What kind of attention? More of everything. More raw materials. More production capacity. More office help. More people for support services. When you get this far you will need resources--lots of resources. You will need venture capital growth.
So it is very wise to plan for adequate resources in advance. Remember, most of the new ventures that die, die due to mismanaged finances. And, because growth places a severe strain on finances, some ventures die of their own accomplishments. It is in the evaluation of "resource sufficiency" that the business plan, staple of the financing community, is invaluable. A business plan is invaluable for two reasons (1) it helps you to clearly think through the resources question, and (2) it helps you to clearly communicate to potential sources of those resources (mainly financing sources) who you are, what you are trying to do, and the likelihood that you can actually do it.
If you don't know how to write a business plan, find someone who does. Many Small Business Development Centers specialize in helping here. Also universities and community colleges have specialists and courses that can teach you the skills needed to produce a plan that will tell both you, and your potential backers, what you need to know about the resources required, and the rewards that are available for those who provide them.
The first step away from danger is taken by writing a business plan. With the right business plan one can find the necessary backers and then "go on" with the venture. Without sufficient resources, we transmit to our new venture's birth defects that are often almost impossible to overcome. Like it or not, most new ventures carry with them almost permanently, the structure, attitudes, and culture that arise consequent to resource availability at time of founding.
So don't proceed with a congenital flaw in a venture, when it can be avoided by a little work up front. The obtaining of sufficient resources to sustain the venture is a form of "venture genetic engineering." Given all the evidence that points to the importance of sufficient resources, venturers who "plug in" their ventures before the "resource ducks" are "in a row," are imprudent, to say the least.
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Dr. Ronald K. Mitchell is a specialist in entrepreneurial cognition, global entrepreneurship, and venture management. He developed the Entrepreneur Assessment which won the acclaimed Heizer Award for this groundbreaking research. Find out more entrepreneurs at http://www.venturecapital.org/
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