Acquiring Knowledge for Small Business Owners

The life of a small business owner is hectic, to say the least.  Multi-tasking is the norm. So much of our day is spent reacting to the crisis of the moment, conducting the business of the day, and initiating our plans for the future. And once we acquire a level of competence in this life we've chosen, its natural to want to relax, settle in, and seek the ease that can come with familiarity and repetition.
 
But the marketplace isn't a comfortable, lumbering vessel anymore, rolling along like a single screw trawler. It's become more like a vibrant starship capable of warp speed. Indeed, it takes a much more knowledgeable person to successfully operate a business in today's marketplace than it did even 10 years ago.

The great American revolutionary and legendary wordsmith, Thomas Paine, said, "I have seldom passed five minutes of my life, however circumstanced, in which I did not acquire some knowledge." This from a corset maker who dropped out of school at 13.

You can't anticipate everything, so react when you must. The business of the day, obviously, must be attended to.  And what will you have tomorrow if you don't plan for it? 

But "however circumstanced," before you succumb to the human tendency to rest on your laurels, make it part of your daily tasks to "acquire some knowledge."

Make it your daily intention to learn something new that might help you react more effectively, operate more profitably, and plan more intelligently.