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Quiz 2 Reviewer (Entrep Mind)

The document discusses the entrepreneurial mindset and what it means to have an entrepreneurial disposition. It identifies five qualities of an entrepreneurial mind: curiosity, creativity, competence, commitment, and compassion. Curiosity is seen as key, as it provides vision for the future. Nurturing curiosity involves asking questions to seek answers and solutions. The document uses examples from the author's experiences and advocacy work to illustrate these points.

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Pia Rose Roque
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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
513 views166 pages

Quiz 2 Reviewer (Entrep Mind)

The document discusses the entrepreneurial mindset and what it means to have an entrepreneurial disposition. It identifies five qualities of an entrepreneurial mind: curiosity, creativity, competence, commitment, and compassion. Curiosity is seen as key, as it provides vision for the future. Nurturing curiosity involves asking questions to seek answers and solutions. The document uses examples from the author's experiences and advocacy work to illustrate these points.

Uploaded by

Pia Rose Roque
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
Available Formats
Download as DOCX, PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
You are on page 1/ 166

PART 1

good morning fellow learners good day i'm mentor ray i will be your mentor for this
concept and i'd be happy to discuss
1:18
with you and share my experiences about the go negotia formula and this is about the
entrepreneurial
1:25
mind okay here are our objectives for the day at the end of the session the learners
1:31
shall explain what is the entrepreneurial mind identify five requisites of the
entrepreneurial mind
1:37
and explain how to nurture the entrepreneurial mind
1:46
so as your mentor for today i'd like to do something that most of you oh shall i
1:52
say a lot of us would want to do especially now that social media is in we all have our
social media accounts
1:59
and we love to share something about the past so let me begin our session with that
kind of thing
2:07
so these are actually the 13 entrepreneur who in 2005
2:14
after the appointment of them
2:20
a presidential consultant for entrepreneurship joey concepcion by the president gloria
marpagal arroyo
2:27
we actually gathered upon his calling for us to form an advocacy
2:34
group so within this group okay we have governor el rey villafuerte vivienne
2:40
time of course the daughter of liu japan the very famous doctor to the stars dr vikki
bellow
2:46
youth advocate anne marie pereke presidential consultant for entrepreneurship mr joey
concepcion our
2:52
boss ohoro ramos of national bookstore
2:58
and of course dr talesa of splash corporation a good and dear friend les
3:04
reyes of race haircutters jay aldiger of island souvenirs and of course
3:10
uh mr fior gelato himself richie kuna
3:15
and the president of ceo and bob sunji of bubs and jeans mr victor time
3:22
where am i in this picture okay let me introduce myself there you
3:27
go that's your mentoring a lot of people will get to see this picture they would usually tell
me
3:35
okay does that mean really that you have to look older to be a little more mature looking
when you enter into business
3:41
transactions so the gomigosho advocacy group has a goal in mind which is to change
3:47
the mindset and the attitude of the filipinos and actually our motto is teach a nation how
to fish and feed the
3:55
nation many lifetimes so in essence we're saying do not just give
4:03
the filipinos the fish teach them how to get it and that's the very
4:10
essence of our discussion for today so this is actually the
4:16
first goldie gosher book that contains the 50 inspiring entrepreneurial stories from 50
entrepreneurs in the philippines
4:24
and that's me of course okay so once again
4:29
um our advocacy group rolled up our sleeves early on and
4:35
we actually uh tried to reach as many negotiators in the philippines as we can
4:40
from all sectors and from all professions okay so
4:47
let me talk about five issues today and the first issue is are filipinos entrepreneurial
4:55
is it a yes or a no we have to answer this immediately and i'm gonna say
5:01
no okay according to former social economic planning secretary selito habito
5:06
filipinos tend to be geared towards finding a job rather than creating jobs
5:11
so very fun of working for their wealth rather than creating the mechanism to earn
wealth
5:20
so what's the difference to the philippine statistics authority
5:26
2.2 million filipinos work overseas from april to september 2019 alone so if you
5:32
think about this huge number of filipinos who are adding up to those who are
5:38
already there we are really losing a lot of our countrymen for greener pastures
5:44
and thought but come to think of it what do they bring into the philippines when they go
abroad sometimes they just send the
5:50
money and then the people here will just be using it for day-to-day expenses
5:56
think about what happens if those 2.2 million filipinos
6:02
would usually put up their own business establishments so we're gonna have an
6:07
average of two million new businesses every year easier said than done
6:12
but here's issue number two that begins with understanding what is
6:19
the entrepreneurial mind is it a whim or a disposition what do you mean by
6:25
whim is it just a sudden desire whimsical means it is brought about your
6:30
sudden desire or change of mind you get it at your you do it at your whim whenever you
want it
6:38
which a lot of people are actually doing at the moment they just do things because they
just want to do it they just want to try it or is it a
6:46
disposition when you say a disposition it's your own nature it includes the
6:51
inherent qualities of the mind and character in other words it's a mindset
6:57
i would say that the entrepreneurial mind is a disposition
7:04
okay and according to canon abakken the entrepreneurial mind is a set of dispositions
that enables a person to
7:12
develop entrepreneurial traits that will help start and grow a business venture
7:18
so when we talk of the entrepreneurial mind as a mindset it is something that
7:25
is consistent with our internal motivation
7:33
so these things that originate from within our internal
7:39
motivation shapes our beliefs and actions and then eventually we do things
7:45
because not because we just like it but we do things because we are committed to
7:52
making it work to better the product or service that we provide and then
7:58
eventually hope that it will change not just our lives
8:03
but also the lives of the people that use it that's the essence of the
8:08
entrepreneurial mind so we can therefore say that eventually these sets of actions
become our habits
8:16
and if you talk about habits eventually they form part of who we are
8:23
so what are the five c's of the entrepreneurial mind let's talk about
8:29
this one by one the first is what we call curiosity it is the very core of the
8:34
entrepreneurial mind it provides us a sense of vision when you say vision it is our plan
for the future
8:42
the second c will be your creativity creativity breeds innovation
8:48
and eventually when you talk about innovation we talk about transforming things around
us we better what we have
8:55
day in and day out the third c is your competence now
9:01
this leads to passion it's not enough that you know what you're good at it's not enough
that you know you can perform
9:08
the skills you have to have that strong feeling called passion to do what you do
9:13
best and then we have commitment that is
9:18
actually contributory to determination and perseverance when you say determination
9:26
that is our willpower the firmness of purpose that we have and perseverance of
9:32
course is the persistence despite difficulty bring these two together and wow
9:37
what a person you have so when you have determination and perseverance
9:42
you would definitely be able to stand up after a fall and remember when you are
9:48
an entrepreneur you would definitely experience a lot of failures like i did
9:54
so it's not as if i just dreamt about it and then the next day i'm making money
10:00
no you have to work for it and if you want to be successful you have to double your
10:06
failure rate and look at failure not as opposite of success but as part of success so if
you want to
10:14
keep on succeeding you have to keep on failing okay but that idea doesn't seem
10:20
to sit well with a lot of students because they would always want the highest grades but
at the end of it all
10:26
it's not the grades the numerical value that defines an entrepreneur it is
10:32
the 50 compassion that provides the breathing ground for
10:37
motivation if we want to better ourselves every day and then eventually better our lives
we
10:44
also have to look at what's happening around us look at our fellow men and create
opportunities that will better
10:53
their lives too so that when everything becomes better
10:58
then we continuously are motivated to do what we do best
11:04
okay so the first c let's expand on the first thing curiosity
11:10
that leads to vision well joel barker says vision without action is a dream action without
vision
11:16
is simply passing the time action with vision is making a positive difference and who is
joel barker where he was the
11:22
first to popularize the concept of paradigm shift in the corporate world which means
what
11:29
does it mean to have paradigm shift paradigm shift is the major change in how people
think and do things so if you
11:38
are capable of influencing people around you to take a look at what you are
11:44
proposing to better a service or a product then you are espousing paradigm
11:50
shift and you can always call yourself a visionary okay so let's move on
11:57
curiosity is at the core of the entrepreneurial mind what does this mean
12:02
now remember this um success reminder choose curiosity over judgment how do
12:08
you do that when you are judgmental you end up blaming people
12:13
for your misfortune you tend to point your fingers to other people
12:19
okay that is being judgmental but when you choose curiosity
12:25
you always ask yourself after you fail how could you have done it differently
12:30
what would have changed the result that is the mark of a visionary person
12:37
so when we say curiosity it means our desire to know our desire to learn
12:44
so how do we nurture curiosity well you have the three rules the abcs of
12:50
developing curiosity a means ask questions and seek answers
12:55
remember the very popular vicky bellow who is one among the 13 of us we started
13:00
the gonigoso core group with uh then presidential consultant for
13:06
entrepreneurship joey concepcion during the time of president roya page
13:11
we start she started asking herself what can she do because she's having pimples
13:16
as a teenager and she wanted to get rid of the pimples so she tried to find
13:22
answers to her personal problem and then after she found the right
13:29
treatments and medications she dreamt of one day doing the same to her fellow men
13:37
that's why her mantra is making the filipino
13:42
beautiful one at a time so how can you beautify
13:47
the filipinos of course you have to understand their core and being a filipino and
13:53
having the same set of problems of course you know how to go about it so what she did
after is that she explored
13:59
the world so she traveled the world she just did not have that dream
14:05
what she did is she took action so she traveled the world to find solutions to
14:11
common skin problems and she advanced her training and education and eventually
14:17
she came up with her own fellow medical group that has given birth to bello essentials
14:25
and a lot of beauty products and treatments thereafter and as they say
14:31
cliche as it may seem the rest is history well you can be the next
14:36
vicky bellow if you have pimples we can always think of something that
14:42
irritates us as an opportunity to create business you just have to be curious
14:49
about it you just have to search for the solutions and you can do that by
14:54
exploring okay the second c is creativity
15:00
which breeds innovation a creative minds gives birth to innovation but the
15:06
question is do we really have an ounce of creativity
15:11
within us or does it really have to be nurtured okay
15:16
so always remember when we do things repeatedly eventually
15:22
it becomes a habit so we can make creativity a habit now how this is a
15:27
success reminder all habits follow a specific path and according to samples and really
15:34
there is what we call the cycle of habit that begins with a trigger okay
15:41
and then you perform actions based on the trigger
15:47
that eventually becomes the habit and then after that you attain your reward which
could be a
15:54
goal which could be your dream thing a car a bug or whatever
16:00
so whenever you have something that could either
16:06
irritate you or that that gives you an idea
16:11
or it actually triggers your curiosity go for it search for the action that's
16:21
creativity begins okay another study found that 98 percent
16:28
of five-year-old children are at the creative genius level and then five years later only 30
of the same children
16:35
remained in the same level another five years later only twelve percent and when the
test was administered was convinced
16:42
to adults only two percent were at the creative genius level what does this mean guys
creativity declines with age
16:51
a lot of people would say but it is surprising that your most
16:56
creative stage is actually your kindergarten stage where you are utilizing about 95 to 98
17:06
of your creative energy when you reach school age that goes down
17:11
to 50 to 70 high school and university level 30 to 50 and then eventually for adults
17:18
less than 20 maybe because as you grow older you are having more
17:26
opportunities to deal with more concerns a lot of concerns and that would usually
17:34
cause you to lose some of those creative side creative character because you are
17:41
focused on a lot of tasks at hand okay next the issue with philippine
17:47
businesses is that filipino businesses are small in scale and may be lacking in originality
and innovativeness
17:53
reflecting the copycat syndrome that's according to the global entrepreneurship monitor
so according to the philippines
17:59
statistics authority of the total 957 620
18:04
000 business enterprises operating in the country 952
18:10
969 or 99.51 are micro small medium enterprises and 4
18:18
651 or 0.49 percent and even one percent are large enterprises so majority palana
18:26
nigosa filipinas
18:40
crisis maybe because this is the kind of mentality that we have
18:47
we lack the motivation or division
18:53
to make something small and grow it into something bigger
18:58
okay now how do we foster that kind of attitude
19:04
we have the abcs of developing creativity the first one is always seek to develop new
ideas and improve
19:10
processes now if you have something that you have observed in the hospital like for
example
19:16
well the oxygen um diffuser that you can improve on you
19:23
could also improve on for example if you have cars you are riding the ambulance and
you notice that the seat belt may be
19:30
improved for elderly or for younger children those are all
19:36
potential business ideas and of course
19:42
be flexible and resourceful being resourceful means you utilize what
19:49
you have at the moment a lot of people would say
19:58
is the list of the concern of the entrepreneur the primary phone of the
20:03
entrepreneur would be yourself your skill and it's happening now around us
20:09
look at youtube a lot of those who are in youtube have given birth to a lot of products
20:16
and you get to see them now raking the fruits of their sacrifices more on that
20:22
as we go along and then of course you always have to imagine
20:29
it is limitless you can create things in your mind for
20:36
as far back as how you get to see your future the most important thing is you stay
motivated
20:44
well you can go and do some serendipity walk activity okay around your
20:50
neighborhood talk to your friends talk to your family they these are all source
20:55
of inspiration that could eventually make you a more imaginative
21:02
individual so remember james ingram and his song whatever we
21:09
imagine i'd like to share this with you guys because the lyrics speaks well of
21:14
what an entrepreneurial mind is and let me share this with you so that
21:21
at least you have an idea what i am talking about okay so i'd like you to listen to this
song
21:29
and then understand the lyrics carefully because the lyrics represents
21:35
what an entrepreneurial mindset should think about when opportunities
21:43
come along to do business so i'd like to share this with you guys join me if you know the
song once again
21:49
it's by james ingram entitled whatever we imagine
21:58
so here we go here's once again the song
22:22
i can live [Music]
22:45
imagine [Music]
22:52
why [Music]
23:03
cause where can we run when you see this
23:18
[Music]
23:25
and i imagined [Music]
23:41
and just
23:47
[Music] oh [Music]
24:11
[Music] whatever we
24:17
[Music] and i imagined
24:23
[Music]
24:38
again
24:46
[Music] me
24:52
[Music]
24:59
[Music]
25:10
[Music] every foreign
25:30
[Music]
25:36
don't be afraid halfway the most important lessons
25:43
[Music]
25:50
[Music]
26:00
so that's actually the lesson that i would like you to remember regarding that song and
the lyrics speaks well
26:07
about what an entrepreneur should do whenever business opportunities
26:14
would come your way always meet halfway and after that create products
26:20
from the mind whatever we imagine okay
26:32
so i just hope you like that little thing that we did we did a little singing and pardon more
my voice
26:40
okay so the third c is actually competence
26:45
and this actually is made possible when we have more than
26:52
just competence but when we also have a burning passion in our heart so there is no
greatness
26:59
without passion to be great whether it's the aspiration of an athlete or an
27:05
artist a scientist a parent or a business person that's according to anthony robbins sorry
for that so always
27:13
remember the milo jingle great things start from small beginnings
27:18
okay i remember one thing about this some ladies would say was that my
27:24
honeymoon theme song on our first night well that's another thing to talk about let's talk
about that now the success
27:30
reminder is always start small
27:38
problem
27:49
that's the success reminder and always tell yourself never to procrastinate the
27:56
time is now it's now or never start small
28:02
now that's the mantra of the entrepreneurial mind now when i started
28:08
as an entrepreneur this is actually one thing i'd like to
28:13
share with you guys i got it i got it from my memory boxes in our
28:19
storage room if you would notice even the spelling of entrepreneurship is misspelled but
28:27
young forum it's a lecture forum on entrepreneurship but it's done at the national center
for mental health in the
28:33
city of mandaluyong maybe you are thinking
28:40
your guess is as good as mine so these are the kinds of engagements that i
28:48
used to accept when i was still honing my ability to be a motivational speaker so if you
28:54
would notice once again the entrepreneurship spelling still misspelled because the
guest is bigger and that was
29:00
in 1999 see guys sabine anila if you want to eventually develop the skill you
29:08
have to spend at least 10 000 hours to master your craft
29:15
that's um the secret formula of great entrepreneurs the outlayers
29:22
okay or the outliers rather now these are the people who are
29:28
um considered elite when it comes to their business sense like bill gates okay and of
course we have our own
29:35
tycoons in taipan's we have henry c we have luchotan okay
29:41
so there are three things again that we need to remember if you want to develop
29:46
competence or your skill the first one is actively pursue interest and desires
29:52
so what will make you happy it should be the first thing that you should be doing and
trying out as a
29:58
business venture because like for example don't just imitate because it's the in
30:04
thing one thing i'd like to share with you is a lesson i learned from carte mar because i
was
30:10
looking at the different aquariums and the different fishes and then i saw one and i said
30:18
and then and then i
30:30
so how is it different from the freshwater fishes sabina sir
31:15
you know the best lessons i've learned as an entrepreneur i learned it from common
people
31:30
you know so pursue something that you really like
31:35
you went to a beauty parlor and then you said
31:44
because you'll end up eventually okay um
31:49
letting it go because you just did it at at your whim gumbaga capriccio
31:55
van guster of the moment okay in a joke and then eventually hindi naman union
32:02
competence small that's why a lot of questions would arise when somebody who
doesn't know how to do haircut puts up a
32:08
barbershop or a parlor somebody who's not a dentist put puts up a dental
32:13
cleaning so it has to emanate from what you can do lagging
32:26
functions so that you know when your employees are
32:32
doing their job or not so be aware of unique intelligences this
32:39
is one thing i'd like to share with you guys you have to realize what kind of intelligences
you have and from there
32:48
think about what career or enterprise can you manage
32:54
and then cultivate leadership skills well the best way to cultivate your leadership skills
33:00
is actually to lead a group no matter how small the group is based
33:10
you cannot be a good leader if you are not a good follower okay
33:15
so let's talk about howard gardner's theory of multiple intelligences
33:21
when it comes to entrepreneurship so let's talk about intelligences potential enterprises
or career and role model so
33:28
for example okay you are word smart so your intelligence
33:33
is in the area of linguistics magalinkang magsalita
33:39
it's because take note class it's the it's one of the first things
33:44
that we develop we learn how to talk and in fact as early as our nine to ten months of
33:52
age we already utter our first word atamiya thing first word mama
33:58
and we utter it specifically or non specifically we are the written and specifically we call
our mother mama and
34:05
we also refer to our father mama young father
34:13
sorry okay now uh those who are word smart people are
34:20
those who enjoy reading they like to solve word puzzles okay or word games
34:27
and they like to tell and listen to stories so if they are going to
34:33
choose a career or create an enterprise they could have language training
34:39
centers or publications like what i did okay
34:45
i remember my teacher commenting on my report card okay always pay attention
34:50
and lessen unnecessary talking but hey i made a living out of my
34:56
passion for talking and talking and motivating people okay and i would like to share with
you
35:04
the uh a potential role model if you are familiar with um
35:09
the the story diary which was popularized on wattpad whatpad
35:16
incidental entrepreneur okay of course
35:28
ionyan okay when she was 16 after high school
35:34
pumunta silent italy and of course because napunda shatsa foreign so nexus serves as
the internet
35:41
until she came across a site called candy magazine at dunsa online platform
35:48
naom and what would be the problem
35:53
of a hit story and eventually making movie penny james read
36:00
okay moving james okay
36:06
of course but there's a
36:12
striking resemblance of nadine to denis
36:18
so after graduation from high school in italy
36:25
so it was out of boredom you see even boredom could actually give you um
36:31
potential business ideas
36:56
the first few sentences really hit it well with the readers and
37:02
she was surprised to note undone in views
37:07
and so she wrote the story as it progressed and eventually when she discovered the
37:14
online uh forum now what pad she transferred
37:20
and as they say the rest is history it gathered 12 million views
37:26
and it prompted movie producers to look for her okay
37:33
okay very young then eventually in a transformed into a book
37:39
story from internet the king movie and in 2013 the movie made 120
37:48
million in the box office what was her dream what was danny's
37:53
dream then he then actually just dreamt of writing a book before she turns 30 but
38:00
she never realized that she would be able to do it at 16
38:06
and it became a hit and became a movie when she was already she was just 19.
38:12
you can just imagine if you have a gift
38:17
you have to nurture it show it to the world have the confidence
38:23
to present yourself and your work and eventually you would be surprised of how
38:29
the rewards would come your way so that's if you are word smart okay but
38:36
what about if your intelligence is in the area of logical mathematical meaning your
number
38:44
smart these are the people who like to categorize things they love to create strategy
when they're playing
38:51
games and they always ask how things are working okay so these are the people who
are
38:58
very very inquisitive so you could actually be a computer software developer okay or you
can create your
39:04
computer software development firm like bill gates okay well um bill gates doesn't have
an
39:11
inspiring rugs to reach his story but he's a very practical person if you would notice
when he came to manila
39:17
he he was placed at the penthouse of vanilla hotel but he requested to be
39:23
on the lower floor because she he wanted to you know get to the city as fast as he can
he could he
39:30
was given a lot of um minou for the food that he would want but at the end of the day he
just asked
39:38
for mcdonald's he was a simple person
39:47
characteristics
40:07
so remember when you become successful success should not change you because in
40:13
the first place you became successful because of those traits that you had so
40:19
actually um bill gates started developing um softwares at the age of 15
40:26
and with the first software that he developed he made like 20 000 together with his
friend but have you
40:32
ever wondered why why is the name of his company microsoft
40:38
inspiration maybe
40:44
only the wife knows and maybe it could be the reason why they divorced
40:50
microsoft okay i don't want to be naughty okay so remember um
40:57
bill gates dropped out from harvard okay
41:02
and this just goes to show that the school is not the only place to learn
41:09
but when he was asked if he had any regrets in life what he said was that he
41:15
regretted being too focused on academics when he was in college that he forgot to
41:21
socialize we are social beings life is about
41:27
establishing relationships at the end of it all when everything is lost we can
41:33
only cling to our relationships with family friends and loved ones so in the
41:38
guise of working for your dream for chasing what your entrepreneurial
41:44
mind is telling you to chase don't forget to
41:49
interact with your fellow men they can be teachers and learners too
41:55
like you like bill gates that's his regret okay now what about if your area of
42:02
intelligence would be on spatial or even by spatial you buy your my lecture plan
42:08
no halo halo uni ice cream spatial means orientation as to space
42:15
intelligence to space in terms of what you see in your environment like your picture
smile
42:21
so what would be your potential career now these people are
42:27
the people who would usually like to draw they dream they dream a lot and eventually
they enjoy um doing jigsaw
42:35
puzzles so a good um career for them would be well something that they can make use
of
42:41
their passion for drawing so they can they can paint
42:46
or they can venture into photography or interior design or even movie production
42:52
now while disney you have visited disney wow well i was
42:57
able to visit this because i promised it as a gift to my niece and my nephews because
43:03
um i remember my sister telling me you know you really have to uh help me assess your
needs and your nephews
43:09
because they seem to be uh not so focused on their studies and i said you know
43:17
my niece and my nephews are good it's such that since everything is provided to them
you're not giving them the room
43:26
to discover their creative side because
43:33
okay so why one time i brought them to the toy store and then
43:42
sabine is and i said okay go ahead
43:47
so he picked two and i said
43:52
124 and i said i want to
43:59
stimulate their mind okay not just buy them because we can afford it so i want them to
make use of
44:07
their gifts their intelligences so i said okay
44:12
120 80 billion [Music]
44:31
[Music] addition subtraction multiplication and
44:38
division so that doesn't leave them anything more to imagine
44:43
okay so here if your intelligence is on the area of
44:50
spatial intelligence so which simply means you could be like walt disney what
44:55
disney started as a cartoonist and then he was the first to create uh mickey
45:01
mouse which is the first cartoon character in technicolor and with the sound then
eventually he produced the
45:06
movies and eventually turned the location sets into a part so now we have
45:12
disney world all over the planet so it simply means that
45:17
nothing is impossible while disney started as a cartoonist and eventually
45:23
that passion grew and improved over the years and before he knew it
45:29
before he died he was able to transform what he used to draw
45:35
into something that people can enjoy as a thin part what a marvelous
45:40
accomplishment okay what about if your area of intelligence would be
45:46
in terms of nature your nature smart your naturalist so you could be
45:53
good at creating guardians so you could have a landscape
45:59
architecture firm okay where this is so brampton in the states
46:04
because your front lawn should be something that you should plant on it and you have
to cut a grass otherwise
46:10
you'll you'll be fine if you don't do that okay so if you don't have the time to do that you
can hire a landscaper
46:17
okay who will take care of your lawn or if you're fond of animals
46:23
you could come up with a pet shop so turn your passion into something or turn
46:28
your habit into something entrepreneurial well a good role model for this would be
46:35
uh cesar milan the dog behavior expert well he had a show it's entitled dog
46:40
whisperer okay so here's a person who loves pets okay and these are also the
46:46
people sometimes we bring in bugs we bring in police up
46:51
okay that just tells us that
46:56
may naturally stand in c so we have to nurture that and then
47:03
sometimes dirty and no let them be because that's where we get to see that they might
be
47:10
loving things around them and they might be having an idea of how to recycle
47:15
those things okay so if you have a child who knows the names of plants the names
47:20
of animals and who would love to visit sewers would want to go hiking just let
47:25
them be okay especially if uh they don't have any spaces but they love to read
47:30
about these things let them be they could be gifted
47:37
naturalist or they are nature smart like cesar milan okay now
47:44
pay particular attention to the fact that uh cesar milan okay
47:49
did not finish anything he's actually mexican and he illegally entered the
47:55
united states through the u.s mexican border okay so he belongs a very poor
48:00
family he didn't finish school so most of his childhood was spent
48:05
with animals because he grew up in a farm and in fact the first job that he had in
48:12
the u.s was to groom dogs so he learned how to interact with dogs early on he didn't
48:20
have any formal training but now he hosted a tv show
48:25
had a lot of dvds he has a lot of clinics he has a lot of dog products okay
48:32
and that's telling us that it's not education
48:38
that really brings success to a person education is just a tool
48:44
what you do with what you have in your mind is what spells the difference
48:54
become again in the future what is important is you have to find
49:02
that gift something that you know god gave you and transform it
49:09
into something that could help other people don't worry about the returns it will
49:15
come after what and he is sipping more
49:22
the universe will reward you if what you are doing is for the
49:27
betterment of the human race now what about if you are music smart you have music
49:35
intelligence well you could be a singer a songwriter you can own a recording studio like
a nurse maybe a lot of you
49:42
know that culidesma is not just a nursing graduate but if you would um visit wikipedia
you
49:51
would find out it's written there that okay
49:56
she finished the course nursing at koleo san agustin bacolod and successfully
50:03
passed the philippine nursing board exam and became a registered nurse so her
50:10
screen name should have been cool desma rn she popularized the zombie tuba okay
50:17
and then okay
50:23
okay so she's an opm icon and she's a nurse but you see
50:29
she was already a band member while still being a student and at the end of it all tina
posing nursing maybe
50:38
okay
50:52
i
50:59
[Laughter] okay don't take that seriously no offense man what i'm trying to say is
51:06
that even if we have a professional degree sometimes
51:11
it is not what we studied that would bring us to success but it is
51:17
what we really want to do so if you have that inclination like to collect cds to
51:24
create songs to play instruments or if you sing well
51:29
if you love to be singing every sunday if you love singing every sunday in in a church
51:35
choir or a gathering then nurture it so you have
51:40
what we call as music intelligence okay way to go so what about
51:48
if your intelligence is on the category of bodily or kinesthetic intelligence you are body
smart okay now these are
51:55
the people who excel in sport they love to run they love to create crafts they love
52:01
role playing they love acting okay acting and role-playing
52:06
involves movements facial expression so you could be an actor or a gym owner a
fitness
52:13
trainer or a zumba coach like lobin rick okay who put who actually is
52:20
the owner of rip fitness okay so he is initially a personal trainer
52:26
then eventually ventured into a nursing career so now he's a personal trainer an owner
and a registered nurse
52:33
okay he owns a chain of fitness studios in the us
52:39
way to go so that at least before you begin
52:45
and after your workout well you are safe in the hands of a
52:52
nurse who can take your and monitor your vital signs
52:59
makeup artist vital signs
53:12
smoking why you are cutting the fingernails straight across and why are you filing
53:19
the edges of the nails way to go okay anyway
53:25
what what about the filipino version of the zumba instructor look at this news
53:30
result nurse called zumba session for coffee 19 patients in quarantine facility and this is
a nurse acting as a
53:37
zumba instructor for patients in montalban rizal so
53:42
we are being um brought to to the edge of our creativity
53:48
on how to deal with challenging situations like the pandemic and sometimes
53:57
for our patients makes a lot of difference and this is what this nurse is doing and
eventually
54:18
now this is nurse barbara mckinley she looks so young but
54:23
she's already 65 years old why because for her zumba relieves stress
54:29
and she has opened her zumba clinic so if you are 65 years old you're retiring do
something that you want to
54:36
do and maybe if you love dancing also come up with a zumba dance studio
54:42
okay now what about if your intelligence is on interpersonal relationships you're
54:48
people smart in tagalog
55:09
these are the people who possess that kind of intelligence
55:15
and acknowledge the intelligence
55:49
and they enjoy socializing okay but most of our parents would usually
55:55
tell us
56:17
okay now what enterprise or career okay should you consider well consider putting up a
56:24
pr firm like it could be a motivational speaker like a boy school administrator because
you
56:31
go along well with people now a role model could be donna cardillo who is a
56:37
nurse and look at her website the inspiration nurse she's a keynote
56:42
speaker humorist okay you want to be a humorist but please um your humor should
56:48
be something that borders on on the intellectual side that stimulates the
56:54
senses not the toilet you more time because you know although that will really bring a
lot of laughter to people
57:01
and sometimes they don't think about what you're talking about they just want to laugh
okay so it could be a humorous you can
57:07
consider that you could be a master motivator and an entertainer maybe you can sing
and dance in between that would
57:13
be great okay so and number eight okay is known as your
57:19
intra-personal intelligence these are the people who are self-smart okay
57:26
who are the people who are self-smart those who can decide for themselves they are
self-directed and they are confident
57:33
with what they're doing they have goals and they want to achieve their goals they work
well
57:39
on their own even without anybody assisting them and they are able to express their
feelings freely
57:46
well an enterprise or career that they can pursue would be as counselor or an
entrepreneur like in gypsia of mang
57:53
now remember india is one of those um who came into our gonigoshu group okay
58:00
after our group so there was initially the third you know was meeting together and then
at one point in time
58:20
foreign
58:32
so that was a sponsored flight so we were in the business class and he was waiting
59:02
nato and then why would you pay three times
59:17
so would that spell a difference sponsored young flight i would also go
59:22
and get an economy class ticket i am not bothered with that indeed
59:33
remember wealth is not how much you make
59:38
wealth is what remains after spending how much you made okay
1:00:00
okay and that's the eighth okay intelligence
1:00:12
intelligence okay intelligence that is existential intelligence
1:00:20
this is um the intelligence that would enable you to think critically to solve
1:00:27
problems and this is the intelligence that will
1:00:32
make you unafraid to challenge the norm and this is one of the traits that
1:00:38
entrepreneurs should have existential intelligence
1:00:46
i think that they develop existential intelligence so in gardner's theory
1:00:55
as you know time goes by and that is your existential
1:01:01
intelligence okay now what is the fourth c
1:01:08
commitment okay and commitment is strengthened by your determination and
1:01:14
perseverance always remember the entrepreneurial mind is a fertile ground for bright
ideas but it is
1:01:21
self-discipline and commitment that will see to it that an idea
1:01:27
grows okay a lot of you may not know
1:01:51
that's actually colonel harlan sanders okay um shiong
1:01:58
original nanak formulate and recipe nan kentucky fried chicken so on a story on
1:02:06
the answer
1:02:13
grabby in terms of uh disappointment disappointments and frustrations
1:02:18
first and foremost um
1:02:24
and then on seven years old
1:02:31
and when he was 16 he faked his age and joined the military
1:02:36
um when he was 17 he he got discharged a man honorably okay kayalan
1:02:43
he tried to do other things like he worked in the railway eventually pursued law and
failed and then at age 40
1:02:51
he started selling chicken dishes well this initially um
1:02:56
gave him a lot of revenues and then the pathway
1:03:03
at age 44. so he bought a motel
1:03:10
and now he's operating a motel business plus the fried chicken restaurant but
1:03:16
both got burned so what happened
1:03:22
okay well he rebuilt it again but after rebuilding it worldwide to bro okay so what
happened
1:03:30
to his business he needed to close it and then after the war
1:03:36
he tried to franchise his recipe of kentucky fried chicken and it was
1:03:43
rejected one thousand and nine times okay
1:03:51
so what happened well he was left with nothing
1:03:56
you
1:04:09
what he did was to supply existing restaurants
1:04:14
brand of fried chicken and he called it kentucky fried chicken
1:04:19
then eventually when it became popular people were looking for it restaurants
1:04:25
kentucky fried chicken until all restaurants that sell it
1:04:32
we sell kentucky fried chicken and then eventually those restaurants adopted them in
kentucky fried chicken
1:04:38
luma and when he died at the age of 90
1:04:46
there were 6 000 kentucky fried chicken stores
1:04:52
located in 48 countries that's at the time of his death and in the last
1:04:58
inventory in 2013 there are about 18 000 kentucky fried chicken stores in 118
1:05:08
countries that started with a recipe that was
1:05:13
rejected 1009 times
1:05:18
but mr sanders never gave up
1:05:25
okay so he never gave up he actually believed that what he has is a gold mine it's
1:05:33
just a matter of time as they are saying rome
1:05:39
wasn't built in a day give a great idea
1:05:45
time to mature in an incubator stage or an incubation period
1:05:51
within an incubation period and watch
1:05:56
as magic grows whatever it is that you do
1:06:02
as an entrepreneur it requires time
1:06:07
yeah me colonel harland sanders
1:06:12
okay so whether you think you can or you think you can't you're right that's according to
henry ford
1:06:19
okay therefore the success reminder that you have to remember based on the kentucky
fried chicken success story
1:06:26
believe that it's possible so always say i believe i believe i can fly okay
1:06:35
i believe i can touch the sky okay so let's move on and then tell yourself i
1:06:41
can and when you say that don't focus on anything else but the goal
1:06:48
it's like playing tennis without minding the scores but looking at the ball and
1:06:53
making sure that the tennis ball would bring in the points as you hit it every
1:07:00
time you s you see an opportunity say to yourself i can so hindi pueding parang
1:07:09
cuento young silas is
1:07:17
salesman a nobody wears slippers here we don't have a market
1:07:22
sabine money salesman b nobody wears slippers here we can teach them how to wear
it we can dominate the
1:07:29
market it's just a matter of the right mindset
1:07:34
so what is important when you're nurturing your entrepreneurial mind is you have to
believe that it is
1:07:43
possible okay so think about this
1:07:48
ordinary talent mr sanders have an ordinary talent what was it cooking chicken
1:07:54
but he had extraordinary perseverance
1:08:06
but before he died he was able to attain his goal why because he persevered
1:08:15
okay so if we talk about now the abcs of developing commitment so
1:08:21
that you can become a determined and a persevering entrepreneur always do your
1:08:27
best and work hard there's no substitute for hard work anyone who would say i'm
1:08:33
an entrepreneur i
1:08:41
can't do rather so be in charge welcome responsibility and change look at what
1:08:46
happened to kentucky fried chicken
1:08:55
okay you have to be in charge well i got an entrepreneurial tip from from a
1:09:00
sister of mine by telling me sabine ray lahat
1:09:10
you don't entrust it to just your lawyers you don't interest it just to your staff you have to
understand you have to know
1:09:18
from a to z of the papers that you are signing and then the most important
1:09:24
thing of all be a lifelong learner and that's what we do at go nikola show we always have
go negotiators the last time
1:09:31
i attended was when the speaker was jeff hoffman who is jeff hoffman you may not
know him
1:09:43
support system for booking.comhotel.com and then agoda
1:09:58
and creates again because he loves creating you have to learn to let go when you are an
entrepreneur
1:10:07
no don't be greedy no to learn how to let go because with the art of letting go
1:10:15
you learn how to start from scratch and you are actually feeling the the fertile grounds
1:10:22
of your creative imagination you do not keep everything forever
1:10:29
my personal philosophy no one know when to exit i told myself after i turned 35
1:10:38
well i'll go semi-retirement in what i'm doing now achieve mobana delena
1:10:43
because my mom got sick and passed away so i have um to attend to the things that
she left
1:10:50
behind but yeah i was able to do that and the most important thing that we
1:10:57
need to remember about being an entrepreneur is you have
1:11:03
to know when to enter and you have to know when to exit
1:11:08
do not overstay if you want to make a business out of yourself remember our
1:11:14
basic premise in fundamentals of nursing man's energy is not limitless look at
1:11:20
what happened to whitney houston look at what happened to michael jackson they
overstayed making business out of
1:11:27
themselves and their talent so what happened again agree enforcement and drugs until
1:11:34
they died because that's not the design of the universe the universe allows us to grow
but we
1:11:42
have to learn when to let go so the fifth scene is compassion
1:11:49
which is actually triggered by motivation according to dalai lama if
1:11:55
you want others to be happy practice compassion if you want to be happy practice
compassion whether you want
1:12:01
others to be happy or you want to be happy you have to learn how to become a
1:12:06
compassionate person and this is inherent among us nurses so to do that
1:12:12
we need to nourish our mind our body and our soul nobody talks about the soul
anymore we are very busy tending to the
1:12:20
brands of whatever we want to wear now the pandemic is teaching us to go back to the
basics nobody would be wearing
1:12:26
the shoes anymore because you wouldn't see what what one is wearing while we're
doing zoom meeting or microsoft meeting
1:12:34
okay and then okay nobody wears the expensive belts anymore nobody will see your
bugs anymore because the in thing
1:12:41
now is the aswang the aswang look is so
1:12:49
things like this happen so what matters the most is you know how to cope and the
success
1:12:56
reminder for this specific okay c
1:13:01
okay of the entrepreneurial mind is that surround yourself with people who can
1:13:07
encourage and uplift you do not stick it out with people who have negative things to
share with you
1:13:14
remember we become the five people who spend the most time with this is what
1:13:20
they call what social anthropologists would say okay
1:13:26
that um this is something that we adapt
1:13:33
okay when we adapt the behavior of the
1:13:39
person who whom we are always with okay so pattern social
1:13:57
that's why we have this saying that says tell me who your friends are and i will tell you
who you are
1:14:03
because of this fact or social heredity okay
1:14:13
okay i remember senator baum aquino when we start when he was just starting out not
not a
1:14:20
senator before okay he would always hang out with our group in gonigoso because
1:14:26
he would want to become entrepreneurial until he put up happiness for the people
1:14:32
okay so the people you hang out with eventually
1:14:38
will influence your entrepreneurial mind so always tell yourself i can and once
1:14:45
again focus on the goal so next important thing that you have to remember would be
1:14:51
the abcs of developing compassion the first one always think about how you can
improve people's lives so when you
1:14:59
think of a product it should not be because you want to make money first and foremost
it has to be
1:15:04
altruistic you would want to improve your life and the lives of people around
1:15:09
you not necessarily the world starts
1:15:24
and then believe that the filipino panelists i've always been telling you a while back and
most
1:15:29
important thing care about others so that ends the part one of our
1:15:37
discussion see you on the next part
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PART 2

welcome once again my dear fellow


0:04
learners
0:05
here's your member mentor ray and this
0:08
is part two of our topic the go negotia
0:11
formula the entrepreneurial
0:13
mind
0:22
so
0:23
let's move on to
0:25
the next important issue that we're
0:28
going to talk about and this is issue
0:30
number three do we consider who we are
0:33
as a nurse as being aligned with the
0:35
entrepreneurial mind what do you think
0:37
is it a yes or a no i would say it's a
0:40
yes
0:41
why
0:43
well if we're going to take a look at
0:45
the characteristics of the empowered
0:46
nurse
0:47
we usually use our mind
0:50
to come up with our clinical judgment
0:53
what we can do
0:54
to
0:56
make the patient more comfortable
1:00
and then
1:01
we need to enhance our skills
1:03
we need to be competent which is one of
1:05
the five c's
1:07
we need to be compassionate
1:09
another of the five c's but
1:12
okay
1:13
which was not explicitly mentioned in
1:16
the five c's of the entrepreneurial mind
1:20
is the core of our being as nurses
1:23
our caring role represented by the heart
1:27
that's why the nurse
1:29
is best described with the 3h we have
1:32
the head
1:33
we think the hands the skills and the
1:37
heart
1:40
which is the very core of our profession
1:44
the caring
1:46
and compassionate heart
1:49
that does the job
1:51
okay
1:53
and ensures that the job is done
1:57
with utmost concern
2:00
for the patient's well-being
2:03
so if we need to answer the question do
2:06
we do we consider who we are as nurses
2:08
as aligned with the entrepreneurial mind
2:11
take a look at the characteristics of
2:13
the empowered nurse
2:15
okay hindi come on he said the answer is
2:18
a resounding yes
2:20
that's why a lot of nurses have ventured
2:23
into entrepreneurship like carrie barton
2:26
salinas and gail barton hay
2:28
who
2:30
innovated
2:32
okay
2:33
the
2:34
iv lines by color coding it such that
2:36
when patients have multiple iv lines
2:39
it's not going to be difficult for the
2:40
nurse to monitor
2:42
so this is now earning them royalties
2:44
okay
2:45
or you can also agmalit and you can do
2:48
ah
2:50
a business like this face bull
2:52
[Laughter]
2:55
very nice recall
2:59
subject and nutrition so put it into
3:01
practice facebook or
3:08
i usually get pictures of the things i
3:09
get to see around okay
3:11
uh star box for example maraming papa
3:14
papa pizza
3:16
but it you know it attracts attention
3:19
but what's important is that it delivers
3:22
the message okay
3:24
except the face bull because the face as
3:26
a new fish the one again facebook
3:30
and then star box it talks about hair so
3:32
this is a salon okay
3:34
so
3:36
let's take a look at the world health
3:38
organization key facts and figure things
3:41
out do we really need to nurture our
3:44
entrepreneurial mind to become
3:46
entrepreneurs after nursing or should we
3:49
use our expertise
3:52
our skills our knowledge to take care of
3:54
patients let's take a look at the facts
3:58
what is the who telling us nurses and
4:01
midwives account for nearly
4:04
50 of the global health workforce
4:08
there is a global shortage of health
4:10
workers in particular nurses and
4:11
midwives who represent more than 50
4:14
of the current shortage in health
4:16
workers they need us as nurses
4:18
so we can do
4:20
entrepreneurship on the sides okay the
4:23
largest needs-based shortages of nurses
4:25
and midwives are in southeast asia and
4:27
africa that's very true we're feeling it
4:29
now for all countries to reach
4:31
sustainable development goal number
4:32
three on health and well-being the world
4:34
health organization estimates that the
4:36
world will need an additional
4:39
9 million nurses and midwives by the
4:42
year 2030.
4:51
i remember
4:54
from the titan
5:23
headed for worst nursing shortage okay
5:27
currently they have a shortage of 690
5:30
000 and
5:31
the country will need meaning the u.s 4
5:34
million
5:35
579
5:37
275 nurses in total by 2022 to keep up
5:42
with the required demand you can just
5:46
imagine no matter how many nurses we
5:50
produce in our country we cannot supply
5:54
okay the u.s
5:56
to
5:57
diminish these demands
6:01
okay
6:02
so the question now is
6:04
should we stay as nurses
6:06
or should we be entrepreneurs that's one
6:10
thing you have to consider i will not
6:11
dictate upon you on what you want
6:14
because in the same manner when i
6:17
decided that i will become an
6:19
entrepreneur instead of a bedside nurse
6:21
my parents respected the idea okay
6:25
so in the philippines nurses are the
6:28
most numerous health workers
6:30
and the philippines is the largest
6:31
source of registered nurses working
6:33
overseas
6:34
however there will be minimal graduates
6:37
from 2020 to 2022 due to the k-12
6:40
adjustments that's very true so it
6:42
confounds the shortage so the impact of
6:44
the pandemic on the professional
6:46
licensure exam schedule which
6:48
is usually being postponed or
6:50
rescheduled
6:52
and then the slow implementation of
6:53
salary adjustments and release of
6:55
benefits of nurses is
6:58
becoming at the motivation for a lot of
7:00
nurses to continue in bedside nursing
7:03
and of course parental fear of the
7:05
coveted exposure of students in the
7:07
clinical area so a lot of schools
7:09
they're allowing their students to go on
7:11
leave of absence because the parents
7:13
would not permit their students to have
7:16
hospital clinical duty and of course
7:19
small distribution of nurses non-nursing
7:21
opportunities versus hospitals like a
7:23
lot of nurses are in bpos okay so the
7:26
question is this are we ready to keep up
7:29
with the global demand for our
7:30
professional services
7:32
i don't think so but are we ready to
7:34
abandon being bedside nurses and become
7:36
entrepreneurs i also don't think so
7:39
so let us take a look at some factors
7:42
that could be worth considering
7:44
as of 2019 one in every three humans on
7:47
planet earth will be a gen zero so what
7:50
does that mean a growing number of gen
7:52
zeros are interested in forging career
7:54
paths in sports music and fashion
7:57
they're not interested in becoming a
7:59
nurse contingency or learning customer
8:02
nurse therefore
8:03
nursing
8:05
the entry-level hospital practice is no
8:07
longer among the top 20 highest-paid
8:08
professions that's according to the u.s
8:11
bureau of labor statistics as of
8:12
september 2020 but my friends there now
8:14
are telling me
8:16
that
8:17
nurses who are being asked to return to
8:21
their jobs are being paid as much as 150
8:24
dollars to 250 dollars
8:27
per hour
8:29
that's how bad the shortage is
8:32
it's no longer per day
8:33
per hour
8:35
and some would have a minimum
8:37
salary of one thousand dollars per day
8:41
because they need nurses
8:49
i'm showing you both sides
8:51
of the coin so that you can make an
8:53
informed decision i'm not going to
8:56
lure you to become an entrepreneur when
8:59
the times would call that you should be
9:02
a bedside nurse okay
9:05
okay i would just give you the idea the
9:07
facts the beauty of both sides and it's
9:10
up to you to make the decision
9:12
so issue number four would be
9:15
how to nurture the entrepreneurial mind
9:18
is it through role modeling or earning a
9:20
degree remember
9:23
mr millian the dog whisperer didn't have
9:26
a degree but he became famous earned a
9:28
lot had a tv show had a lot of products
9:33
what we need
9:35
is not a degree
9:38
what we need
9:39
is a mentor or a role model who can show
9:44
us the way that's why we're doing this
9:47
course now this has should this should
9:50
have been
9:51
part of the curriculum for the longest
9:53
time but i'm so glad it's now part of
9:55
the curriculum so allow me to be a
9:57
little more personal at this point in
9:58
time so let let me share with you how
10:01
did i start as an entrepreneur well
10:05
initially
10:07
i was a jollibee crew member while i was
10:11
still doing my nursing course at usd
10:14
this is me
10:17
110 pounds no no
10:20
maybe 70 pounds ago that was how badou
10:23
the uniform of jollibee is orange and
10:25
brown brown plants and orange so
10:28
after my classes at usa i would usually
10:30
go to jollibee holiday plaza and then uh
10:34
i would do my things a grill station or
10:37
a sign and i will have to be i usually
10:40
i'm the closing crew
10:42
for
10:44
the
10:46
grill station there was one thing that
10:49
that's very funny that happened to me
10:51
that i'll i'll tell you in a while okay
10:54
this is in relation to my salary look
10:55
say something is
10:57
928.93 pesos because my salary per hour
11:01
is 11.25 but non first hour because
11:06
just
11:07
say sir where because i wanted to become
11:10
a member of the elite 60 seconds club so
11:12
gusta
11:22
[Music]
12:30
and of course i admitted my mistakes so
12:32
what happened was
12:54
but of course i was determined
12:57
because i needed a job
13:04
on
13:06
so i i tried my very very best to learn
13:10
from my mistakes and to better what i do
13:13
on a day-to-day basis then eventually
13:17
okay
13:19
that's how i am 670 pounds ago okay
13:24
then eventually
13:31
that's me okay
13:43
we both represented the philippines in
13:45
the world entrepreneurs summit in
13:47
singapore in 2005
13:50
and i was inducted as the first nurse
13:53
entrepreneur to become a member of the
13:55
prestigious arts and young entrepreneur
13:58
of the year academy okay and that's
14:02
because
14:03
i once was awarded as entrepreneur fear
14:06
of course whoever whatever i am whoever
14:09
i am now i owe it to my mom
14:26
my mom raised me to be entrepreneurial
14:38
[Laughter]
14:40
but that's how my mother
15:01
the things i practice as an entrepreneur
15:06
i experienced it first time
15:08
because my mom
15:10
wanted me to see it
15:13
that's how she raised me i don't have an
15:16
mba
15:17
i don't have a master's in
15:19
entrepreneurship my siblings all had
15:21
master's degree either in business ad or
15:24
entrepreneurship but whenever we have
15:26
discussions they would say how did you
15:28
get that idea
15:30
and i would take a look at my mom
15:37
so what's my secret
15:39
my secret is my one two three formula so
15:42
what's a one two three formula what is
15:44
one
15:45
one idea
15:46
when i started to uh
15:49
uh with a business
15:51
it's an idea along with you mashadu
16:35
that
16:36
and then after a while i received a
16:38
letter i was so excited and then what
16:41
was in the letter well the manuscript
16:44
was very gorgeously rejected
16:48
they expected happened but
16:51
but
16:52
okay
16:53
it wasn't rejected based on content it
16:54
was rejected because the format was just
16:57
too ahead of its time
16:59
ramishan games
17:01
crossword puzzle okay
17:03
so
17:04
eventually
17:07
i persevered allah kfc i went to another
17:11
publisher presented my book this time i
17:14
wrote next rn in a flash for
17:16
um barnes and noble's usa okay at
17:20
johnson bartlett usa rather barnes and
17:23
nobles was the bookstore okay and then
17:26
what i did is that ayoko
17:28
competes among grades so i would want to
17:31
create something that would just
17:32
complement the existing books but making
17:35
sure that it is different
17:40
each page has a flowchart
17:42
the functional concept then applied to
17:45
an answer the functional concepts method
17:48
is my innovation in spite of actually my
17:50
advanced studies in the states i now
17:53
have my own functional concepts method
17:56
of lecturing and it has been adapted in
17:59
25 countries worldwide
18:02
okay you see how
18:04
one talent
18:06
of writing
18:08
can influence people to get to see
18:15
so the reason why this book was
18:17
successful is that it never competed
18:18
with what is in there
18:20
so when this was tagged as customers
18:23
favorite in barnes and nobles
18:26
and actually it was one of my students
18:28
in the states who called me up and told
18:29
me sorry i saw your book this was it was
18:32
the customer's favorite and so happy
18:35
okay
18:36
and
18:38
eventually
18:40
must be
18:41
sent me a letter if i can write a book
18:44
for them and so i wrote the abc of
18:46
passing the employees rn
18:48
okay
18:50
and then see lippincott vengeance
18:51
saunders kasamana and young abandoned
19:10
okay so eventually they asked me to
19:12
write most essential concepts for the
19:14
philippine nurse licensure exam
19:16
that became the first filipino authored
19:19
book that was
19:21
awarded as winner in the international
19:24
book awards in 2010
19:36
you'll never know
19:38
where your imagination and your dreams
19:41
will take you
19:43
just
19:44
believe
19:45
that's the most important thing so what
19:47
is number two
19:49
one one idea i mean
20:07
and this is the the picture that would
20:10
always remind me to be grounded
20:13
the picture that would always tell me
20:15
where i'm from
20:18
because it tells me
20:20
how far
20:21
i have been
20:23
and i wouldn't be here i wouldn't be
20:25
speaking before you today inspiring you
20:28
to do the same had it not been for the
20:31
dynamic duo in my life of course my
20:33
mother
20:34
and my father
20:37
and of course
20:59
is
21:05
but
21:06
i never gave up i was determined
21:10
i persevered
21:12
i believed
21:14
my time will come
21:16
and so
21:18
if we're going to take a look at what's
21:20
important
21:23
that would enable us to shape our
21:26
entrepreneurial mind
21:28
i can identify three important things
21:31
life experiences
21:34
like the dog whisperer
21:36
role model like bill gates and the rest
21:39
and of course the environment that
21:41
allowed me to grow
21:43
these three main factors
21:45
nurtures the entrepreneurial mind
21:49
and allow me class
21:51
to share with you
21:54
why do we need our parents to guide us
21:59
as we aspire to become entrepreneurs i
22:01
will not answer that but i'll share with
22:03
you an anecdote
22:10
now
23:02
so in essence
23:06
the row side of our entrepreneurial mind
23:11
should be properly molded
23:13
by the guidance of our parents
23:17
so
23:18
the fifth
23:20
issue that i'm going to ask you class
23:23
are entrepreneurs born or made
23:27
well those who say that entrepreneurs
23:29
are born
23:32
that's actually not
23:34
realistic
23:36
or
23:37
it's a silly idea
23:39
because how come we are having
23:41
entrepreneurship as part of our nursing
23:43
course
23:45
so it simply means that it can be
23:48
learned
23:49
and therefore i can say
23:52
entrepreneurs are made
23:55
so if you want to find out if you are an
23:59
entrepreneur
24:00
i'm asking you to take
24:02
a short online quiz to find out go to
24:05
the site
24:07
type it
24:08
and take the quiz and find out for
24:11
yourself if you could be an entrepreneur
24:16
always remember to be an entrepreneur
24:19
everything begins with an idea and the
24:22
idea
24:23
could
24:24
emanate from the three eyes
24:27
which are well information what are the
24:30
market needs what are the trends okay
24:33
what is going on on the internet okay
24:37
what are the business that are on
24:39
uptrend what are the needs of the people
24:43
second would be what irritates you
24:45
irritation could also be a source of
24:47
business idea like for example
24:49
you get irritated doing such melanin cr
24:51
you need a deodorizer you need uh you
24:54
get irritated by the small of the under
24:57
arm so you need a deodorant
25:02
you you get irritated by your spouse
25:06
okay that's why you go to night clubs
25:09
dear house see any any irritation could
25:12
result to an entrepreneurial idea
25:15
or you could also turn your hobbies
25:19
your passion into business ventures
25:22
okay
25:23
so
25:26
let me leave you
25:27
with
25:29
a horoscope of mine a couple of years
25:32
back but this has always inspired me
25:36
it says
25:38
make sure you love
25:40
for the work make sure you have love for
25:43
the work you are doing if your work is
25:46
not inspired by a true love from within
25:50
then quit your job
25:52
and find something else
25:55
follow your passion
25:56
follow your heart
25:58
and the money and opportunities
26:00
will follow
26:02
naturally
26:04
amen to that
26:07
so this is your mentor mentor ray saying
26:09
thank you
26:11
for
26:11
sticking out with our discussion today
26:14
and i'll meet you soon for
26:16
our other topics
26:18
once again thank you
26:31
you
English (auto-generated)

PART 3 BUSINESS PLANS

good day fellow learners once again this is your member ray joining you for another
teaching learning session and
1:14
this time on the topic about business plan so
1:20
today we'll be talking about the 12 parts of business plans and our objectives include
the following at the
1:26
end of the session the learners and that's you shall identify the parts of the business
1:32
plan identify the components of each part of a business plan
1:37
and then write an initial draft of a business plan that reflects all the parts of the
business plan that we've
1:43
discussed so let's begin with the 12 parts you have the cover page table of contents
1:50
executive summary business description market analysis and strategy marketing
1:56
and sales plan competitive analysis management and organization description
2:01
products and services description operating plan financial projection and
2:06
needs and last but not the least exhibits and appendices which could be your favorite
part but remember
2:14
this that you would not be able to put anything there until you're able to get through the
2:23
meeting parts of your business plan so let's begin with the first one it's
2:29
the cover page now take note that in the cover page it should include contact
information for yourself and your
2:34
partners this is very important because once the investor who reads your business plan
becomes interested
2:42
in what you are proposing it's going to be easy for them to locate for your contact
details then include your logo
2:48
if you have one one or two sentence uh that reflects a descriptive summary or
2:53
it could just be a a specific mission statement or
2:59
if your page if you have uh like a single liner
3:06
description of what you intend to do so in essence you are coming up with
3:13
your own slogan and then use an elegant font and design to
3:20
present to your would-be investor that what you have in mind is
3:25
a business that is in essence it reflects that your
3:32
business plan is reflective of a well thought out idea
3:38
with well thought out and well researched components okay
3:44
so and then our checklist for our cover page would
3:49
definitely include these three contact information logo and brief description so here's an
example
3:55
so you have the name of the company and then you have your slogan okay great
4:00
ideas today for your future i don't think this is a logo but it could be a very attractive
picture that's very
4:05
representative of what they intend to do and of course the name of the proponent and
the contact details it's as simple
4:12
as that you can be creative there's no mandated format for the cover
4:18
page what matters the most is you have the most essential parts that we've just
4:25
outlined okay now the second part of a business plan would be the table of contents
now
4:32
make sure that you have demarcations for the main part specific parts and accurate
page numbers
4:38
um there's no clear-cut rule as to whether you are supposed to come up with the use of
roman numerals for
4:45
the main parts or capital letters for as long as you are consistent throughout the text
and one of those things that a
4:52
lot of those who write their business plans would not be so keen about is ensuring that
the page
5:00
numbers the pagination are specific to what is found in the table of contents specifically
if you've
5:07
added figures or tables or pictures in between your text it could have moved
5:13
the labels for the part so it's very very important that you first have to print it and check
it against the table of
5:21
contents that you have prepared and the printed
5:27
page that bears the page number in that case you won't be able to
5:33
miss out on the most important point the piece is off really okay a business plan
5:38
reader okay so the table of contents checklist includes your main parts specific parts
and accurate page in hr
5:46
now part three would be the executive summary now this is the single most important
5:54
part of your business plan so what is included in the executive summary let me
6:01
give you just one word that would give you an accurate description of what your
executive summary should be it contains
6:08
it's one word highlights okay so in a nutshell it could be just one to
6:14
two pages to start strong you could actually cite a recent statistics showing the
6:22
trend in the industry which you would want to engage in for example if you would want
to engage in the yaya
6:29
training program you could say that since after the pandemic jobs have
6:34
increased and most of those housewives who are now working to help
6:40
out in the family expenses would need to hire aya so in in one community
6:46
90 of the households employ at least one yaya so you could actually cite those
6:54
statistics and then it's also very very important to relate how those statistics
7:00
would eventually affect the opportunity that you see okay
7:07
so that could be your strongest selling point for your enterprise okay so
7:15
remember this your summary should express the future success of the business so
what i would
7:24
want to see if i'm going to read your executive summary would be
7:41
your projections must be based on realistic
7:47
data do not fantasize and overshoot your targets what is important is
7:55
it breeds excitement your executive summary should breed excitement
8:01
the excitement of the reader it should initially make them salivate about the
8:08
opportunity that you found okay so the content checklist for the executive
8:14
summary you have to have a brief description of the company include the structure and
the scale of operations
8:20
meaning should it be regional should it be national should it be global okay
8:26
always remember start small okay and then present the goals and objectives what you
hope to achieve okay
8:34
and then description of products and services include your competitive advantage what
makes your product or
8:40
your service unique and of course identify the characteristics of your
8:46
target market okay and then include expenses and sources of
8:51
revenue on the area that presents the cost then include the traditional and
8:57
innovative strategies which you plan to employ for your marketing and last but not the
least would be the financial
9:04
projections include your formula for financial success so all of this will
9:09
just be stated in general terms you don't have to be very very specific in your executive
summary because the
9:15
specific details should be contained in the body of your business plan so in a
9:22
nutshell your business plan should only be one to two pages okay so you have to
9:29
be realistic to not overshoot to not fantasize so remember this write your
9:35
executive summary last so if since it is the single most important
9:41
part of the business plan you have to make sure that it contains the necessary
9:47
highlights that will make your reader come to you and say let's put up the
9:52
business right here right now yeah yeah okay okay so let's move on
9:59
and then part four would be business description here the keyword is
10:06
comprehensive which means you have to make sure that your details are complete
10:13
and it includes the goals the objectives the legal structure of the business would it be
sole proprietorship would it
10:19
be partnership or would it be a corporation so you have to specify and for you to be
10:26
able to do that you have to go through the site of the department of trading industry and
the securities and exchange
10:32
commission or better yet consult a lawyer on what is best for what you
10:38
intend to come up with and then the star of what you need to discuss and
10:46
describe in a comprehensive way would be your products or services that is the star
10:53
of this part and then of course definitely who will use it so you have to know your
11:00
target customers your base your market make sure that when you identify your
11:07
market it is capable of
11:12
supporting what your business operations would entail okay so include details on
11:19
the industry trends specifically uh major competitors now there's no need
11:26
for you to compare your business with that of your competitors you don't need to
denigrate them what matters the most
11:32
is to highlight how different you are in terms of managing the situation that
11:39
they're currently doing so what are the innovative aspects of what you intend to
11:45
do okay once again you talk about yourself your product okay
11:51
less of your competitor and you can just even say that in the market these are
11:57
the existing competitions that we have all of them are utilizing western
12:02
products we intend to introduce locally produced products which are more aligned with
the taste of the filipinos and that
12:09
would be your selling point okay so include your team's experience what sets you apart
but
12:16
it's not nice the mind that if you will include your team you would show that you have
pirated them from
12:22
different parts no no no that's other way to do it so if you introduce your team you don't
12:28
have to be giving the details that they graduated with latin owners and they have no no
no no no that's not what is
12:34
needed when you include your team make sure you have a brief description of why that
12:41
person is in your team what are the things that that person could do to propel the
business to where
12:50
it should be okay and then specify if it is an existing business this is what i'm
12:55
trying to say you'd in in our first video what we said is you don't
13:02
come up with the plan before the business it is better when your business is running for
six to twelve months
13:07
before you come up with a plan okay and then include also whether
13:13
this is a business plan for a new business or an expansion of an existing business and
then of course include its
13:21
location now you have to be very very specific with the location it has to be aligned with
the image of the business
13:28
of course you don't want to put your restaurant near a funeral business okay what would
they
13:37
think about yung le mangle i remember in one of my travels up north
13:44
before we were looking for somewhere to sleep during the night and then we came up
uh we we came to a
13:52
pension house you can just imagine of course you don't
13:59
also want to have like your parlor beside the poneraria so who would be your customers
okay
14:07
okay so and then explain why the business will be successful so the first
14:13
person who should believe that you will be successful should be you because if you
cannot spell out how your
14:19
business will become successful you won't be able to encourage your investors to
believe in what you plan to
14:24
do so let's make let's make things easy okay so if you're writing your
14:32
um this part of your business plan the first thing that you have to ask
14:38
yourself is so pay particular attention describe the
14:44
market in the industry that you want to penetrate cite statistics okay
14:50
and then say so what so if 95 of the households now are employing
14:57
yayas so what so identify the opportunity and
15:04
check it out if it aligns with your expertise remember as we said a while back your
business could either be
15:10
market driven or technology driven technology driven means it emanates from
15:15
the expertise that you possess okay and then after that
15:20
now what so what will you do with the opportunity so you have to have a goal and you
have
15:26
to have a plan so it begins with what so what now what okay
15:32
so part five of the business plan would be your market analysis and strategy
15:38
remember the purpose is to research and identify your company's target market
15:43
and where to find them so ask this question is this about location looking
15:48
for a business versus a business looking for a location some people would do like this
16:07
so what happens now so indi dominate market sometimes naman okay you
16:14
have a business that's looking for a location say for example you want to uh
16:21
put up a bookstore but definitely you don't want to put up a bookstore du unsa
16:28
area where you don't have schools and universities okay so you have to look
16:34
for the location to bring in that business okay so ask yourself is this
16:39
about location looking for a business or is it about a business looking for a
16:44
location then claro muneon you consider where is your market that is the
16:51
priority consideration okay you need to provide evidence that there is a market
16:59
okay so which means this is the part in which you have to identify how much is the
industry which
17:06
you plan to penetrate growing are they growing five percent a year 10 a year 50
17:12
a year but even if it's growing 100 every year
17:18
remember if you are a start-up business okay do not buy more than what you could
17:25
chew okay remember uh there was this story about two
17:30
restaurants in the united states so one restaurant was really selling its
17:36
food very very fast bye so what they did they spied on that
17:43
restaurant the negnana
17:56
offices nearby and if i can just get 10 percent of what they are catering to
18:09
okay no let's not go for the percent let's go for the sixty percent
18:17
restaurants
18:32
seems to be a bright idea so what happened okay on the day that they opened the
restaurant the competitors
18:39
the first one the original restaurant restaurant a let's call it restaurant a
18:45
close the restaurant an aggregation and signage that says
18:50
with due respect to our new neighbor who is offering an alternative set of foods
18:58
we would want you to try them go and try since um
19:04
50 to 60 percent no 50 to 60 percent regular daily
19:09
customer no original restaurant so what happened since nakshara's original restaurant
19:18
okay restaurant and so what happened
19:30
okay so after the opening day the second day they didn't have any
19:35
customer
19:51
the competition that would eventually set you apart okay don't look at it as
19:56
something that would kill you and don't ever try to kill your competitor you won't be able
to do that okay you're
20:02
gonna kill yourself thinking of nasty strategies if you do that so what is important is
20:08
you believe in your product and you know what makes you unique and
20:13
then in your market analysis specify what your market needs are the scalability whether
it's global national
20:21
regional and of course the return of investment and then pay particular attention to the
demographics the social
20:28
media presence and the strategies for flexibility okay so remember this the
20:33
end result of your market analysis should be why your business will be able
20:39
to grab a piece of the pie and make sure you have the right
20:44
strategy when you target that percentage of customers that you
20:50
want to get so if you want to make your life a little
20:55
more easy this is actually a template for market analysis you can
21:01
go to this site and then use the template for your business plan okay remember this you
can
21:08
use charts grabs or simple text in this section share news that supports your
21:13
projection okay part six of your business plan should be the
21:19
marketing and sales plan so consider how will you market your products and services
so
21:25
for the first month what do you intend to do are you going to hit the market big right
away it's supposed to be by
21:32
super bonga with even your um tv interview
21:38
try media interview with press conference would you go that way or would you rather
just be a little more
21:45
conservative okay try to feel through the market
21:50
now you also would need to answer this how would you establish market presence
21:55
would you need an endorser would you be the endorser yourself who would be the face
of your business those are the
22:02
things that you have to consider now are you going to enter the market utilizing pricing
as your main strategy meaning
22:09
you're going to lower down your price initially are you going to offer it for free
22:14
and then what would be your sales strategies who would speak and sell your product
okay and then how will your
22:22
product stand out versus the competition what's your unique selling point these are the
22:28
questions that you need to focus on for your marketing and sales plan
22:34
and if you want to make your life once again easier check this out that's asana.com you
have templates for your
22:42
sales plan okay so let's move on so marketing and sales plan checklist
22:49
includes your pricing sales strategies and sales tracking advertising and profile building
networking and
22:55
promotion partnerships and other innovative strategies okay
23:00
business plan part number seven your competitive analysis so the first thing they have
to consider is
23:07
so what would be the market segment that you will be targeting is it the low end or the
high end if it is going to be the
23:12
low end
23:19
they can only pay as much kung hai
23:30
so if you are a nurse and you want to put up your salon what would be the selling point
23:46
whether the patient is diabetic or not and whether why you have to cut the fingernail
straight across and file it
23:52
on the edges so which means you are giving health education in terms of food
23:57
care among diabetic patients and then you could use that eventually as your tagline
okay the health is alone for
24:04
people who wants to maintain health okay so you can selling point more okay
24:11
my vital sign station okay and then identify your competitors
24:17
strengths and weaknesses so turn their weaknesses into your strength okay
24:24
so crowded so 20 right away so maybe you would want to have a spa
24:32
type of ambiance and just limit your customer to two at a time of course they
24:39
will pay higher okay and with all the mood lights and the music okay
24:44
then identify potential issues in the market sometimes even government regulation
could actually affect your
24:51
market pandemic such as this could affect your market flight of professionals could
affect
24:57
your market then explain how you will improve upon existing products or services so
what
25:03
are the things that you intend to do to keep on innovating your products so
25:09
all of these should be considered when you are coming up with your competitive
analysis so remember this class if there
25:16
are other companies that are already doing what you plan to do it simply means there's
a demand for what you want
25:21
to do but okay and um
25:39
and sometimes it would just need a little
25:48
that's focused on the health needs of people with health issues that's your selling point
so you have to
25:55
be able to differentiate yourself from the crowd early on generic
26:04
what sets you apart okay so that's one thing that you have to remember so part
26:10
eight of a business plan would be management and organizational description so first
you have to
26:15
identify your company
26:26
so i always just say i remember my one two three formula for success and the answer i
started with one idea okay
26:36
that's so when you are a new company you would
26:42
need a lot of advice so this is where your friends could come in if you have a lawyer
friend could give you insights
26:49
about the legalities of the structure of the business that you want if you have an
accountant friend and consultant for
26:55
taxation and uh okay and then you you may want also to
27:02
identify um what sets of professionals would you need
27:08
to run your company
27:14
okay we're doing marketing
27:33
and then on week ends okay i do my masters and then i one time i told my mom
27:45
um
28:20
at the same time but my mom was right all along so
28:26
she was never wrong and when she told me that there will come a time
28:31
that what you need will just come to you not because
28:37
not because they need you but the universe is rewarding you for a job well
29:00
from single proprietorship going on corporation but make sure class when you turn it
into a corporation
29:10
okay
29:39
should have listened to her okay next use charts and include pictures if you
29:44
want specifically pictures of um those who will be
29:49
occupying your management position okay so if you want to create one check this
29:55
app out so this would help you create an organizational chart okay it's by asana
30:02
and then part nine would be the part of a business plan that would deal with the
products and services that you need to
30:08
describe so consider um asking yourself this how would the
30:14
products be created and how would it be introduced to the markets
30:20
so for example
30:35
magano on the gaso you have to do the cost thing okay so
30:40
remember this a product or service should match the characteristics
30:45
preference that's the most important and buying power of your target markets
31:02
that's very okay so part number 10 would be the operating
31:08
plan so consider where will be your operations
31:16
clubhouse
31:33
okay so initially how many employees do you need would you have partner companies
like
31:38
for example will you call red cross or demonstrate cpr if so magano and gasto smoking
31:46
all of those things must be spelled out in the operating plan so you have to be very very
specific okay so for you
31:56
here's another site in which you can create your own business processes you can try it
for free okay
32:03
so part 11 of the business plan would be your financial projection in need so
32:11
what will be your source of revenue for the next three years because definitely when a
business is new
32:18
hindi payang ki kita agad at might be break even that's a joke or a misconception so
32:26
when i started their first business zero
32:32
income for the first 18 months but a christmas bonus
32:40
okay and my mom was diagnosed with cancer and she has to undergo chemotherapy
32:46
and it was a late stage thing and at papa arala i was doing my masters don't have any
32:52
money anymore but because one of those
32:58
who had a very good experience with the program i created the academic program i
created
33:03
really liked it so much young parents
33:22
and
33:46
so i gave um the parents of that participant a call and they said
33:55
and we know for a fact that you did more than what we expected from you to implement
that academic program and so
34:02
as as our gratitude guess about blowout
34:08
[Music]
34:18
that situation keeps coming back
34:24
it keeps rewinding over and over my mind such that whenever we have debates in the
company
34:32
about raising fees or what that situation almost always
34:38
would guide me with my decision and i would always ask myself what is the reason why
i'm here bakit ba
34:44
ako nandito so
35:00
so you have to be innovative about your sources of revenue and then make sure that
you are clear with your financial
35:07
statements you know the cash flow and then specify and justify how funds
35:14
will be spent like for example 11 percent non-capital
35:20
equipment 11 percent 11 percent
35:25
specified okay so as a beginner i'm not expecting
35:34
to prove to us
35:41
3000
35:51
okay so you have to be very realistic about your estimates remember your financial plan
which means the
35:58
projection and the needs demonstrates how your business will become profitable
36:10
okay so always be conservative don't fantasize
36:28
until it's done and you are paid you don't have the funds yet okay
36:34
so always remember start small be simple and remember
36:39
wealth is not about how much you make wealth is defined by what remains of how
36:46
much you make okay
36:52
okay next so uh for your financial plan okay
36:58
our checklist would include break even analysis so months back will come a break
37:06
projected balance sheet then projected income statement and then projected cash flow
okay so once again
37:15
check this out okay you can plan your cash flow and you can do your false card uh
forecasting okay using this site okay
37:25
and then part 12 of the business plan would be exhibits and appendices this could be
your favorite why you place
37:32
here the resume of company management make sure that you just have one brief
resume for each one page or even half a
37:38
page for each the permits if you already have it the marketing research findings
37:44
proposed marketing materials some sample of your flyers a picture of
38:15
a business without a sign is
38:23
materials legal documents pictures of the prada okay and of course financial
documents like
38:30
for example projections
38:36
it has to be there okay for easy referencing once again para dumali
38:42
mo my advice log on to this site to make your life a little more easy okay so you
38:49
have a pre free business plan all you have to do is to get the template that you need for
example it took us a
38:55
professional services click on mail alabaster template you just have to fill
39:00
it up so i hope with this presentation i made your life a little more easy
39:09
a young tedious process of creating a business plan
39:25
but as a beginner we're not asking the sun and the moon and the stars from you we're
just asking you to go through
39:32
the process so that you know what to do just in case you will venture into
39:38
a business okay so with that thank you so much this is your memory saying
39:44
maraming Salamat Po it was a short engagement with all of you and i look
39:49
forward to meeting you in person when the time comes and i just hope i can inspire you
to become
39:56
entrepreneurs with a heart okay thank you
40:14
you

BUSINESS MODELS

good day fellow learners once again i'm your mentor mentor ray gapuz joining you
1:08
for the part two on our discussion of the concept the business plan the house advice of
it so
1:14
for this lesson and teaching and learning engagement we'll be talking about one
important
1:21
aspect of planning for a business and this needs to be spelled out even before
1:28
you decide to write your business plan and what better way to do it than
1:33
of course learn from life lessons okay so let's learn from my life lesson today
1:40
and how do we apply whatever learnings i have in terms of identifying
1:46
the business model that would fit something that's popping out of your mind
1:53
what business model would fit the idea that you have in terms of the kind
2:00
of business that you would want to come up with okay so today we'll be talking about
2:06
understanding your business model and the first thing that you would ask yourself
probably would be
2:11
what is business what is a business model what does it mean now in my dealings with a
lot of
2:17
entrepreneurs and businessmen and colleagues in the nursing profession whenever we
come up with a proposed
2:24
business the first thing that your listeners would ask you would
2:30
be so how will your business make money
2:37
the answer to that question is your definition of your business model so in
2:44
essence when we talk about business model okay it is how
2:50
your business would earn money so our objectives for this session would be at
2:56
the end of the session the learner shall define what a business model is identify at least
three types of specific
3:01
business models and discuss the four general types of business models that
3:06
are applicable in an e-learning business environment as well as
3:13
in real life face-to-face market okay
3:19
so let's begin so i've been telling you a while back the answer to the question
3:24
that is posed by friends acquaintances investors
3:30
okay or friends in business clubs would be your definition of your business model
3:39
so in essence a business model is an outline of how a company will earn a revenue now
3:46
there's no specific business model that's appropriate for all types of businesses in other
words it's not
3:53
something that's standard you can always innovate and create and improve on existing
business models
3:58
so there's an endless list when it comes to
4:04
the types of business models that we have but what is important is you have
4:09
to be able to address the key points that you need to address when you decide to come
up with a
4:17
business model okay so a business model should therefore answer the following
questions okay
4:24
one what product or service will the company sell what are you selling i remember when
my sister was asked
4:33
what is her company all about and she answered her guru by saying this is in a
4:38
business called i'm selling dreams how can you sell dreams
4:45
because during that time there were a lot of nurses who would want to venture into a
career in the us and that's what
4:52
she's selling okay facilitating the entry of nurses to the us so in essence
4:58
you're saying what is your company selling or selling dreams okay but
5:04
making sure that the dreams that we sell should turn into reality and then how
5:09
will it market the product or services so how will your company market it will you go
5:15
try media which was the fad back then you'll have ads on the tv the radio the
5:20
newspapers it's a whole lot different ball game now when
5:26
we talk of social media and what is important right now is when you are going to market
your
5:32
product or service you have to consider three things
5:40
which means you have to be present in the consciousness of your target customers so
5:47
the first thing that you have to do therefore is to target the mind make them aware that
you exist and after that
5:57
forget the mind and then target the heart how could you make your prada
6:03
target the heart some would do this by putting on a little um
6:08
corporate social responsibility on what they do like for example the advertisement of
nest cafe now for
6:14
every cup of coffee you drink okay it means a return of investment for the
6:21
coffee farmers okay so that's an advocacy anchored
6:27
marketing okay so first the mind make them aware that you exist second the heart and
the
6:35
third of course you cannot run a business without money so you also need to target a
wallet but the wallet of
6:41
your customers to be should be the last of your targets
6:50
so what we want to do now is to first make your customers become aware that
6:56
you exist then win their hearts and when you are able to win their mind in their
7:02
heart then they would voluntarily spend for your product of course that
7:09
doesn't occur overnight
7:14
overnight and young quality control room wasn't made in a day okay the third
7:21
question is what kind of expenses will it incur definitely when you're running a business
you are incurring expenses
7:29
every day so if your business is not bringing in revenues on a daily basis the next
question that you would ask
7:36
yourself is how would you be able to copy the expenses okay and that's a very important
7:42
question that you need to address and then last but not the least if you would notice this
is last on our list
7:50
and what is it how will your business make the
7:57
profit so in essence when you create a business okay it's very very important
8:03
that you think of profit not first but
8:09
as your reward for doing a great job if you keep on doing what you are doing
8:15
eventually the universe will reward you a thousand folds in a manner that you did not
8:23
imagine it to be [Music]
8:42
but you see when you do things consistently and the quality is there there's no
8:50
stopping you but for me as a young entrepreneur i started so young i was six years old
when i started
8:56
being an entrepreneur i know how to exit you have to know when to say
9:03
i'm okay i'm contented enough is enough i'll give chance to the
9:09
others to make their own niche in this world and i won't stop no entrepreneurs
9:15
from making it um making it big and becoming successful
9:20
just like the way i did that's the essence of entrepreneurship okay
9:26
so now let's have an example to concretize
9:32
what we've talked about so for example several years back okay i
9:38
mentored a friend to open a pass a load business okay so what product or service will
the
9:44
company sell it's mobile phone load second and mobile phone lots i wanna
9:53
why because he wasn't hands on so any one sakanilan coffee shop in indoor saka
10:00
pate du isman in the coffee shop and the kapatid endorse it to the cashier and then the
cashier did not bother to check
10:07
on it so what happened was everything got lost including the phones
10:12
because they're allowing it they have a mini phone station on a coffee shop so
10:18
um again one great lesson that my mom told me is
10:28
it cannot be the first time palang de nellygate so eventually your stuff would know more
10:34
than you do and that doesn't make sense when you start an enterprise it should
10:39
be you who should be considered as your business consultant you have to be the
10:44
expert of what you are doing okay so how will the company market the product or
10:50
service so what they did before is just post on social media that they have a pass a load
and then friends from
10:56
facebook would usually then they have word of smell initially it's it did well and then
what
11:03
kind of expenses will it incur now this is where the problem is because the cost of
mobile unit and the
11:09
initial load it was obtained through a loan so what happened was when they
11:16
saw that there are a lot of income they never thought about saving
11:21
for the payment of the loan so what happened was it gained interest then eventually
11:28
they lost the mobile phone they lost the load they lost the business so you have to be
financially literate when you open
11:36
your business and then how did it make a profit of course the profit was through the
11:43
um customer request for a loan okay so when you are able to address all of
11:51
these four questions then you have what we term as
11:57
your business model okay so now let me talk about the 10 key terms
12:04
that you need to remember when you are aspiring to come up with your own business
models the first one
12:10
is your value proposition what makes your product attractive to customers so
12:15
what makes it unique and why should your customers patronize it
12:21
several years ago when i was younger i was too keen on starting ayaya training
12:28
program or akasamba high training program it all started when nahu looked
12:35
memyaya
12:51
they don't teach how to be ayaya even to high school or college graduates
12:56
and that then um i had a bright idea that came out of my mind
13:02
yaya training program i was then a young nurse okay
13:08
so puerto de montgomery graduate from my knowledge kind of pediatrics procedures
fundamentals in
13:15
nursing maternity nursing my knowledge can care of the elderly so public
13:21
module mo and then do it in your first in your subdivision probably it could be
13:27
free and then you have a more premium program so it's called freemium from
13:32
free to premium okay so at least there's something unique in that business
13:42
for example how to take vital signs
13:53
and eventually they'll send their yaya to you so you can educate them okay and then um
target market the specific group
13:59
of customers who are interested in your product so uh if you are in a variant subdivision
14:04
with very young families training program retirement village you
14:11
know come up with something else competitive advantage what's the unique feature of
your product that cannot be
14:17
easily copied by competitors that should be you because you are a nurse and therefore
14:22
you have the passion to do this that in itself would set you apart then cost structure
fixed and variable expenses
14:28
and how will it affect your pricing well the good thing about creating a business out of
your skills is that initially you
14:35
can offer the price at a lower cost and then you have to have your metrics how will you
measure your company's success
14:41
for on a monthly basis participants mode
14:47
yaya training program okay six the resources meaning physical do you need a whole
financial do you need um
14:55
and intellectual assets of your company that's going to be you and then problem in
solution your target customers pain
15:01
points and how you will address it like for example what happened to my sister
15:07
okay so that's a pain point therefore how will you solve it so come up with
15:12
the training program and then the revenue model so this would actually be the
framework
15:18
that identifies viable income sources to pursue like for example initially you're training la
muna then you can come up
15:24
with your yaya emergency kit okay or silent or something then you sell it
15:31
to them then you come up with your uh yaya emergency manual
15:37
on the accident samyari sabahi in the first eight treatment you can come up with the
manual like that okay
15:42
and then this would also form your revenue streams which means the multiple ways
that the company can generate income
15:49
from so which means income from the training medical income
15:56
and then uh identify your profit margin the amount your revenue exceeds your cost so
16:02
if you initially spent like 10 000 pesos and then uh the total gross income was
16:08
25 000 so merongua kinitan 15 000 then elasmo
16:15
okay which is approximately uh from single proprietorship yes compute
16:21
at approximately 30. 30 to 35 percent okay
16:26
and then 25 to uh 25 percent but corporate name set more so
16:33
approximately because come taxation day you will need to file your income tax now
what is the
16:40
essence of knowing all of these terms when you want to create your business model
because okay we'll use it to
16:46
supply the data needed by your um the business model canvas which was
16:52
developed by oscar walder entenur okay so this could be your
16:58
preliminary graph for your business plan so
17:03
identify key partners activities scale resources the value proposition what makes your
product service unique should
17:10
be at the center of your business model canvas and then customer relationships
channels customer segments cost
17:16
structure and revenue stream so if you want to have a thorough reading on this this is
the link where you can
17:23
find how to create your business model canvas
17:28
okay so let's move on there are
17:35
12 common specific types of business models that i'm going to present to you and we
will use
17:41
examples remember we are supposed to be first and
17:47
foremost nurses okay with entrepreneurial
17:53
idea how to create or come up with your own business model first business model one
18:00
is a subscription model where this is what is in nowadays it requires recurring payment
obviously young
18:06
netflix ghanaian new generation in our generation readers digest you would
18:11
usually subscribe to readers digest and gets delivered right to your doorstep okay now
18:17
the advantage of this is that once you get a customer all you have to do is to charge
charge charge and charge but you
18:24
also need to maintain quality otherwise always remember one of the things that i
18:29
told you about when it comes to business nothing is so good that lasts eternally
18:35
perfect situations must go wrong so nothing is permanent in business something good
or better would pop out
18:43
of the movie goers screen anytime okay so what is important is
18:49
you have to be agile when it comes to marketing your product however what is
18:54
difficult with a subscription model now that entails cloud-based storage of data that is
very
19:02
expensive so you have to know how much your cloud storage data would cost and from
there
19:10
you have to create or identify how many of your target market should sign up for
19:17
the subscription so you can pay the data storage it cannot be that you create
19:23
something you store it in cloud and then hope that people would come remember
nobody would come okay nobody would come
19:30
you have to be a little not pessimistic but you have to be a little conservative
19:35
do not over fantasize okay so sometimes excitement kills the dream okay so
19:42
business model number two would be bundling model so you're selling two to three
products together as a unit for
19:47
example globe they could bundle globe post paid plus go globe home internet okay
make sure when you are bundling um
19:56
products or services
20:02
okay now nowadays um this doesn't work anymore i used to have a platinum
20:08
account in globe that was my number since 1998 okay and
20:14
when the pandemic came and i i have upgraded our
20:19
globe home internet to 100 mbps okay which simply means in the
20:26
long and phone service because i can call through viber i can call through facebook
messenger so what would i why
20:33
would i need to pay globe that much every month to maintain my platinum um
20:39
service where in fact i i'm not using phone service anymore so i have to call
20:44
my relationship manager that's a good thing when you are given a platinum account you
have your own relationship
20:51
manager and i told her that i would be giving up my platinum account after what
20:56
23 long years and she said cersei young man because but you know i said i i'm
21:02
not traveling that much at this point in time and i don't think um
21:07
i would still be able to use the service okay because i'm just here at home and she says
okay sir but we can give you a
21:14
discount one third of the cost but i said no so i'm giving up my platinum account
21:19
just bring me to the lowest level so i can maintain my relationship with globe
21:25
and so that's what happened okay so those are the things that you have to consider
when you are doing bundling
21:31
mode like for example if you're going to do bundling mode in the yaya training program
you're gonna have bundle one
21:37
training only bundle two training plus the yayaki bundle three training plus the yayaki
plus the yaya
21:43
okay so you can do that too next business model number three this is what i'm talking
about early on freemium model
21:50
company hosts or provides a tool such as an app for customers to freely access
21:56
and then after a while a premium access package is offered like in youtube okay
22:01
when you don't want to uh be interrupted with advertisements then you can pay for a
premium youtube
22:09
account okay same is true for your link in account for your resume if you're advertising
yourself worldwide you also
22:17
need to subscribe to a free premium account so free new model means from free to
22:24
premium okay and then business model number four would be your razer blade model
it's
22:30
called razer blade if you would notice class when you buy razor blades if you buy one
22:36
set you would notice that when you buy the refill
22:41
the refill becomes more expensive than the entire razor blade that you use for
22:47
shaving okay why is that so because that's how they decided to be okay so
22:53
this occurs when a company offers a cheaper main product but whose replaceable
accessories are more expensive now this is one thing you can
22:59
consider when you're buying your first car okay you are torn between toyota and
23:05
nissan during those times okay i would say
23:10
so i got my first car it's nissan and lo and behold known after two years
23:16
replacing accessories
23:31
so that's also another form of business model okay business model number five
23:36
your product to service model so a company sells the output rather than the equipment
that creates the output for
23:42
example here's a company that sells prefabricated um grill fences so you
23:54
rather than them selling the welding machine and the ironness materials so that's your
product or service model
24:01
okay now this business model number six would be the leasing model so a company
purchases a product to be leased to
24:08
customers like rent a car business okay so if that is
24:15
who would want to write about
24:37
okay so some of those craziest ideas that could pop out of our minds could
24:43
actually be turned into profitable business ventures okay so business model number
seven is crowdsourcing this is
24:49
now what happens if you're finding a group of experts um this is when you use
24:54
social media and the internet to access various talents or human resources for example
you need a band player okay and
25:02
you can crowdsource now what is difficult with this is that if you are not careful
25:07
and you are also a middleman and you are referring these people you better make sure
you do a background check because
25:13
whatever things they will have will be reflected on you as the agent
25:20
eventually it could work against you okay so that's
25:27
a crowd sourcing uh business model business model number eight one for one
25:33
model now here a company donates one item to charity for every item purchase
25:38
now uh hindi not even
26:05
so this is a form of social entrepreneurship which means
26:22
bottled water now for every uh bottled water that you've purchased i in ipo
26:28
nilayou plastic to create one chair okay that will be used by
26:33
um elementary students eventually so you
26:41
[Music] okay
26:47
business model number nine would be your franchise model where
26:52
in established business blueprint that is purchased by aspiring business owners like for
example jollibee or monkey
26:58
nassau so like franchise sky big s
27:10
once again uh the disadvantage of this is that it's a little expensive gonorrhea
27:16
okay uh there was a friend before in sabinary
27:32
how many stores should you open and then he said that ludow okay so three times
seven hundred thousand that's 2.1
27:39
million okay and then a new investment more in terms of kitchen in terms of building in
terms of seven million
27:46
dollars that's 21 million plus 2.1 million that's 23 million and then i ask him
27:55
okay um uh 100 pesos okay so 100
28:31
everything comes at its proper place and time so i'm not saying
28:38
welcome adventures a franchise model investment i'd rather that you create
28:44
your own okay now business model number 10 is the distribution model a company
28:49
acts as a distributor to a group of agents okay for example okay online
28:55
resellers so meron is
29:01
the online resellers that sells your product that's a distribution model business model
number eleven would be
29:07
the manufacturer model a company converts raw materials into products
29:12
arena vibrant margarine and geese
29:19
and then presto my product okay again
29:44
see okay that's the reality okay so anyway and business model number 12
29:51
would be the retailer mode the atomization model a company buys goods from
distributors and sells it directly to
29:58
customers halos okay micro to small
30:04
and medium enterprise meron tayo no 99 percent no adding business establishments of
30:10
pilipinas more business model negan again okay so
30:16
what is the right business model for you there's no absolute correct answer for this
question
30:22
what matters the most is create something that is unique to your market that you know
something off and
30:30
that you think will meet the pains of your customers okay
30:37
so at the end of the day ask yourself these questions how will my product or service
benefit the customers how will i
30:44
generate revenue who's my target customers what startup cost i'm looking
30:49
at what expenses will be fixed or variable cost fixed meaning to say um
30:55
nagririkarian every month like for example rental a variable cost would mean
31:01
you um
31:07
on a monthly basis okay and then ask yourself do i need support from
31:13
investors okay and then are your investors
31:18
more likely to give you what you need mahira piantegnan because as i've been
31:25
telling you in our previous videos angus returns i times four yonkanilang investment
31:31
times four point five for me one million that but in five years taking 4.5 million
31:37
okay so and uh more often than not if the presentation
31:42
is too good to be true they don't just agree okay so if you want okay to check
31:49
out um a thorough discussion on this topic that could add up to what i've shown you
31:56
today check this out so this is actually the link to opentax.org books on
32:02
entrepreneurship and focus on designing the business model
32:07
concept okay now the 12 specific business models could actually
32:14
be narrowed down to four general types and these are usually the business models that
are being used for
32:21
e-business okay so the first one is the b2c model meaning business to consumer model
this
32:28
is the traditional retail business i mean the company sells products directly to the
consumer like in your sarisari
32:35
store okay then you also have the b2b model business to business so two companies
32:40
doing business with each other company sells to another company it's more stable if
your target company is stable
32:46
like for example you if your yaya training program you want it to be stable
32:53
participants okay you come up with a memorandum of agreement for homeowners
32:58
association so for every session 11 percent income one ibb models are
33:04
homeowners okay as part of their commission for you doing the business in
33:10
their community
33:17
on a weekly basis
33:22
with okay okay so next important thing
33:28
c2c model consumer to consumer now this involves transactions between two
33:33
consumers the consumers are the buyers and at the same time the sellers and they use
a third-party online
33:39
marketplace for trading the advantage of this model is that it has low transaction costs
example would be fb
33:45
marketplace now i'm very very fond of fb marketplace because one of my advocacies
33:51
during the pandemic when it hit the country was that anub
33:58
as an entrepreneur you teach the person how to fish don't just give the fears
34:45
you make it easy for your customers to buy from you okay
34:58
availability next month
35:05
so i think these people need a lot of education in terms of professionalizing the delivery
of products and services
35:14
so every
35:29
that's my own little way of teaching them okay now
35:35
our advertising and marketing from them minsania
35:42
uh
36:00
so those are the little things that i know i can do while i'm still at home during the
pandemic that would help
36:06
these little people who are really doing their best to make both ends mean okay
36:13
so that's one example of your consumer to consumer business model so the law one
36:18
consumers syllabus engage in a business and then c to b
36:24
model or consumer to business freelancers offer business model to a business to a
company example nito would
36:31
be the social media influencers eventually pagdumami followers parents tony gonzaga
36:37
or alex gonzaga that go offer nacilla in one specific time where okay some
36:44
companies could insert their advertisement or sometimes they have their videos
sponsored by specific
36:51
companies okay but once again um the danger of putting yourself
36:59
open to the public is that your life would become like an aquarium i've been there i've
done that and sometimes um
37:07
there are times in your life that you do you just don't feel like doing it
37:12
anymore and that's the time that you have to step back and say to yourself
37:18
reflect on what you've done and what you've achieved if it's already enough for you to
last a lifetime
37:26
then that's a time for you to exit okay next
37:31
okay so with that i just hope i was able to give you an idea of how to identify
37:38
the right business model for you but in a nutshell when you are identifying a business
model you have to decide
37:46
whether you are coming up with a market driven business meaning it's it's based on
what
37:52
the market needs and what is demanded by the market or is it based on techn or is
37:57
it a technology driven business which means young expertise
38:06
you always based your choice of business model on what your market needs so it has
to be
38:14
market the event so young expertise
38:26
into another business that you can put up that is based on what the market
38:32
demands okay so examples
39:12
as an accountant being a consultant for your subscribers okay that's the way to
39:19
do it okay so thank you so much for engaging with me today and we're gonna have
more
39:24
of this in our next set of videos
39:46
you

PART 5 ENTREP BEHAIVIOR AND PERSONALITY

joining you for this teaching and learning session on entrepreneurial behavior and
personality so we're gonna
0:14
have this session in three parts so without further Ado let me start with
0:23
my Declaration of fair use my Declaration of authorization for
0:29
possible playback and of course my Declaration of no conflict of interest I
0:35
declare no conflict of interest so let's begin with our part one discussion and
0:42
for this specific session we will cover what is contained in our objectives
0:49
so without further Ado let's begin so if I ask you this question what makes an
0:56
entrepreneur once again in our previous videos we've addressed this issue and we
1:02
we tried to analyze it and identify whether it's due to Nature or nurture
1:08
meaning could it be genetics or could it be a stimulation from environmental factors
1:16
so I was raised in a very entrepreneurial family so
1:29
early on I was really exposed to a very entrepreneurial environment one funny
1:35
thing is the fact that when I went into a meeting in a university in our Province the vice
president came to me
1:43
and said Dr Ray we've met each other in our past lives
1:48
and I said that's a livestock something I'm just kidding it's actually several years ago
1:55
when you were still very young because I used to be one of the boys that sell
2:02
pandesal from your bakery and I said oh my God and he's not the vice president
2:08
of that University so using all of those things that
2:16
have stimulated our minds on what really makes an entrepreneur let's proceed
2:21
further by identifying what is it in our personality that makes
2:29
us a potential entrepreneur or are really are we really born with the
2:36
traits that will make us a successful entrepreneur so when you take a look at
2:41
personality it's defined as the integration of those systems and habits that represents
an individual's
2:47
characteristic adjustment to his environment two important words integration meaning
it could be a
2:54
function of both genetics and environmental factors and
3:00
adjustment so what does that tell us personality is something that we can
3:06
predict based on how a person behaves so that would make us think therefore can
3:13
we predict if a person would become an entrepreneur would there be indicators
3:18
could it be dependent on how they cry at Birth
3:26
could they become an actress or if they cry like Henry C when he was
3:33
born would he be a good entrepreneur okay so the these are questions that we
3:38
would want to answer in this discussion okay so according to Dr Martin reason an
3:45
entrepreneurial personality is one that sees opportunities and exploits them by
3:52
creating value for themselves and others sustainably which simply means that an
3:59
entrepreneurial personality is good at scouting
4:04
opportunities where they can offer a solution to improve whatever is existing
4:12
in the market and potentially getting rewarded by a return of their
4:19
investments in terms of their time energy and resources and that is in a
4:26
nutshell what an entrepreneurial personality is however we have to remember the fact
that some
4:32
believe that some personality traits are fixed okay we're not saying that they are wrong
we have to respect those who
4:39
believe that entrepreneurial personality traits are fixed however there are those
4:47
that say otherwise and there have been studies from across several decades
4:54
already that tell us that the entrepreneurial personality can be
5:01
something that can be developed in a person but this brings to mind again
5:07
um the question when is it the right time for a person to become and an entrepreneur
okay do we have
5:14
entrepreneurs immediately at Birth do we have entrepreneurs when they already get
retired now the question is when you are
5:22
an entrepreneur how much can you spare in terms of your time
5:28
energy and resources in other words in Tagalog
5:34
because the entrepreneurial mindset is one who is a risk taker that's why a lot
5:42
of business gurus would usually say you have to venture into business when
5:49
you're risk taking abilities are still strong enough to withstand failure after
5:57
failure because that's always a reality when you do business so in Tagalog I would
usually say inigos
6:08
because when you take risks you can never be sure that you will succeed on
6:16
your first try Okay food for thought now according to Raj in 2014 characteristics
6:23
like self-efficacy and achievement motivation can be influenced by simple
6:29
interventions therefore if we keep on motivating a person
6:36
through interventions that could be as simple as this is what my mom would
6:41
usually do to me okay we don't get a new set of school supplies if you
6:49
don't graduate with honors and the point was when I was in
6:54
elementary I think I was just living in the shadows of my sisters who all graduated on
top
7:00
of their class and so I was always at the tail and La guitar
7:06
why well for whatever reason there is but maybe because I'm being compared to
7:12
my older siblings who actually uh went to the same school before me and so what
7:18
my mom did very simple intervention she transferred me to a new school where
7:24
there were more challenges and there I learned how to innovate and
7:33
apply it into my study habits and so at the end of it even if I was transferred when I was
already high school at the
7:40
Don Mariano Marcos Memorial State University that was Don Mariano before okay
when the marcosis got exiled
7:47
imagine okay
7:56
that's actually a joke in this court in our school so actually with that simple intervention
8:02
transferring me to a new environment I was able to adjust that's the basic
8:09
function of personality and applying it into the mindset of the entrepreneur
8:16
when you bring an entrepreneur to another environment they would
8:22
definitely Thrive that's how they are okay so here's a sample task suppose you
8:29
asked four of your groupmates to prepare decorations in your unit for a competition
okay and imagine yourself as
8:36
a part of an rle group or a group of nurses in award and this is how your
8:42
four group mates responded so decorations for example for a
8:48
competition the best decorate decorated unit in the hospital and so
8:55
this is how the members of your team actually reacted so you have nurse a who
9:02
reacted with a lot of enthusiasm and that person begins to talk and talk and talk
9:09
okay that's the sangin personality
9:18
okay nurse beer or nursing student B okay okay
9:24
went down to work right away sets the goal and works independently
9:31
okay goals and objectives
9:39
that's actually the choleric temperament the nursing students see
9:45
try to think for us and then plans for the details the repeated detail-oriented
9:53
person that's the melancholic is
10:00
it and of course there's one person who doesn't want to think okay who doesn't
10:07
want to get down to work right away but this very caring person would be very quiet
10:13
and easy going and would love to be just the targeting plan and copy of the team
10:19
so that is the phlegmatic now these are the four temperaments based on
10:24
Hippocrates okay who identified it and actually
10:30
classified people during his time based on these four major temperaments Okay so
10:40
how do we communicate effectively with these people the sun gain they need
10:45
guidance and since they are very good at talking then you can assign them as the
marketer of the team wow so in a
10:52
business sense the sangin personality is a good marketing officer the coleric in the
other hand who sets the goal and
10:59
works independently allow them to lead the team these are the people who are born
leaders the Milan colleague on the
11:06
other hand who loves to think and think and think okay appoint them as part of
11:11
the think tank strategies okay and of course the phlegmatic who just loves to
11:17
prepare coffee ask them to provide care for the team in
11:24
essence okay who would make a good entrepreneur there's no such thing as
11:31
um one size fits all for entrepreneurial personality uh
11:38
entrepreneurship because you're very caring it's not like that we all have
11:44
specific amounts of these temperaments in ourselves okay so that's a contention
11:50
so after meeting your team to create the decorations this is how
11:56
you should assign the task to your team question is how okay you assign the
12:03
melon colleague to think about the strategies how can we beat the competition and
then okay you assign the
12:11
caloric who gets down to work right away works independently to lead the team to
12:17
work on the task and then you assign the phlegmatic to take care of the team provide
the coffee and the food they're
12:24
quiet and easy good luck is going and then
12:30
to market the product present it to the judges so therefore
12:37
if you are to be considered as possessing entrepreneurial behavior and personality what
should you have you
12:44
have to have a little of all of this okay so me I'm more of the sangin type
12:51
okay and the choleric type I buckle down to work right away I identify my goals
12:58
and then I talk and talk and talk about it okay now the question is how will you
13:04
know your temperament you can go to this site take a short quiz that's less than five
minutes and you'll get to know what
13:10
your temperament is this is also very important when you're dealing with your cost of
nurses eventually or your fellow
13:17
nursing students when you're doing group work so you don't expect okay a person who
is singing to think
13:23
before acting okay you don't expect
13:28
a accoladic person to initially just be easy go lucky no okay no no no no so in
13:38
essence in essence it's very important that you have to have a little of
13:44
everything so look at my results so I'm a bit of the choleric and melancholic okay sorry
choleric and the sangin and
13:52
of course a bit of the melancholic and the phlegmatic so in essence
14:03
strategy but I'm more of an independent worker echoleric and a marketer
14:15
invitation to speak in professional Gatherings every week
14:20
okay so according to the results my impairment is I'm a sangin okay I'm fundamentally
14:28
spontaneous and pleasure seeking sangan people are sociable and charismatic they
tend to enjoy social Gatherings making
14:35
new friends and tend to be boys to those they're usually quite creative and often they
dream however some alone time is
14:42
crucial for those of this temperament sangin can also mean sensitive compassionate
and thoughtful singing
14:48
personalities generally struggle with following tasks all the way through are chronically
late and tend to be
14:55
forgetful and sometimes a little sarcastic I'm not chronically late in fact I always respect
time okay so often
15:03
they they pursue a new Hadi they lose interest as soon as it ceases to be engaging or
fun they are very much
15:10
people persons they are talkative and not shy sangings generally have an almost
Shameless nature certain that
15:17
what they are doing is right they have no lack of confidence so
15:23
confidence is what sets the entrepreneurial person from the rest you
15:29
have to believe in yourself in what you are doing and in the output whether that
15:35
be a product or a service that you have came up with okay so what makes
15:41
therefore an entrepreneur so I've been saying a while back there is no one-size-fits-all
portrait of the
15:48
entrepreneur which simply means study suggests that it is unclear whether
15:53
individuals with a given set of personality traits decided to go into
15:58
entrepreneurship or whether they develop the traits after becoming entrepreneurs
16:05
so what is this trying to tell us that these are trying to tell us are the entrepreneurial
personality
16:11
traits the cause why a person is an entrepreneur or is it the effect
16:18
meaning something that they develop after they became entrepreneurs you own bank
personality traitsang
16:26
entrepreneur I and Kombat
16:38
so what I can potentially say is that it could possibly be both it's not for us
16:44
to resolve at this point because this is a finding of a review of literature that's done at
the Harvard Business
16:51
School now the question now is this is like a chicken or a dilemma okay but
16:58
what matters for us in this subject is we need to identify the personality
17:05
traits of the entrepreneur and then describe it and try to reflect
17:13
how are these potential potentials within ourselves can be
17:22
developed such that we become full-blown entrepreneurs okay so it's very very
17:29
important to note that so let's not a straight from our Focus okay
17:39
[Music]
17:56
entrepreneur or entrepreneur okay so which begs us to ask this question who
18:03
is an entrepreneur an entrepreneur now what is important when we're dealing
18:09
with the entrepreneurial personality is that we have to acknowledge that the
entrepreneur
18:15
whether they're venturing into a business or
18:21
there's preparing to venture into one should have both a vision and a mission
18:27
they should know the direction they're getting into they have to have a clear idea of how
their status in life as well
18:36
as the product that they will introduce become in the future that's why you will have to
ask the question
18:42
how do you see yourself five years from now and then they also have to have the
18:47
mission which means they have to have the overall goal they have to know their sense
of purpose because it's their
18:55
sense of purpose that will help them identify what product or service will they introduce
okay the customers that
19:02
they will Target and the location where they will put the business and this is
19:08
very very crucial entrepreneurship okay
19:16
now an entrepreneur is characterized as this is one thing that I formulated the
19:22
code is antra enthusiastic you have to have a passion but your passion should
19:30
be grounded on your absolute truth because
19:36
if because if you are just
19:42
doing things because you are passionate about it but you are not accepting your
19:49
truth or the reality of the situation you're in then that could be just delusional in nature or
false belief
20:06
don't be like an entrepreneur I know nah okay
20:17
so do not pretend be as realistic as you can be so do not drive your
20:25
entrepreneurial energy such that you are only driven by enthusiasm and passion
20:31
Your Enthusiasm and passion should be grounded on your absolute truth okay
20:37
next an entrepreneur is a networker okay so which simply means you love meeting
20:43
people you love making friends but you have to know when
20:48
to Bridge and when to build a wall because one business part of mine always
20:57
reminded me before always remember everyone is a sucker
21:02
okay and then of course an owner of a very popular um coffee shop chain of coffee
shops
21:10
reminded me Ray let's attend the event and then get out right away and I said why and
she said you know what happened
21:17
to me last time I attended a networking night then my email got flooded with so
21:23
many proposals and solicitation so in other words
21:33
as a result of networking you have to be ready but you have to know how to say no
21:39
gracefully okay because when I was starting my business
21:51
be aware of that next entrepreneurs thrives on challenges but once again
21:58
this is very as one theories would say some of these indicators and characteristics
could be age specific
22:05
which I agree when I was 22 years old because I'm now 26. sorry
22:13
one student of Mines sir we're not asking about years in service we're
22:18
talking about your age okay so when I was 22 my
22:23
energy for challenges was at its peak but whoever said that life
22:30
is perfect when you start your time as an entrepreneur you have
22:38
the energy you have the time and you don't have the money so you work hard for that
and then Midway you'll have the
22:44
money you'll have the energy but you don't have time okay and then towards the end of
your entrepreneurial career
22:51
you have time you have the money but no more energy so which begs us to ask the
22:57
question when is the proper time to exit as an entrepreneur you just have to respect
23:04
generation and your specific goal so when you reach
23:13
that goal then that's all right you serve your purpose you serve your
23:18
mission like for example an x amount of money
23:30
you just have to respect the time the
23:35
generation and be grateful that during your generation
23:42
you reach the peak but that's not the design of the world or the universe that you'll stay
on top
23:48
forever no that is a useless proposition you cannot
23:54
the law of gravity would always tell you to go down because that's how the world
23:59
is designed otherwise
24:05
stay there forever no okay so once again entrepreneurs are Risk Takers what does
24:12
that mean they have that innate sense
24:18
of venturing into something new sometimes that is completely absorbed
24:23
and unknown absurd and unknown to them okay and that's one of the characteristics of
Donald Trump
24:30
he wants every day to not actually every day but every hour to accomplish one
24:35
thing and he wants to win every deal that he
24:41
gets into okay sometimes at the expense of his
24:47
family okay but that's how they are that's how he is as a person
24:52
now entrepreneurs are also extrovert and proactive what do you mean by extrovert
24:58
okay they love to socialize what do you mean by proactive they don't they don't
25:04
have they don't need any instruction from someone they don't have to be told
25:10
of what to do they know how to anticipate they do something in anticipation of certain
25:16
things but for you to do that you are supposed to be properly informed what
25:22
can trigger happy before the pandemic some of the executives in our family
25:28
business or presenting to me proposal for expansions into other countries
25:34
which I refuse and said no no no and no okay why because I attended this
25:41
Forum with Robert Kiyosaki the author of good dad bad dad and he said it's very
25:49
clear that the world is right for a worldwide meltdown but he doesn't
25:56
know what will cause that meltdown that's before the pandemic and so being
26:02
informed of this I prepared preparation means I have to discipline my people
26:10
make them understand what I'm saying from the information I'm getting from
26:16
the experts and true enough before the pandemic came in we were prepared the
26:23
company is flexible enough and so we were able to sail through it and
26:29
right now back on track two expansions so that's in a nutshell
26:36
what characterizes an entrepreneur enthusiastic networker thrives on
26:41
challenges Risk Takers extrovert and proactive okay now the question is do
26:47
certain traits predict an individual's likelihood of becoming an entrepreneur
26:53
nothing or
27:01
is
27:10
okay so let's answer those questions using the big five model and the concept
27:19
of locus of control and so let's begin with the big five model the big five
27:24
model is a multi-dimensional approach towards defining um what personality is it is the
most
27:31
widely accepted personalities Theory held by psychologists today now according to the
big five model
27:38
personality can be described by five core factors namely the mnemonic is ocean
openness to experience
27:45
conscientiousness extroversion agreeableness and neuroticism okay so we
27:51
will talk about this in detail and identify the indicators and bring into the scenario how
these are
28:01
observable in terms of the entrepreneur vis-a-vis the manager so we'll compare
28:06
the two so the big five model asserts that each personality trait is a
28:12
spectrum spectrum and we fluctuate okay it's not
28:27
it's not like that so being in a spectrum means that
28:33
levels of the trait exist within an individual we could be less open but
28:39
more consensus we could be more open and more extrovert but less neurotic or
28:47
neuroticism Okay so that's what we mean by the personality
28:53
trait being in a spectrum okay so studies suggest that heritability and
28:59
environmental factors affect all five factors to the same degree ah so this
29:04
therefore answers our initial question what makes an entrepreneur is it nature
29:09
or nurture nature or nurture both heritability that's nature environmental
29:17
factors how we were nurtured affect all five factors to the same degree which actually
brings to mind the question
29:24
therefore genetic a part influencia
29:36
the entrepreneurial trait and behaviors can be developed
29:41
let's answer that in a while so according to the big five model this actually precedes
Hippocrates four types
29:49
of temperament okay it was based on the works of various researches like catel fist
29:56
Norman to pass Crystal Costa and McRae including Goldberg okay so this is very
30:03
very important okay for us to know okay the five macro threads remember the code
30:10
ocean openness to experience how would we know so you can be imaginative or
30:16
spontaneous or reverse routine or practical if you are imaginative or spontaneous you
can be the
30:22
entrepreneurial a person if you prefer routine and you are a little more practical
30:29
how do you come up with a cost effective budget you could be a manager okay
conscientiousness you are disciplined
30:36
and careful because you take all the risks you take care of your money or you can be
impulsive and disorganized
30:43
you propose for ventures okay
30:48
that could be done if you're not taking the risk at all and that's primarily associated with
being a manager or
30:55
extroversion meaning you are sociable and fun lobbying or you are reserved and
31:01
thoughtful agreeableness suspicious and uncooperative you hire people but you
31:06
don't want to um delegate tasks because you don't trust them so what's the use or are
you
31:12
trusting and helpful because eventually an entrepreneur should be someone who is
willing to distribute
31:18
ownership of the business to those people who are essential to their
31:25
operations and then neuroticism are you anxious or pessimistic or are you calm
31:31
and confident you need to become inconfident if you're an entrepreneur
31:36
counting problem and that sends you into panic and a person who is in panic could
potentially become hostile and
31:43
eventually will have personality disintegration okay next okay so let's pay particular
31:50
attention now to the descriptors or the description of the five macro trades openness to
experience means how open a
31:58
person is to new ideas and experience if you say yes to this you could be a good
entrepreneur conscientiousness how goal
32:05
directed persistent and organize a person you are if you have these
32:10
characteristics another check extra version how much a person is energized by the
outside world
32:16
so you have to ask yourself what pushes you to do your thing
32:21
okay is it just your internal motivation or partly you are energized by
32:29
accolades you're receiving from people around you okay agreeableness how much a
32:35
person puts others interests and needs ahead of their own so entrepreneurs are
32:41
good at putting themselves at the bottom of the list when you are
32:47
identifying what should be the priority the priority should be what you can offer your
customers how can you add
32:53
value to your products and then neuroticism neuroticism is not the same as being a
neurotic Behavior according
33:00
to Freudian Theory so neuroticism in the context of the entrepreneurial State means the
ability to withstand stress in
33:08
other words how much emotional emotionally stable you are so it simply
33:15
means if you are very sensitive to negative emotional triggers that could be a red flag
because as an
33:22
entrepreneur you will experience a lot of rejections a lot of rejections and some people
may
33:28
not be good at um making the rejections uh more acceptable on your end sometimes
people
33:35
really are very open offensive with their words but that's how the world is whoever said
that the world is
33:42
not full of cruel people okay when you go out there like in the ocean there are sharks
and whales but it
33:49
is your exposure to those sharks and whales that would actually strengthen you
eventually so there's no
33:57
such thing as negative experience only learning opportunities okay so look at
34:06
it as a learning opportunity Now using the big five model let's differentiate
34:13
the entrepreneur from the manager an entrepreneur is a Visionary they know
34:19
what they want in the future the manager who is an employer of the boss would
34:24
align their Vision with what the employer wants them to do okay so that's a difference
next the
34:32
entrepreneur takes all the risks remember the entrepreneur must be very Staker
34:37
the manager does not bear any risk at all that's why sometimes they are giving a lot of
proposals okay pandemic my
34:44
proposal but in for expansion okay next for the entrepreneur achievement is the
34:50
key motivation they want to get to the goal but some of these people don't
34:56
really know how to have a good accent okay we cannot own
35:03
the world no matter what we do that's not the design of the universe so once
35:08
you have achieved what goal you've set for yourself then find peace that you have had
your
35:16
moment in time okay all of us are in our respective in the meantime favorite
35:22
author Ian lavanzan okay we are all in the meantime but you have to use your
35:29
mean time to prepare for your moment in time okay okay
35:39
give me One Moment In Time
35:49
they're in that one moment of time again
35:55
on I will feel oh my God okay
36:00
that's the key motivation achievement for the manager the key motivation is
36:07
being promoted to the next higher position and eventually being the CEO of the
company for the entrepreneur they
36:15
don't get motivated by money alone they look at profit as their reward for a job
36:21
well done remember when you've done your part the universe
36:27
will reward you in a million ways that you can never ever imagine for the
36:33
manager salary or remuneration is the reward I want the next higher salary and
36:39
the entrepreneur is usually very informal and casual
36:46
branded clothes okay the manager would usually do that part of their packaging
36:52
of the position they hold the entrepreneur [Music]
36:59
for as long as they are presentable they smell good they are clean they are very
37:05
hygienic and once they open their mouth people would listen that's the entrepreneur
37:12
okay
37:18
okay so let's move on so if we're going to differentiate now the
37:24
entrepreneur versus the manager using the big five model approach in terms of
37:30
openness to experience the entrepreneur is more open the entrepreneur is
37:35
attracted to changing environments because they are Risk Takers the manager may
have less of this we're not saying
37:42
they don't have this remember they are in a spectrum okay conscientiousness
37:50
um the entrepreneur is usually very dependable because the entrepreneur also acts as
the consultant of their own
37:56
business they have higher achievement motivation the managers also Dependable but
their motivation is different from
38:04
that of the entrepreneur some people would say and the Mantra is to kill the competitor
38:10
you cannot do that the world is not I beg to disagree with that Mantra but you
38:16
know even my my sisters who studied in uh very very well known business schools
38:21
here in the Philippines and abroad we usually say kill your competitor I said no I don't
believe in that
38:28
we better ourselves that is a better Mantra than killing your competitors or
38:33
killing the competitors not literally killing the competitors
38:38
or stabbing them with knife but killing the competitor means you kill them in
38:44
the market because I don't believe in management by market share as an entrepreneur
38:51
management should be geared towards profit so that you can sustain your
38:56
Enterprise and pay your employees better so what difference does it make if you
39:03
make 1 million pesos by just having 100 customers than earning 1 million pesos
39:12
and serving 1 000 customers if you're serving 1000 customers that would make
39:17
me make it um lose your call okay
39:23
pleasing everybody that's not a good way to do it okay try to please everybody and you'll
expect failure that's not the
39:31
way to do it the way to do it is create your niche
39:36
make it so palatable and delicious and let the brand withstand time okay
39:43
extra version the entrepreneur and the manager are similar however small business
owners are less likely to
39:49
attend big social Gatherings because usually small business owners would prefer
sending to their business
39:57
especially you would not get anything after except
40:02
solicitation letters okay next agreeableness less likely to worry about pleasing other
people that's the
40:09
entrepreneur okay because well anyway
40:14
pleasing people which is termed in psychiatric nursing as enmeshment okay or
relationship
40:22
addiction okay is actually something cultural whether
40:27
we like it or not that's how we were raised by our parents and in psychiatric
40:33
nursing they are called helicopter parents parents who meddle with the Affairs of their
children in such a way
40:39
in a while and in privacy and Boundary but the letters
40:45
very Filipino however however that is called as investment trauma in
40:53
psychiatric nursing and okay if you are an entrepreneur
40:59
that's not a way to do it you please your customer with the goods or the
41:05
services that you offer not not something else because at the end of
41:11
the day they will look for the product or the service that they want
41:19
in some other ways okay the manager
41:24
manager they work to please the boss make the boss happy that's the manager
41:29
neuroticism okay their emotional instability the entrepreneur is less neurotic so they are
Risk Takers they
41:36
are more confident and so therefore they have high tolerance to stress and one thing
that I can share with you if you
41:43
want to increase your tolerance to stress is you have to have a work-life balance and
you begin with your mobile
41:50
phones have at least two mobile phones one would be poor work one would be for
41:55
your family or personal uh friends such that do not make your house an
42:01
extension of your work otherwise you'll be prone to burn out okay so the moment you
arrive home turn your work phone off
42:09
and turn on your family phone so that would help you achieve work-life
42:17
balance during this time okay so definitely the manager they are
42:22
expected to deliver on the tasks that are presented to them by their boss so
42:28
they are in that sense okay um more aligned with focusing more on
42:36
the tasks at hand okay now researchers suggests entrepreneurs
42:43
strive on a strong sense of self-efficacy meaning a belief that tasks can be performed to
execute their
42:51
Vision what they want to be in the future and a kin eye for Innovation to
42:57
identify new products and markets sometimes they turn complaints or irritations
coming from
43:04
other people or their customers as their basis for creating a product because as an
entrepreneur when you innovate you
43:11
need to offer a solution to the problems of the world okay but the point is now
43:18
when you come up with a product because everything is out there in social media the
moment you Market it somebody will
43:24
imitate it but that's always the danger of being an entrepreneur
43:29
so if you are asking my personal opinion when you innovate you have to make sure
43:36
that you have a market that is ready to adapt your Innovation
43:43
or your product because if you put something out there hoping that
43:49
the market will notice it hoping that your investors will notice it at the end of
43:57
the day they're just going to copy it okay and Technology now can make it easy
44:03
for them to do that so if you would want to assess your entrepreneurial trades
44:09
you can go into this side and take a short online quiz and you'll be able to
44:15
identify whether you possess the entrepreneurial traits that we've just
44:21
discussed okay the second concept that we're going to discuss in relation to
44:29
our question on whether we can develop the personality traits of
44:35
the entrepreneur is the concept of locus of control now this concept was first
introduced by Reuters through his theory
44:44
of social learning okay so according to author's theory of social learning behavior is
determined by nature or
44:51
importance of goals which are very very evident in entrepreneurs and anticipation that
the goals will occur
44:58
once again the nature of the goals and the anticipation that the goals will occur these
are very very
45:04
characteristics of the entrepreneurs
45:12
very very aligned with rotter's theory of social learning so rotter describes
45:17
personality as a stable set of potentials which simply means since it's stable it's very
predictable so since
45:25
it's predictable you can be sure that when an opportunity presents itself the
45:31
entrepreneurial person will respond to that situation in a particular way and
45:37
the router also describes personality and behavior as always changeable so
45:44
that answers the question on is there a possibility that a person becomes an
45:49
entrepreneur after retirement there's always a possibility because we can always
change our personality and
45:56
behavior however
46:07
okay as I've said early on you only put
46:13
into business that which you can afford to lose in gambling in other words since
46:30
okay okay so rather also suggests if you
46:35
change the way a person thinks or the environment the person is responding to
behavior will change look at what
46:42
happened in the pandemic online selling online learning
46:50
an environment
46:58
foreign [Music] and that will not revert back to our
47:06
Stone Age belief in our own Echo chamber in our respective caves in this world
47:15
is
47:30
okay I've always espoused for innovation in terms of teaching and learning and
47:36
and some mentors would usually ask me but how do we know that the students are
47:41
engaging in the content there are numerous ways a thousand and one ways that
47:49
we can evaluate if the learning has occurred and how can we be sure that if
47:55
we lectured and finish the topic within the specified period of time
48:01
or they have just written data data as in raw information because if the data
48:08
are organized then it becomes now your information and when you synthesize
information that becomes knowledge and
48:14
when you use that knowledge to make decision then you gain wisdom what is our
48:20
expected outcome learning about Behavior change
48:27
so therefore memories
48:37
that's why I always pass for gardeners multiple intelligence theory
48:45
like if we want to become nurses exam
48:54
I beg to disagree that's why I always say
49:00
let's recreate our teaching and learning platform and adapt constructionism and
49:06
constructivism okay so that we are very very aligned with The Changing Times
49:12
however we are in our own Echo chamber of primitivity in the caves where we occupy
49:20
listening to the thoughts that other people like our age [Laughter]
49:27
pestering as a way that effective effective until the world has changed and we are now
being left behind Okay so
49:36
how do we differentiate the theory of rotter let's focused on social learning from that of
Freud's that is focused on
49:43
psychosocial development psychosexual rather development okay so according to
49:48
rotter behavior is controlled by seeking positive experiences so on psychological
49:57
accomplished and that person could be given a pat on the back psychological
50:03
paycheck Freud According to Freud says behavior is controlled by unconscious drives
they
50:10
eat the ego in the superego okay and that occurs as we develop our personality the
infant is all Eid and
50:17
then the toddler develops the ego and the preschooler develops the superego that's
According to Freud however young
50:25
fiorian Errata is more aligned for the entrepreneurial personality in which the
50:32
development of a person is reinforced by the positive experiences that could be
50:38
brought about by achieving the goals they have set for themselves yeah okay now locus
of control let's relate it now
50:47
to the theory of Runner is a concept of defining whether a person believes they
50:52
are in control of their future or someone else is in control of it so which simply means
51:05
hinaharap okay
51:10
foreign
51:27
ERS tend to have a strong locus of control which means they believe they
51:33
are in control they create their Destiny they don't wait for people to create it
51:40
for them so when you say locus of control you have internal locus of
51:45
control and external locus of control internal locus of control this occurs
51:51
when a person conceptualizes their own decisions and they control their lives external
locus of control occurs when a
51:57
person believes that true controlling factors are chance Faith or environmental features
they cannot
52:03
influence so it simply means paraceland helpless or
52:14
but by chance
52:20
don't think like that entrepreneurs will
52:25
make decisions that will pave the way for them so that they can control their
52:32
lives okay so there's only one thing that an entrepreneur aspires to achieve
52:38
initially that is to create their own Pathway to
52:44
success and that begins with their internal locus of control the decisions
52:49
that they make such that they can control their vision of what their future is
52:56
like okay so researchers suggests a link between belief in internal locus internal
53:04
control to the likelihood of engaging in entrepreneurial activities
53:12
an internal locus of control
53:19
entrepreneur all will engage in entrepreneurial activity
53:27
okay so once you lose that control and you don't know what to do then
53:33
you just have to pace yourself properly don't quit face yourself properly study the
environment okay so the question now
53:40
is can entrepreneurial traits be developed okay so according to Social
53:46
Learning theories okay social learning theories show that
53:53
humans learn through observing and imitating others therefore we can develop
entrepreneurial traits by
54:01
observing others how they do it and by imitating others so according to the
54:07
social learning theories kasamajan and imitation whether we like it or not people will
imitate what we will do okay
54:13
but find comfort in the fact that as they say imitation is the best form
54:20
of flatteryaka you must be doing something good
54:32
cannot be that's why when you become an entrepreneur make sure everything has
54:37
been properly trademarked in your name copyrighted in your name and nobody can
54:43
take that away from you that's your moment in time okay
54:52
elsevier that's my moment fine during that moment in them I can lay
54:58
claim to the fact that I was the first anybody who comes after me just second sorry
once you have that
55:07
yet then you can now actually take a look at the
55:14
other aspects of living okay addiction
55:19
okay it doesn't make sense okay do something different okay do something
55:26
for others in a different way so when you talk of the theories of
55:31
social learning um there are two theories that are um standing out one would be rotter
and
55:38
the other one by bandura rotor is more specific bandura is broader actually
55:43
bandura a social learning theory has more application in teaching and learning rotter
according to rotter
55:50
behavior is controlled by seeking positive experiences so like the entrepreneur they
want to be
55:57
um reinforced by positive experiences so that's their main motivation and their
56:04
behavior as a response to Opportunities or threats changes okay on the other hand
56:12
according to bandura social learning occurs through observation imitation and
modeling which is also
56:19
applicable to the entrepreneurial trade as an entrepreneur you have to observe
56:25
market trends you can imitate and improve on existing products and services and you
can actually learn from
56:33
your role models okay so according to bandura okay social learning could
56:38
result to a could result from reinforcement learning or vicarious
56:44
learning what do you mean by via carriers it is a secondary experience Hindi economy
56:50
You observe somebody do it so a lot of business Guru would usually tell you
56:55
before you aspire to be an entrepreneur well
57:04
um establish the company of an entrepreneur learn the trade but
57:10
you don't commit the same mistakes somebody would buffer it for you because
mistakes are expensive okay so
57:19
like for example house builders
57:24
around Asia learn the parade suppliers and then once
57:31
come up with your company that should be different Naman don't directly compete with
your creator you always improve on
57:38
the services and maybe have your own niche market don't go in the recollection with
your
57:45
Creator don't do that okay that's a very good trait of Filipinos
57:50
for the longest time so on my end when I put up my own company initially after I
57:57
learned the trade coming from from a reality it was very famous at doing his thing okay
58:05
para I'm not in direct collection with my creditor you always have to remember
58:11
that that's okay thank you and that's actually our first
58:19
part I'll see you back again on the second and third part I hope you enjoyed
58:24
our part one discussion

PART 6

good day once again fellow Learners this


0:05
is your Mentor Ray gapos joining you for
0:08
part two for this specific concept on
0:12
entrepreneurial behavior and personality
0:16
so let's get a ball rolling this time
0:21
before we begin let's focus on the
0:24
objectives for this session
0:26
and let me begin with this question do
0:31
certain traits predict an entrepreneur's
0:35
likelihood of achieving success
0:42
there is this billionaire entrepreneur
0:46
who's very young was a business Club
0:57
[Music]
1:00
okay
1:03
okay anyway
1:06
and then my staff said because that's a
1:09
sponsored flight so I was invited so
1:19
personal assistant
1:22
my executive staff
1:24
it's a business class
1:27
and so the guitar is
1:30
a business Club the billionaire
1:32
entrepreneur
1:35
and then my very observant executive
1:38
assistant eventually asked me sabines
1:45
and then
1:50
it is
1:57
executive assistant
2:04
and then I said
2:14
um
2:20
[Music]
2:26
and as a business class section
2:30
executive assistant but don't get me
2:32
wrong you're gonna be the same
2:34
organization is the one that booked me
2:36
don't say business class I really
2:37
wouldn't mind it's a tricycle mode
2:41
I wouldn't mind okay okay
2:48
[Music]
2:55
foreign
3:01
sabiko
3:03
it was a billionaire young and then I
3:05
answered back economy
3:11
and that was the same answer
3:13
that
3:15
one of my friends
3:18
told an acquaintance
3:34
over
3:41
credit cards
3:50
what does that tell us it's telling us
3:55
that our decisions and outlook on how we
4:00
spend our money
4:02
who determine
4:05
how much we would be able to save in our
4:09
entrepreneurial venture remember
4:12
wealth is not about how much you weigh
4:15
wealth is how much remains after
4:20
spending what you make so well
4:26
[Music]
4:36
as we go along our discussion okay blind
4:41
item in a positive way
4:51
foreign
5:19
okay let's go
5:22
so what are the 11 characteristics of
5:26
successful entrepreneurs this is based
5:28
on an article of collated studies
5:32
um based on collated studies published
5:34
by the Harvard Business School so number
5:37
one curiosity
5:39
so
5:40
as an entrepreneur you have to
5:43
continuously seek New Opportunities how
5:46
do you do that first have a drive to
5:49
consistently ask questions like for
5:52
example na
6:04
you know
6:09
um
6:23
that's how you actually build your
6:28
business ask questions from your
6:31
customers because at the end of the day
6:38
so always have that habit of asking
6:42
questions okay
6:48
okay next
6:53
structured experimentation conduct
6:55
market research and then test run okay
7:02
for those of you know
7:08
turn off the century the early 2000
7:11
before Facebook there's a very very
7:15
popular social networking site
7:17
frenchster
7:27
created one for me okay however
7:30
eventually
7:32
bucket
7:36
because Facebook was quick too
7:41
adapt by focusing on the experiment a
7:46
new experiment
7:49
how their customers are using their
7:52
products
7:54
and Facebook online
7:58
features to allow that
8:01
okay
8:02
and we are supposed to be that proud
8:05
because
8:09
on social media now
8:13
some businesses become successful on
8:17
their secondary purpose not on the
8:19
primary purpose okay
8:23
and on Facebook
8:26
collection photo album on the internet
8:33
however people
8:35
came up with a better idea use it to
8:39
sell their goods and services and so you
8:43
have to base your decision to revise
8:46
your product based on that
8:50
specific
8:51
experimentation done by your customers
9:00
so you always have to engage in
9:03
structured experimentation okay third
9:06
adaptability know how to evaluate
9:09
situations how
9:12
first and foremost as they say change is
9:15
the only important thing in this world
9:16
therefore
9:17
you have to be able to anticipate change
9:21
there's no such thing as
9:23
what is effective before is still
9:25
effective now no
9:27
things have changed people have changed
9:30
the attention span of the Gen Z Learners
9:32
has gone down to eight seconds okay so
9:35
therefore we can create and create an
9:37
video eight hours
9:42
five hours
9:44
because if you would notice now
9:48
um the vlogging is geared towards videos
9:51
that are less than 10 minutes so why
9:54
would you stick to your three hours five
9:56
hours blogging okay you have to learn
9:59
how to adopt okay next
10:03
decisiveness have the confidence to make
10:06
challenging decisions if the outcome is
10:08
less favorable favorable come up with a
10:11
corrective action right away so being
10:13
decisive does not mean that you have the
10:16
answers all the time being decisive
10:19
simply means you take a stand based on
10:22
your absolute truth and values as an
10:25
entrepreneur which simply means
10:47
now you have to decide now so that when
10:52
the decision does not turn out to be
10:55
that good you have time to reassess and
10:59
introduce a corrective action next
11:03
successful entrepreneurs are confident
11:07
they have the confidence to advocate for
11:10
their products so if you don't believe
11:12
in your own product who else would
11:13
believe in you
11:17
that your product works but make sure
11:20
that when you create your product it has
11:23
to be
11:24
something that's very unique that your
11:28
competitor cannot copy so what makes an
11:32
Enterprise successful only one recipe
11:35
something that they cannot imitate
11:39
if your business can be something that
11:42
can be imitated
11:45
you'll have a let go of competitors in
11:48
maybe an hour's time after you launch it
11:51
on social media but if the core of your
11:55
business is something that is unique to
11:58
you and nobody knows it
12:00
then by all means go ahead have the
12:05
confidence and advocate for your product
12:08
next
12:11
team building okay now pay particular
12:14
attention success
12:16
[Music]
12:17
the success of any Enterprise and the
12:21
success of an entrepreneur is spelled as
12:24
t-e-a-m team okay no man is an island
12:28
okay even if you are the primary
12:33
decision maker creator thinker marketer
12:38
and advocate of your product you have to
12:42
be able to build a well-rounded team to
12:46
complement your abilities
12:49
to correct your weaknesses and to add to
12:52
your strengths some people would
12:55
consider political power as part of
12:59
their team building strategy for an
13:02
Enterprise that could be good but once
13:04
again
13:05
without a an excellent Prada
13:09
your
13:11
connection power or political power
13:16
cannot last long
13:18
so what withstands Market forces would
13:23
be an excellent
13:25
unique well thought out product
13:29
that you can simply put there side by
13:33
side with any competition and they can
13:36
withstand Market competition because of
13:40
a unique feature so think about what
13:43
makes your product unique
13:44
so if you want to be a successful
13:46
entrepreneur
13:48
next risk tolerance okay so you have to
13:52
learn how to manage and balance risks
13:54
and rewards learn how to minimize
13:56
failures now remember failure is not the
14:01
opposite of success failure is a part of
14:04
success and it's the job of the
14:06
entrepreneur to implement strategies to
14:10
minimize the risk like for example
14:13
some of the risks that we have here in
14:17
our country could be
14:21
disasters
14:22
so if you are a startup entrepreneur
14:25
with limited Capital you earn a lot of
14:27
money and then some people would usually
14:30
have this idea and a Biblical building
14:37
earthquake insurance
14:43
you did not minimize your risk
14:48
why buy when you can rent okay now that
14:53
leaves you thinking applicable
14:58
why buy when you can rent no I'm not
15:01
saying that okay just for you to
15:03
remember that Mantra in order to
15:05
decrease the risk you have to know how
15:09
to minimize the risk okay next
15:15
okay comfort with failure now prepare
15:19
for and be comfortable with failures
15:22
I've been saying a while back failure is
15:25
at the opposite of success failure is
15:28
always a part of success so if you want
15:30
to be successful you double your failure
15:33
rate but some people because they keep
15:37
on failing they don't know
15:40
how to cope with failure
15:43
okay they cope with failure by
15:47
scratching everything and venturing into
15:49
a new thing in which they will fail
15:51
again you don't do that you have to
15:53
build on your previous failures to
15:56
create a successful
16:00
products
16:05
not until you put that in the market you
16:09
would not know how people would respond
16:11
to it so keep moving move straight ahead
16:16
next
16:17
persistence
16:19
um be willing to learn from your
16:21
mistakes and then
16:23
be optimistic try to see your missed
16:26
steps as opportunities to learn and grow
16:28
you don't say I failed you say I learn
16:32
okay and then number 10 Innovation so
16:36
you have to know what is existing in the
16:39
market how can you improve on the
16:41
products and services and then create a
16:44
brand out of it and finally long-term
16:48
Focus remember
16:49
entrepreneurship is a long-term Endeavor
16:52
it is not something that is for
16:57
someone who has a very narrow idea of
17:00
what they want to achieve so an
17:02
entrepreneur would always continuously
17:05
grow and sustain the Enterprise and
17:08
sometimes this this requires a lot of
17:10
work it takes a toll on their energy it
17:13
takes a toll on their relationships but
17:15
that's how they are okay now
17:20
let's put a little Filipino flavor on
17:24
this entrepreneurial
17:27
characteristics Okay so
17:30
can we race would-be entrepreneurs
17:33
here's what Joya backing through our go
17:37
negotia Publications have to say the
17:39
eight simple secrets to raising
17:41
entrepreneurs according to Joy one is
17:44
knowing thyself all children are smart
17:48
there's no such thing as
17:51
idiot or the job of the parents
17:55
and the teacher is to work on the
17:56
strengths of the children look our
17:58
national hero Jose Rizal his first
18:01
picture was his mother okay now if you
18:05
are very very fond of animals and you've
18:09
came across the YouTube channel of big
18:13
boss bully pH okay this guy
18:17
I passionate about dogs okay
18:21
[Music]
18:23
and then because of his interest in dogs
18:29
came up with his own
18:31
Pet Shop eventually and now you know
18:37
business yeah okay
18:43
okay and he's offering different
18:45
Services now for
18:48
dogs so therefore you can turn your
18:52
passion into an entrepreneurial venture
18:55
first things first
18:58
you have to know what your passion is
19:00
and make sure
19:04
you actually fulfill or pursue your
19:07
passion based on your absolute truth
19:10
okay okay next attitude develop the
19:14
condo mindset look Ricky Reyes wanted to
19:17
become a hairdresser at age 13. and even
19:21
if
19:22
um they are so poor that he cannot
19:24
afford to go to school
19:26
he persevered and now he's a successful
19:29
entrepreneur okay being the president
19:32
and CEO of the Ricky Reyes chain of
19:36
salons okay
19:38
okay that's the winning attitude next
19:41
entrepreneurial mind you have to have a
19:44
vision I keep telling you this in part
19:45
one you begin with a vision what do you
19:48
want to achieve you should have a clear
19:51
idea of where you want to go that's
19:53
according to marixi trieto CEO of the
19:56
Philippine daily Inquirer okay because
19:58
your vision provides you with a sense of
20:02
direction okay next
20:05
money smart okay remember our
20:10
blind item a while back teach children
20:13
how to spend wisely and how to earn
20:15
honestly now in Japan initially help out
20:19
in their family business by Manning the
20:21
cash registry okay
20:30
and that is reflective in everything
20:32
that he does okay Hindi
20:38
splurgeon entrepreneurs
20:42
savings
20:56
okay
20:58
entrepreneurs
21:08
for that engagement and you know as long
21:11
as you are comfortable that's perfectly
21:13
fine the members have been saying
21:19
it depends on what remains after your
21:23
spending mentorship now we are all
21:26
Learners and our parents can be our
21:28
mentors look at the sea family so when
21:30
Henry C passed away
21:32
the children
21:33
have to take charge and that's how it
21:36
should be okay
21:37
[Music]
21:38
on my end my mom was really my mentor
21:42
and up to now
21:44
lesson second
21:46
I live with all of this I live by all
21:50
reminders
21:57
and everything follows don't mind what
22:01
people are saying
22:04
because
22:06
your core or your essence as a person is
22:11
more important than the perception of
22:14
the people around you so at the end of
22:17
the day you have to go back to your core
22:19
what defines you as a person and that's
22:23
where you should strive to thrive okay
22:26
work ethics Foster respect in the work
22:29
area now
22:31
who owns Jollibee and I am formerly when
22:35
I was a student in college a crew of
22:38
Jollibee everyone in Jollibee from the
22:40
CEO to store's kitchen crew respectfully
22:42
at the rich other as Sir or mom so which
22:46
simply means you have to have set
22:50
standards on how you will work your way
22:52
to the top and that begins with yourself
22:55
and your co-workers starting a business
22:58
the heart of the business is to begin
23:01
with yourself the question is how first
23:03
and foremost I'd like to share with you
23:06
um
23:06
the results of a survey that we did in
23:10
one of our companies and my question is
23:12
how do you put a heart in what you do
23:14
and this has been collated by professor
23:18
okay so I call her mommy Che okay and
23:23
Mom cherry and Durante was recently okay
23:27
awarded the young investigator award in
23:31
Asia and she won representing the
23:34
Philippines of course I'm asking Sean
23:36
hacking research body and partner
23:40
research okay and this is what came out
23:44
of
23:46
what we did in that survey how do you
23:48
put a heart in what you do first
23:50
interact and connect do that to your
23:53
customer make sure they know you need
23:57
Based Teaching know their failed needs
24:01
which simply means
24:06
if it doesn't
24:08
meet a need of the customer and then
24:11
share past struggles and success
24:16
they want to see and hear stories of
24:21
failure and how people Rose above their
24:23
failures then personalize their
24:25
experience there should be something
24:28
more than the usual that they're getting
24:30
from others and then incorporate
24:33
authenticity that's what I'm trying to
24:35
say you have to base your actions on
24:38
your absolute truth
24:41
then respect the limitations of your
24:44
customers then encourage before during
24:47
and after the lesson so that forms the
24:50
mnemonic Inspire once again interact and
24:53
connect need-based teaching know their
24:56
needs share past struggles and success
24:58
personalize their experience incorporate
25:01
authenticity respect their limitations
25:03
and encourage before during and after
25:06
the lesson that's a quick survey that
25:10
was presented in one of our monthly
25:13
meetings and of course number eight
25:16
making a difference a business is not
25:20
just about making money that's not the
25:22
primary motivation of an entrepreneur it
25:24
is about helping people through
25:26
innovative solutions it is about
25:28
inspiring them influencing them and
25:32
making them believe that they too have
25:35
their
25:37
entrepreneurial traits inside themselves
25:40
and your job as a mentor is to bring it
25:44
out so they can use it properly so this
25:48
is the end of part two thank you and
25:52
this is regapolis once again saying
25:55
maranin salamat and see you in our part
25:59
three
26:01
foreign

PART 7

good day fellow Learners this is once


0:05
again your Mentor Ray gapos joining you
0:07
on the part three for our teaching and
0:11
learning session on the concept
0:14
entrepreneurial behavior and personality
0:16
or entrepreneurial personality and
0:19
behavior okay so let's begin this time
0:23
we're going to talk about skills and
0:26
competencies of an entrepreneur and will
0:30
actually have these objectives that
0:33
would serve as our guide in the
0:36
direction of our discussions today
0:40
so what are the seven skills of
0:43
innovative entrepreneurs
0:45
first and foremost would be basic
0:48
Financial skills
0:53
and there's several things that you need
0:56
to focus on as an entrepreneur first you
0:59
have your you have to know how to read
1:02
and prepare your balance sheet so your
1:05
balance sheet actually shows how the
1:08
business is performing in a general
1:11
sense so it it actually helps you
1:14
decipher the assets the liabilities
1:18
including the equity of the owner and
1:21
the shareholders when say Equity it's
1:23
the value of the shares especially of
1:26
the investors okay so income statement
1:30
um would actually give you in a nutshell
1:32
an idea of how much the company is
1:35
earning cash flow will give you an idea
1:37
of how much the company is spending from
1:42
the cash that it receives and then the
1:44
statement of the owner's equity it
1:47
details via changes in the equity held
1:50
by the shareholders depending on the
1:52
performance of the company so
1:58
how is the company doing at this point
2:01
in time so basic
2:04
to the entrepreneur should be your
2:07
ability to prep to read and prepare your
2:12
finances okay next networking
2:17
as a beginning entrepreneur you can
2:20
initially
2:21
make a list of the people who you want
2:26
to introduce your products to some
2:28
people would say
2:34
when I started my developing my
2:38
entrepreneurial skills
2:41
where it has all sorts of manga you know
2:46
like condiments
2:48
spices vinegar Toyo because
2:52
um
3:01
[Music]
3:04
so that small little cabinet paved the
3:08
way for me to eventually learn the ropes
3:11
of how to approach potential clients of
3:14
course that begin with family members
3:16
then when I became an entrepreneur I
3:19
have to get in touch with industry
3:20
leaders alumni from educational
3:22
institutions and of course
3:28
solicitor general okay
3:32
okay solicitations of course is is part
3:36
of it so if you want to do a little PR
3:39
just make sure that you are not spending
3:42
all your budget for marketing just for
3:47
um solicitation purposes which simply
3:49
means you are just pleasing one two or
3:52
three people you're giving so much and
3:54
it's not yielding you the return of
3:57
investment in terms of product exposure
3:59
that you need
4:01
three the ability to accept and act on
4:03
feedback now this skill requires you to
4:07
be very very humble why only a humble
4:11
person
4:13
is able to listen to the feedback
4:19
of the customers and after listening
4:21
then you reflect on it so first and
4:25
foremost if you want to be successful at
4:28
accepting and acting on the feedback of
4:31
customers you first have to put the
4:35
truth ahead of your passion even if
4:38
you're so passionate about your business
4:44
is it being accepted by your customers
4:47
don't say oh my product is excellent
4:50
they don't want to use it because these
4:52
people are idiot you don't do that okay
4:54
you first have to learn how to listen to
4:57
your customers find out why despite your
5:02
perceived Excellence of your product are
5:05
they not using it okay next
5:09
pattern recognition so you are supposed
5:12
to be able to monitor market trends as
5:16
well as user behavior and when you come
5:18
up with new product you actually
5:21
um would test it first internally and
5:23
you call that Alpha Testing so you allow
5:26
some people to uh
5:28
use your product initially I've seen
5:30
this in one very famous Dermatology
5:33
Clinic so after the formulation of the
5:35
dermatologist of a whitening treatment
5:38
they first try it on the staff of the
5:42
clinic okay that's what we call Alpha
5:44
Testing and then better testing would be
5:47
um through external users if you want to
5:50
find out about the sentiments of your
5:53
would-be target market now if you know
5:56
how to identify market trends and user
6:00
Behavior then that will make you um
6:03
very very ahead of the competition why
6:07
because with that you can strategize
6:10
based on uh the presence of emerging
6:14
competitors in the industry and once you
6:17
are able to come up with a good strategy
6:19
that will make you lead the pack in
6:23
terms of
6:25
um offering your product okay strategic
6:28
thinking when you say strategic thinking
6:30
you need your analytical skills which
6:33
simply means you have to have a
6:35
knowledge of the market conditions
6:37
emerging business okay yeah internal
6:40
resource allocation
6:42
strengths weaknesses communication
6:45
skills which is very very important
6:46
there's one important thing that we use
6:49
in nursing that you can use in in your
6:51
business I modified it uh on our end uh
6:55
remember sbar communication situation
6:57
background assessment recommendation in
7:00
our office we just use SBR situation you
7:03
have to describe what happened
7:04
background so provide information and
7:08
then a recommendation what is the
7:12
solution from your own perspective so
7:15
having that format facilitates
7:18
communication the office
7:21
hi good morning rhetorics
7:27
that's a waste of time so in the office
7:29
we use SBR method and then problem
7:33
solving skills okay you have to have
7:38
strategic planning abilities which
7:41
simply means you have to know how to
7:43
interpret the data that are being served
7:47
to you in terms of for example
7:50
misfinancial targets inefficient
7:52
workflows or presence of a lot of
7:55
emerging competition in the market you
7:57
have to be able to take this into
7:59
consideration to position yourself
8:01
properly in the market and then planning
8:04
and management skills you have to learn
8:07
how to think
8:08
don't focus on what should you think
8:10
about learn how to think plan and then
8:14
have that plan flexible enough because
8:17
we know for a fact that the business
8:18
climate is not fixed it's it's
8:22
constantly changing and so
8:26
managing change requires a lot of
8:29
planning and management skills number
8:32
six negotiation so the first like your
8:34
nurse patient relationship the first
8:36
step for before engaging in negotiations
8:39
to build trust once again
8:41
it's going to be easy for you to
8:43
negotiate if you have proven to your
8:47
client that your product works
8:50
no amount of black propaganda can topple
8:53
you down not even sour graping previous
8:57
employees and competitors can topple you
9:01
down if your product works
9:04
so at the end of it all it's about
9:07
having the product that works no amount
9:12
of marketing can make you successful so
9:16
you have to know how one very famous
9:19
Dermatology Clinic ventured into
9:22
uh beauty products and then eventually
9:24
have the beauty products being
9:28
um on a special offer website why
9:31
because if you're gonna read the
9:33
feedback of people who use this they
9:35
would say oh
9:40
um
9:41
you see at the end of the day it's how
9:46
the
9:47
you sir
9:49
would react to your product that's why I
9:52
am not a believer of multi-level
9:54
marketing because my idiosyncrasies
10:02
what if
10:13
so would you want to have a package when
10:17
you have your proven choices that has
10:21
worked in the past
10:22
if it if it ain't broke then why fix
10:27
okay so a lot of multi-level marketing
10:30
don't last that long because they reach
10:31
their saturation point and then they
10:33
don't know what to do next so if you are
10:36
one of those who are giving
10:39
um false reassurance that this work for
10:41
you and it will work for your friend too
10:43
I don't think that's a good business
10:45
model at the end of it all the product
10:47
should speak for itself okay now find
10:50
Uncommon Ground instead of initially
10:53
finding some commonalities between you
10:56
and a potential customer find something
10:59
that will make you curious about the
11:02
person something uncommon on your end
11:04
and on the client's end so that you have
11:07
the opportunity to talk about these
11:09
things that you are not familiar with on
11:13
on both of your sides and then
11:16
talk about it and then be agile what
11:19
does that mean you have to move as fast
11:21
as you can when you are introducing a
11:24
product so you have to know how to
11:27
saturate the market when you need to
11:29
remember
11:31
um
11:32
time is of the essence when you have a
11:35
product and the most important thing
11:37
that you have to remember is every
11:42
minute counts and each of those minute
11:45
that you lose
11:47
is a deduction to your potential Revenue
11:51
so remember to be agile
11:54
seven growth mindset now pay particular
11:56
attention to the fact that
11:59
um running a business is not just having
12:02
the intelligence the abilities or the
12:05
talent okay because an Enterprise is
12:08
never static the market is never static
12:11
so you have to learn how to be flexible
12:14
you have to learn how to improve on your
12:17
product you have to learn how to look
12:19
for opportunities to venture into new
12:22
things okay and okay with that let's now
12:27
summarize the entrepreneurial behavior
12:30
and personality using the 10ds of an
12:35
entrepreneur and let me put a little
12:38
Filipino flavor to it by integrating
12:42
some anecdotes from among those whom I
12:46
rub elbows with in our business group
12:48
The gonig also group under the
12:50
Philippine Center for entrepreneurship
12:53
which has been previously attached to
12:56
the Office of the President so let's
12:58
begin
12:59
okay the first day every entrepreneur
13:02
should have a dream
13:04
it's a dream
13:06
and for you to turn the dream into
13:08
reality you have to have a vision
13:11
remember
13:14
at age 13 he knows what he wants he
13:17
wanted to be a hairdresser and he
13:21
envisioned himself as a professional
13:23
hairdresser
13:31
okay and that started with having a
13:36
Clear Vision next of course
13:44
in the Agora award for entrepreneurship
13:47
well previous Awards or Ben Shan Henry C
13:51
uh John gocom way okay and yours truly
13:55
being the first nurse entrepreneur to be
13:57
awarded that recognition decisiveness
14:00
Swift decision making don't
14:02
procrastinate now what's inspiring with
14:04
lesser is is
14:06
foreign
14:12
but he is running a salon business
14:15
remember
14:19
why because he he has that ability to
14:24
decide whenever opportunities present
14:28
themselves in front of him he doesn't
14:31
procrastinate okay there was even a time
14:34
that he has Reyes haircutters in New
14:37
York okay
14:39
next doers Implement one's course of
14:42
action as quickly as possible remember
14:46
okay
14:47
[Music]
14:48
um
14:50
the doers are people who act as fast as
14:55
they can okay at an example
14:58
a group of entrepreneurs
15:08
branches okay because they saw the need
15:13
for it okay so example
15:16
Enterprises branches like for example of
15:20
India okay for determination you have to
15:25
be totally committed okay they seldom
15:28
give up even in the face of
15:29
insurmountable obstacles
15:32
um
15:35
if you would watch some of her
15:38
interviews lately she said that she has
15:42
been diagnosed with stage three breast
15:44
cancer and was in fact
15:46
given two years to live
15:49
but if you would notice she's still all
15:52
over the place acting as a marketing
15:55
advocate for Bello Medical Group she
15:58
never stopped that's determination okay
16:04
of National Bookstore
16:08
Sabina
16:11
if you're an entrepreneur there's no day
16:14
off you have to be willing to work
16:17
tirelessly 24 7. you should be on top of
16:22
your Enterprise
16:25
six of course my former boss Tony tan
16:29
captain of Jollibee
16:31
the 6D is devotion entrepreneurs love
16:35
what they do so I've been saying a while
16:37
back find your passion turn it into a
16:39
business because if your passion is your
16:42
business you are not working not a
16:44
single second of your life because
16:45
you're doing what you love to do so
16:48
loving what they do makes them sell
16:50
their product or service more
16:52
effectively because it's coming from the
16:55
heart seven of course details
16:59
Marquis Fuso in the world on top of the
17:02
critical details of the business
17:05
attorney goes on Philippi goes on of
17:08
gma7 always looks at the figures ratings
17:12
and programs okay
17:16
because at the end of the day that's
17:18
when you get a feedback coming from the
17:21
valley viewers
17:23
Max of course
17:25
why because they used to operate a
17:29
bakery Jan look or a French Baker
17:31
eventually
17:35
and then when he decided to level up
17:38
their business
17:43
so French Baker
17:46
also teaches business administrations
17:49
so very very educated and mostly awarded
17:53
entrepreneur so he's one person who
17:56
created his own destiny
17:58
then of course Dallas
18:02
one of the richest okay politicians
18:06
we've ever had and it's actually now the
18:09
richest Filipino and he's actually in
18:14
Forbes magazines list of
18:18
richest people in the world
18:20
so Hindi language
18:23
okay remember
18:26
entrepreneurs don't consider money
18:29
as the main motivation entrepreneurs
18:33
assume that they will be rewarded with
18:36
money
18:36
if they become successful so don't chase
18:40
for the greenbacks don't chase the
18:42
dollars it will come to you when the
18:45
universe reward you for a job well done
18:49
and of course Young
18:57
[Music]
19:01
now skincare
19:04
and he's not a doctor so he is
19:08
a person who has a very
19:12
entrepreneurial mindset okay so one
19:16
thing I admire with Ben Chan is they're
19:19
open to franchising or duplicating the
19:21
business that they have they distribute
19:23
ownership of their business with
19:25
employees who are critical to the
19:26
success of their business so don't turn
19:28
your employees as just employees forever
19:31
when you become successful
19:33
share your blessings turn them into your
19:36
partners so with that this is the end of
19:41
part three and I hope you were able to
19:45
get a good grasp of what we hope to
19:47
achieve for this third part of the video
19:51
once again this is your manta ray saying
19:54
thank you for joining me in this lesson

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