RECAP: 1 Million Cups panel offers decision-making advice

June 3, 2015  |  Abby Tillman

1mc ToughChoice (1 of 1)

Three entrepreneurs took the stage at 1 Million Cups this week to offer advice on navigating the tough world of entrepreneurship.

Alex Altomare, co-founder of BetaBlox, Linda Buchner, co-founder and president of Minddrive, and Ben Kittrell, co-founder and CTO of Doodlekit, all spoke about the variety of hard choices entrepreneurs face.

On handling tough decisions…

Altomare: The best advice I ever received on this subject was when someone said to me, “Alex, it’s all about options. Every business person should pursue options.” I boil it down to which path opens options instead of closes options. That’s made a big difference.

Kittrell: We faced a lot of tough decisions because we were programmers and not entrepreneurs or marketers. A lot of the decisions we made were from advice we found in books and stuff. A lot of decisions that we had to make without a lot of help and education that definitely could have gone one way or another.

On good and bad decisions in their own businesses…

Buchner: We started off being open source with the information about how to do our program in other cities. The time we spent on those calls didn’t lead to people actually starting Minddrives, and we’ll never get that time back. Concentrating on how to expand in Kansas City was a great decision. I met with a couple alums from the Kauffman Foundation who helped us think through scalability and what a franchise of Minddrive would look like.

Altomare: Proven methods don’t always work. When we rolled out our education, we hired a professor to run our class. That didn’t go well. We ended up having to create a curriculum from scratch because theory and the academia thing doesn’t offer the tangible tools our entrepreneurs needed.

Kittrell: We always focused on the product and trying to make the product better and that only took us so far. We really had to go out of our area of expertise. Now having gone into that and stepping outside of our comfort zone to do things like drip email campaigns and connecting more intimately with our customer. You learn that it’s not that difficult.

On staying revitalized…

Kittrell: One of the things that’s really helped me, honestly, is events like this. I started coming to 1 Million Cups back when it first started. It doesn’t necessarily have to be a direct thing, just being here, hearing different things can spark a new idea. When you sit in your office you only have what’s in your mind. You can’t get something else like you can when you attend events and interact with new people.

Altomare: It’s the community. There’s so much energy in the entrepreneurship community here in Kansas City. Being a part of that helps you see things that you didn’t see before. Once you’re an initial catalyst for something, surrounding yourself with good people is something you can’t do soon enough. Bring people around you and give them incentive to work and believe in this and trust them to help you carry it forward.

On motivating people to buy into your vision…

Altomare: Creating incentive for people goes beyond giving them money to pay them to do it. You have to find what triggers them and what drives them to get involved. Show meaning and purpose.

Buchner: Provide meaning and purpose. Everyone has a desire to help other people. Engage people in your story and get them to buy into your story.

Kittrell: Challenge people to do more than they believe is possible. Giving them a challenge and helping them believe they can meet it gets them to do more

startland-tip-jar

TIP JAR

Did you enjoy this post? Show your support by becoming a member or buying us a coffee.

Tagged , , , , ,
Featured Business
    Featured Founder

      2015 Startups to Watch

        stats here

        Related Posts on Startland News

        Innovation index: Cross-newsroom startup data partnership puts Kansas City on the map

        By Tommy Felts | May 6, 2025

        Finding relevant, actionable information on innovation happening in one’s own backyard can be tough, said Christopher Wink, announcing Kansas City’s inclusion within a new resource for navigating innovation communities. “Every metro region, every state has some website or page — ‘This is where you start if you’re going to join the KC tech community or…

        This duo plans to takedown one of female wrestlers’ most ‘mortifying’ foes: the wrong kind of exposure

        By Tommy Felts | May 6, 2025

        Two women-owned Kansas businesses are teaming up to ensure that female wrestlers don’t get pinned by a wardrobe malfunction mid-match, shared Deb North and Frankie Elder-Reedy. It’s a pairing that shows for these sole sisters, entrepreneurship is more than an individual sport. Topeka-based Yes! Athletics is going to the mat with the Apex high-impact sports…

        Entrepreneur featured on Hallmark show finds identity beyond motherhood (with help from Connie Britton and her own KC Team Mom)

        By Tommy Felts | May 6, 2025

        When Kansas City’s Rochelle Owens answered a message from Hallmark, she had no idea it would launch her into the national spotlight — or transform her life as a single mother and aspiring entrepreneur. Owens is the featured mom in Monday’s episode of The Motherhood, Hallmark’s new reality series created and hosted by actress Connie…

        Four role models selected for Hall of Fame as Junior Achievement celebrates 25 years of business honors

        By Tommy Felts | May 3, 2025

        A fresh round of Hall of Fame laureates celebrates Kansas City’s living legacy of visionary leaders who drive business excellence, innovation and community impact, said Megan Sturges, announcing a range of honorees from tech to tender chicken. “The JA Business Hall of Fame celebrates more than business success — it honors the spirit of leadership…