The Resilient Entrepreneur, Edition #121


The Resilient Entrepreneur, Edition #121

Hi there

I hope you had a great week!

Here are the topics in today's edition:

  • Stop Whining. Suffering Is Part of Entrepreneurship
  • Why Enthusiastic Entrepreneurs Are More Successful

Please reach out with comments, questions, or suggestions for articles!

Talk soon,
Tom


TACTICS FOR RESILIENT ENTREPRENEURS

Stop Whining. Suffering Is Part of Entrepreneurship

Lost deals, silent prospects, churning customers, and outages on your wife’s birthday. Suffering is part of entrepreneurship. Here’s how to keep going.

Entrepreneurship is awesome. You are your own boss, you work whenever and wherever you want, and you’re building a product you truly love.

Wait, not quite.

Even if you don’t have a boss as an entrepreneur, you live in a world full of constraints and frustrations.

A Small Selection of Frustrations

Here is a small selection of frustrations I’ve seen in my 10+ years at the helm of Yonder, a B2B SaaS company.

Let’s start with the commercial frustrations. You’ve worked hard to submit a great RFP response, you’ve demoed your product numerous times, and you negotiated hard to reach a best-and-final offer acceptable to both sides. Then you don’t hear from your prospect anymore. Until you receive a formal email stating that they regret to inform you that you weren’t chosen as their preferred supplier. After airing your initial frustration with your co-founders, you politely ask for feedback to understand why you were not selected. Silence.

Some other deals don’t even reach the stage of negotiating a best-and-final offer. At a certain point, the discussion just stalls. You’re left in the dark about the reasons, and you start to speculate. Maybe your competitors undercut your price? Maybe the prospect has other priorities? Maybe they didn’t understand the true value of your product? You will never know.

Losing a customer is always hugely frustrating, yet it happens. Sometimes, you know the reason why a customer wants to leave you: Price, unhappiness with the product, or organizational pressure to harmonize systems within the group. And sometimes, you don’t know the reason — the customer just terminates the contract and doesn’t want to share the reasons for their termination.

On certain occasions, you will even fail to land customers in a new market segment. Maybe your product is great for large organizations, but you can’t make money with it serving small organizations. Maybe you’re successful in your home geography, but you can’t bridge the cultural differences to customers on other continents.

And as if this weren’t enough already, sometimes your revenue growth slows or stalls due to factors you cannot control: Geopolitical developments, wars, or adverse foreign exchange rate developments.

And then, there are the technical frustrations. In a software-as-a-service business, there is always something to build, update, or fix.

Sometimes, customers camouflage their feature requests as bugs, terrorizing your team to speed up the closure of the bug ticket. You spend endless time explaining that their request is not a bug, and it therefore has a different fix timeline than “immediately.” Sometimes customers call you about an urgent bug, which isn’t a bug but a misconfiguration of their corporate IT systems.

And sometimes you truly fuck up on your side: Your system experiences grave performance issues or even a full outage. Or, still worse, you suffer a data loss that you need to recover immediately. These things will always happen in the worst possible moment — when you’re super busy closing a major deal, one day before Christmas, or on the 40th birthday of your wife. Frustrating to the bone.

We’re not done yet. Even if you are on top of the most pressing commercial and technical problems in your company, there is one more thing that drags every entrepreneur down: The daily administration grind. But let’s not waste time discussing administrative frustrations.

What To Do About It

Whining isn’t an entrepreneurial discipline. So stop complaining about your frustrations and start thinking about how to solve those frustrations.

1. Accept Reality

Start with accepting that we’re living in a less-than-perfect world. Living in Switzerland, I constantly remind myself I’m super lucky to live here; many people elsewhere are much worse off. So surely I can cope with some frustrations in daily entrepreneurial life, can’t I?

Accepting reality is a question of mindset. In many poor countries, you see many joyful people. In contrast, in many rich countries, people whine all day about non-problems.

2. Grab Every Opportunity

If you have a large number of opportunities in your pipeline, it matters less if some of them take a long time to close or don’t materialize at all.

Therefore, grab every opportunity to fill your pipeline. Now you might argue that focus is a good thing for entrepreneurs. Yes, focus is important. But it’s easier to suck as many opportunities as you can into your pipeline and then focus, rather than focusing too early and then getting frustrated that your pipeline is so small. Also, some opportunities might look vague and outside of your focus at first, but they might suddenly close and prove to be hidden gems. That’s why you should grab every opportunity.

3. Learn to Suffer

Frustrations are not fun. But they are part of life, irrespective if you’re an entrepreneur, an employee, or a parent. Sometimes, you’re on a roll, and everything falls into place, and sometimes, you have to sustain a dry spell.

Sustaining long dry spells is painful. But you still need to keep going. That’s why it pays to learn to suffer. Even the darkest nights turn into beautiful sunrises at some point. Even after the longest winters, spring will come again.

Where did I learn to suffer? As an active reserve officer in the Swiss Armed Forces. And because I’ve been an active reserve officer for more than 20 years, I know that I can cope with suffering over extended periods.

Conclusion

Given all the frustrations, is entrepreneurship still worth it? Absolutely! It’s still great building something out of nothing, finding untapped market needs, and creating great products to satisfy those needs.

And you know what? The grass is not greener for employees. You might not be confronted with all the entrepreneurial frustrations I described above. But there might be other frustrations as an employee.


STRATEGIES FOR RESILIENT ENTREPRENEURS

Why Enthusiastic Entrepreneurs Are More Successful

People call me “Mr. Yonder”. This is down to my enthusiasm for my product, my team, and my work, and it’s one of the most powerful sales tools.

Recently, I gave a presentation at an officers’ association gathering on the battalion I command as an active reserve officer in the Swiss Armed Forces. After a lively Q&A session, an elderly gentleman (I later learned he was a retired general of the German Armed Forces) approached me, saying he was convinced I would rise through the ranks over time. I told him that I had no fixed plans to do so, but asked him why he was so sure. Without hesitation, he said that it was my enthusiasm for the subject that would make all the difference.

This feedback holds important lessons for entrepreneurs. Yes, entrepreneurship is frustrating sometimes, but keep your frustration private if you want to be successful as an entrepreneur. In contrast, share your enthusiasm for your business with the wider public at every opportunity.

Let’s look at a few specific examples from my experience as the Founder & CEO of Yonder, a B2B SaaS company.

Love Your Product

At Yonder, we are in the business of electronic documentation.

Awwww, electronic documentation. How exciting.

Well, ever thought of digitizing the cockpit of an aircraft? Or about making ISO 9001/27001 certification easy and affordable for startups and SMEs? Or about bringing relevant information to firefighters on the front lines to help them get their mission done?

Think again. Electronic documentation is exciting because it solves a relevant problem many businesses have.

If you want to sell your product, you need to pitch it enthusiastically whenever you have the opportunity. This means you’re not just pitching in sales calls, but always. When somebody asks you about your job at a networking reception. At a family gathering, when somebody mentions their employer has a mess with their internal documents. When you meet somebody who says he knows one of your key prospects.

Whenever you pitch, do so with authentic enthusiasm. Sometimes, people call me “Mr. Yonder”, and that’s how enthusiastic pitching should sound.

Love Your Team

An entrepreneur is hardly successful without a great team. Don’t believe all the solopreneur stories; even solopreneurs need help from contractors and suppliers. Solopreneurs should consider their contractors and suppliers as their team.

If you roll your eyes whenever someone from your team calls you, you probably have the wrong people on the team. You should be excited when they call you (of course, you will have the odd argument with your team, but that’s ok).

Now, when you are excited about your product and your team, pass on your enthusiasm for the product to your team. If they are enthusiastic about your product too, you can declare that business development and pitching are everybody’s jobs.

Love Your Work

Don’t become a software engineer if you don’t like coding. Don’t become a writer if you don’t like writing. And don’t become an entrepreneur if you don’t like pitching.

It’s that simple. If you don’t love your work, you won’t be good at it. You will spend your time procrastinating, trying to evade your work. That’s hardly a good point of departure to build a successful business.

Conclusion

Success has nothing to do with social media noise talking about success. Success is a result of enthusiasm — about your product, your team, and your work.

What are you waiting for? Get up and start spreading enthusiasm for whatever you are building.


About Me

I’m a tech entrepreneur, active reserve officer, and father of three — writing about entrepreneurship, leadership, and crisis management from hard-won experience. No AI, no fluff, no promos. Just plain-text insights for people building and leading under pressure.

When I’m not solving problems, I find clarity in the mountains around Zermatt.

If this was useful, here’s how to get more:

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The Resilient Entrepreneur

Growing a company in uncertain times is like running a marathon — it demands grit, strategy, and resilience. As a tech entrepreneur, active reserve officer, and father of three, I share practical insights and write about entrepreneurship, leadership, and crisis management. When I’m not solving problems, I recharge and find inspiration in the breathtaking mountains around Zermatt. Sign up to receive my articles by email every Friday - no paywall, no AI bullshit, no promos, just my thoughts in plain text.

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