways in which
you can become part of the evoked set in your industry.
It’s rich.
It is.
4. ADVERTISING FOR MAXIMUM
PROFITABILITY
A chapter full of Nigerianisms™; a phrase or a combination of
words that couldn’t possibly be used by humans who do not have deep
affiliations with Nigeria. The chapter is about getting people to know and
patronize you. It drags the nonchalant “quality speaks for itself” creamy kind
of thinking out the back and violently clubs it to death with a 2by2 of stonecold
precision. You read about the types of advertising and why they are done.
**ARE YOU COCA-COLA??**
There are many instances in this chapter where the author stops
just short of telling you to borrow
yourself brain. Ultimately, he wants you to “determine the future of your
business with your hands and brain”.
There are seven advertising commandments geared toward
fetching you immediate patronage and you’ll feel like you saved several tens of
thousands that will otherwise be spent on a marketing course.
It discusses the components of compelling advertising and
there’s a call to let your copy “do something from the first second”
I chuckled at that. Lovely.
5. HOW TO GET PEOPLE TO TALK ABOUT YOUR BUSINESS
This discusses getting people to talk about your business. The
author writes things, which, on closer inspection, one cannot convincingly
disprove. There are eight suggestions to induce word-of-mouth marketing.
“There is some truth in
it. People will talk about fantastic products, but you cannot wait for that. Smart
business people do not allow things to happen naturally. They make things
happen. They are in control.”
Disprove that!
6. PRICING
Mathematics of the milk
was used to explain
the concepts of “Affordability” vs. “Cheap”
The chapter explains the notion that people aren’t necessarily
looking for the lowest prices, but for what they perceive as the best deals
(i.e. value for money). A crucial chapter.
CAPTAINCUE’s VERDICT:
I’ve been tacitly giving it along the line. I like the book’s
anti-positivity approach and the realistic theme that runs through its 220
pages. There are a couple of places where inverted commas would’ve been useful –
and a few words could’ve been hyphenated also.
On sticking to the financial plan: “you cannot solve all the problems
in this world. You can only play your part.” That’s for you not to exhaust your
money on helping. Eeesh.
Do not fall under the illusion of doing something. Be
deliberate about your stuff. The author says, in other words, that hope/luck is
not a strategy, before going on to prescribe tested ways of successfully
running businesses. With his face covering 40% of the cover page, the author
gets in your face with some difficult truths.
(Yet) Another positive is that the book does not drone on and
on about Nairabet as I feared it would. The principles discussed are instead,
designed to be useful across several kinds of businesses.
Finally, it must be said that SMALL BUSINESS BIG MONEY plugs
into a problem of the Nigerian zeitgeist; joblessness. A large percentage of those with
jobs are gainlessly employed – forcing
many into sourcing alternate income by starting businesses. You might as well
do it right if you’re going to do it at all.
For Lists.Ng, I wrote here that the single thing you can
confidently say Nigerians are unanimously good at is prevarication. There is
still, a widespread #WeThankGod syndrome to “how did you do it” questions – even from legitimately successful
Nigerian business humans. Especially from them.
·
Misplaced
paranoia?
·
Avoidance
of competition?
·
Fear
of village people?
·
Intentional
hoarding of information that could cast your
business?
An ant has no quarrel with the boot, but the game is the
game. This book explains the game. In the end, more naijacentric books like this one need to
be written.
On my scale of pretty awful to truly awesome, I think this is a
bloody brilliant book.
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Captaincue...is a freelance writer taking on gigs for unridiculous money. Call/Text 08132150177 now. Let's get started.
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Captaincue...is a freelance writer taking on gigs for unridiculous money. Call/Text 08132150177 now. Let's get started.