The Art of the Start: The Time-Tested, Battle-Hardened Guide for Anyone Starting Anything
by Guy KawasakiThere are many ways to describe the ebb and flow of business cycles. Kawasaki presents another one: microscopes and telescopes. In the microscope phase, there’s a cry for level-headed thinking, a return to fundamentals, and going “back to basics.” Experts magnify every detail, line item, and expenditure, and then demand full-blown forecasts, protracted market research, and competitive analysis.
In the telescope phase, entrepreneurs bring the future closer. They dream up “the next big thing,” change the world, and make late-adopters eat their dust. Lots of money is wasted, but some crazy ideas do stick, and the world moves forward.
When telescopes work, everyone is an astronomer, and the world is full of stars. When they don’t, everyone whips out their microscopes, and the world is full of flaws. The reality is that you need both microscopes and telescopes to achieve success.
The problem is that this means gathering information that is spread among hundreds of books, magazines, and conferences. It also means talking to dozens of experts and professionals. You could spend all your time learning and not doing. And doing, not learning to do, is the essence of entrepreneurship.
The Art of the Start alleviates this pain. My goal is to help you use your knowledge, love, and determination to create something great without getting bogged down in theory and unnecessary details. The presumption is that your goal is to change the world—not study it. If your attitude is “Cut the crap and just tell me what I need to do,” you’ve come to the right place.
You might be wondering, Who, exactly, is “you”? The reality is that “entrepreneur” is not a job title. It is the state of mind of people who want to alter the future. (It certainly isn’t limited to Silicon Valley types seeking venture capital.) Hence, this book is for people in a wide range of startup endeavors:
• People in garages creating the next great company
• Brave souls in established companies bringing new products and services to market
• Saints starting schools, churches, and not-for-profits
Great companies. Great divisions. Great schools. Great churches. Great not-for-profits. When it comes to the fundamentals of starting up, they are more alike than they are different. The key to their success is to survive the microscope tasks while bringing the future closer.

