Tag Archives: James Wire

Staff Specialisation not good for Start-ups


Business books world over tend to glorify the need for specialisation and ensuring that the different dockets of the business get due attention from their respective professionals.

As a business startup, especially if you are the bootstrap type, this is advice laced with poison. While it may work, the pain it’s likely to put the entrepreneur through is usually uncalled for. A colleague with a new business under a year old approached me and on sharing his experiences, I realised that he had followed the business books’ principles with religious zeal and failed to harmonise their advice with his local situation. He had a challenge of very high overheads and yet was going through a lean period. Essentially the business was bleeding even when it wasn’t earning as expected.

The move he took of hiring people for the different functional areas of the business had led him to a situation where he could hardly meet salary and allowance obligations. Staff morale was at its lowest and there was no end in sight to the financial dip they were facing. He justified this hiring by the fact that the business was making money and could afford to pay for the hires.

My advice to him was simple, STOP THE BLEEDING. I shared with him how he for example didn’t need to have an in-house IT professional since the work being done could be effectively handled through outsourcing. The same applied to the accountant. For a business that currently sends out not more than two invoices a week, all he needs is to have some system set up using simple spreadsheets to capture pre-determined financial information. The files generated can then be shared with an accountant via email who will then spend not more than 2 hours to come up with the relevant reports. Any other staff to be retained had to have the capability to play multiple roles e.g An Office Administrator who can handle book keeping, telephone sales, website updating and customer support. It is possible and in case they can’t do all that, some training is in order and once blended with the right technology, the rest flows like a charm.

As a Startup founder, do not feel guilty when you realise that you are the CEO, Salesman, Engineer and Client Relationship Manager. It tends to happen since during this phase your vision alone isn’t enough to attract people to you who are willing to work through thick and thin for meagre pay.

Roadside Fish Entrepreneur in Mukono, Uganda. Notice the two hand helps in the background.

Roadside Fish Entrepreneur in Mukono, Uganda. Notice the two hand helps in the background.

Indian business owners are a good example here. You’ll find one running a small shop entirely on his own or with the help of one or two unpaid family members. Only when the business has grown and he is making really good money will he hire a paid hand. That paid hand is then expected to play multiple roles in the business based on how the owner deems fit. Every extra hire is justified by a significant growth in stable revenue and over the years, what started off as a small corner shop becomes a large supermarket.

We all usually want to feel good when sharing our business setups with others. We know that people want to hear that you have a Sales Department, Support Department, Accounts team, Management among others. While all these things are nice, they do not make business sense if all they are doing is haemorrhage your company.

Some of the challenges you are likely to face with a quick recruitment drive are;

  • Lack of Management skills. As an entrepreneur, you might need time to up your game in management of people. It is very likely that if you cant manage one or two people effectively, you wont be able to manage a large team. Use the time when you have a lean team to up your game in preparation for a bigger team. The category of staff you’re likely to get in your startup may not be that much experienced in work and hence require a significant level of baby sitting. That is where the headache starts from and alot of patience is needed.
  • Meeting Obligations. For every hire you make, obligations arise and they go beyond merely paying a salary. There are local and national taxes to pay, insurance (depending on the type of industry), clothing (especially protective gear for the construction industry), mandatory leave that also ropes in Maternity leave which can be as much as three months of paid leave. These can be difficult to track and before you know it, the authorities will be raining down on you and demanding their pound of flesh.
  • Staff Utilisation. Business opportunities in Startups tend to peak and dip quite alot. I covered that in this article. This has the implication of seeing your staff be utilised at over 100% in one month and then drop to as low as 20% in the next. For a business that hasn’t yet built enough reserves and has to rely on Accounts Receivables to meet salary obligations among others, the end result is what happened to my colleague at the start of this post.

You are therefore better off avoiding the temptation of hiring too quickly and if possible try operating below the radar as a way of gaining your bearings.

It’s never too late to earn Business Expertise


I am not a fan of the current education system. A fact known to many that have followed me overtime. In my life, I chose to self-teach, guided by my curiosity. However, there is one bit of my journey I have come to regret. As I mastered and gained expertise in programming computers, I missed building expertise in business which is a key component in monetizing my skills. Given the opportunity to go back in time, I would start a shop or any other business on the side while I mastered computers,” lamented a friend of mine.

For all I know, this young man can never be classified as a loser. Infact he is a leading thinker among guys I have meet of his generation. Largely self taught, a dreamer that pursues his dreams without fear, I was taken by surprise reading this message from him. On the flipside, this could be a reaction of a fast thinker who believes he/she must notch up various accomplishments as soon as possible.

From personal experience, I concur with him. Many times we spend alot of effort polishing our expertise in numerous technical areas and forget to understand business. In 2006, I had a heart to heart with a leading Consulting Engineer in Uganda and he told me, “James, avoid the trap of the mechanic. You spend too much time repairing customers’ cars and leave someone else to collect and count the money for you. That someone will earn the money leaving you at sea.” I never understood that statement and even didn’t bother to seek clarification. Two years later, when an accountant I had hired, in a bid to cover her tracks of stealing company money set my office on fire, I vividly recalled this discussion and vowed to change my approach. I always wondered why Indian shop keepers never leave the till, but after this experience, I realised that you ought to be where the money is or else you lose out.

So, if you don’t have business skills like my friend just stated, what do you do? Start acquiring them. These are some of the ways you can do so;

  • Reading books. There are lots of self help books out there that can teach you lots of tricks on “how to” or “how not to” do business.
  • Interaction. Make it a point to meet at least two people per week who you believe can share freely with you their business journeys. They don’t have to be superstar businessmen/women because there is equally as much to learn from those that are riding the tide of success as well as those that have failed.kiosk_in_india
  • Pet Projects. Like he rightly put it, “… I would start a shop …” There are always some basic businesses one can engage in to master some basic skills. These could be selling Airtime, Mobile Money Agency, a roadside kiosk, commodity trade among others. They teach you how to handle cash flow, bargain, manage creditors and debtors, price your products or services, deal with workers, detect fraud, swallow losses among others.
  • Apprenticeship. Find someone or people who can mentor you in specific areas. You can talk to them about spending an hour or two with them to learn through observation. This can only be realised if you are in good standing character wise and have people that trust you.
  • Training. Even when you are fed up with the formal education system, it doesn’t mean that it is entirely bad. There is always something to learn through some of these formal structures. You may not be after the certification that is provided but at least get the skills the training offers. Careful selection of what suits you is important.

For an entrepreneur, it doesn’t matter how old you are or how long you have been at your game, you can always learn something new. As opposed to the formal education systems that put time frames for acquiring knowledge/skills e.g. You need three years to become an accountant, in this space even a few days are enough to arm yourself with relevant knowledge in a particular field of endeavour. You don’t need to master all the details of double entry book keeping in accounts. Being able to understand and interprete a bank statement, profit & loss statement or a balance sheet is enough to steer you into making prudent decisions.

Back to my brother, its not too late. Appreciate the fact that you have realised this need early. Even to you that may consider yourself too old to learn, change your mindset and you’ll be on course to run a wildly successful enterprise.