
Your actions define you and it reflects on your business. You need to start taking actions firmly. Generally people just talk about entrepreneurship, but never build anything. Your ideas and actions are more defining than your appearance, whether you can speak English or not, all these aspects are irrelevant. Focus on your goal, other major parts of your business will fall in the right place on their own.
You have to become the ideal entrepreneur and look ahead into the future, “what I want my business to be in 2 years” should be the question you should ask yourself and your actions should revolve around it. Believe me, you’ll fail often, it is a part of business, your clients may not like the presentation you gave or the conversions may go down, or your conditions for tech bloggers or magazines don’t revert your multiple emails, and the sense of failure and helplessness creeps in. Problems may hinder your business and cloud your judgment; this is where your ideas and wittiness will be most valuable.
There will be times when you will have to do stuff you hate to do, I know many designers who don’t like to code, look at conversion charts and get into the other statistical part of the business. They also have to test out features, write mails to bloggers, make a sales report, and the question they ask themselves is why me?
To sum it up you will have to do work you don’t like, face problems but in reality you will become more experienced and know almost everything about running a startup, sooner or later you’ll start to appreciate the little things that contribute to your success.

You have to become the ideal entrepreneur and look ahead into the future, “what I want my business to be in 2 years” should be the question you should ask yourself and your actions should revolve around it. Believe me, you’ll fail often, it is a part of business, your clients may not like the presentation you gave or the conversions may go down, or your conditions for tech bloggers or magazines don’t revert your multiple emails, and the sense of failure and helplessness creeps in. Problems may hinder your business and cloud your judgment; this is where your ideas and wittiness will be most valuable.
There will be times when you will have to do stuff you hate to do, I know many designers who don’t like to code, look at conversion charts and get into the other statistical part of the business. They also have to test out features, write mails to bloggers, make a sales report, and the question they ask themselves is why me?
To sum it up you will have to do work you don’t like, face problems but in reality you will become more experienced and know almost everything about running a startup, sooner or later you’ll start to appreciate the little things that contribute to your success.