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BIO: Ron Baker is the founder of VeraSage Institute—the leading think tank dedicated to educating professionals internationally. He’s also a radio talk-show host of The Soul of Enterprise: Business in the Knowledge Economy on Voice America.
STORY: Ron partnered with a group of friends and invested $70,000 to start a software company. All the partners had no experience or skills to run the business leading to its failure.
LEARNING: Seek out successful people and try to learn from them. Learn from your losses.
“When it comes to business, you’ve got to have your total skin in the game.”Ron Baker
Guest profile
Ron Baker started his CPA career in 1984 with KPMG’s Private Business Advisory Services in San Francisco. Today, he is the founder of VeraSage Institute—the leading think tank dedicated to educating professionals internationally—a radio talk-show host on Voice America; the show is The Soul of Enterprise: Business in the Knowledge Economy.
Ron has authored seven best-selling books, including The Firm of the Future; Pricing on Purpose; Measure What Matters to Customers; and Implementing Value Pricing. His forthcoming book, Time’s Up!: The Subscription Business Model for Professional Firms, will be published in November 2022.
Worst investment everRon partnered with a couple of friends and started a software company. He invested about $70,000 into the company. The group wanted to write a software program to help firms value price. They hired a software engineer and spent a lot of money to get the program going.
They were all delusional and believed they were sitting on top of something radical and innovative. Their most significant setback was their lack of skills and experience in building a software company. All the partners also had other jobs and were treating business as a side-hustle, not paying it the full attention it needed. Needless to say, the business wasn’t successful.
Lessons learnedDon’t be delusional and go into business just to confirm your biases. Keep in mind that business is much more complicated than most people think.
Ron’s recommended resourcesRon’s next project is to get his upcoming book Time’s Up!: The Subscription Business Model for Professional Firms published and then go and speak and evangelize about it.
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Connect with Ron Baker
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BIO: Ron Baker is the founder of VeraSage Institute—the leading think tank dedicated to educating professionals internationally. He’s also a radio talk-show host of The Soul of Enterprise: Business in the Knowledge Economy on Voice America.
STORY: Ron partnered with a group of friends and invested $70,000 to start a software company. All the partners had no experience or skills to run the business leading to its failure.
LEARNING: Seek out successful people and try to learn from them. Learn from your losses.
“When it comes to business, you’ve got to have your total skin in the game.”Ron Baker
Guest profile
Ron Baker started his CPA career in 1984 with KPMG’s Private Business Advisory Services in San Francisco. Today, he is the founder of VeraSage Institute—the leading think tank dedicated to educating professionals internationally—a radio talk-show host on Voice America; the show is The Soul of Enterprise: Business in the Knowledge Economy.
Ron has authored seven best-selling books, including The Firm of the Future; Pricing on Purpose; Measure What Matters to Customers; and Implementing Value Pricing. His forthcoming book, Time’s Up!: The Subscription Business Model for Professional Firms, will be published in November 2022.
Worst investment everRon partnered with a couple of friends and started a software company. He invested about $70,000 into the company. The group wanted to write a software program to help firms value price. They hired a software engineer and spent a lot of money to get the program going.
They were all delusional and believed they were sitting on top of something radical and innovative. Their most significant setback was their lack of skills and experience in building a software company. All the partners also had other jobs and were treating business as a side-hustle, not paying it the full attention it needed. Needless to say, the business wasn’t successful.
Lessons learnedDon’t be delusional and go into business just to confirm your biases. Keep in mind that business is much more complicated than most people think.
Ron’s recommended resourcesRon’s next project is to get his upcoming book Time’s Up!: The Subscription Business Model for Professional Firms published and then go and speak and evangelize about it.
[spp-transcript]
Connect with Ron Baker
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