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Start It Up: Why Running Your Own Business is Easier Than You Think by Luke Johnson (1-Sep-2011) Paperback

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Running your own business is nowhere near as tough as you might think. So what are you waiting for? Luke Johnson is Britain's busiest tycoon, with a personal fortune estimated at £120 million. From Pizza Express and Channel 4 to his incisive Financial Times column, Johnson has spent two decades on the business frontline. In Start It Up, Johnson sets out to inspire—and guide—every budding entrepreneur. He tackles the issues that really finding the right idea, sourcing funds, and getting the best from the people you meet on the way—chiefly yourself.

Unknown Binding

First published September 1, 2011

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Luke Johnson

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5 stars
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73 (30%)
3 stars
79 (33%)
2 stars
37 (15%)
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7 (2%)
Displaying 1 - 21 of 21 reviews
Profile Image for Elisabeth.
58 reviews7 followers
July 29, 2015
It's an easy read - short chapters, lots of anecdotes, fast-paced change in topics. I just couldn't pin-point anything I really took from it.

On top of that Luke Johnson doesn't strike me as especially future-oriented. I get that he has a lot of experience and success to show for but I just couldn't get in tune with that raw feeling that seems to be very crucial to him for being an entrepreneur. I also couldn't shake off the impression that he thinks that your typical entrepreneur must be male - he can't hide that fact by writing a whole chapter on women inventors when another one is titled 'Fatherhood and the entrepreneur'. There are many better books on starting up out there, both when it comes to practical help and anecdotal insights.
1 review
March 22, 2017
'Start It Up" pitches itself as a cheerleader for entrepreneurialism, heralding a "fire in the belly", optimism, and a ‘can-do’ attitude as all one needs to become the next Richard Brandon. Johnson sees entrepreneurialism as a genetic disposition, one that if one has, should not be ignored for the sake of an ever-changing societal and economic climate. The book begins by listing Johnson's business venture failures, almost as simple as a bullet point list, giving the reader the impression that any failure is just another notch on the belt. Johnson doesn't dive deep into the financial and emotional set-backs of these failures - maybe it is Johnson's genetic disposition for optimism and ambition that never allowed him to feel these set-backs, or maybe it's my own cynicism.

Although claiming to be a “How-To Book”, I would not regard ‘Start It Up’ as a go-to guide for starting a business, in fact, Johnson himself states he prefers to buy an already existing company rather than investing in a start-up venture. Instead, this is a “How-To Book” for running a business. Johnson provides key elements that should not be ignored when running a business, these span across: listening to users, the importance of a name, fostering of creativity, collaborations and partnership, and management strategies to name a few.

‘Start It Up’ provides countless inspiring business ventures and experiences from Johnson's career, from running themed parties at a club as an 18 year old, to renaming the London Institute to University of the Arts London. I personally would have appreciated a more transparent approach to understanding these ventures, like financial commitments, pitfalls and infrastructure headaches, but again, this book is all about "optimism". Johnson is an author who clearly does not like to dwell, and in fact believes that to dwell would kill the reader's desire to experiment and innovate - a crime against Johnson's desired humanity.

Johnson's writing is approachable, funny, and succeeds in taking the fear and stress out of starting your own company. 'Start It Up' is not a “How-To Book” on start-ups like you would expect, and instead aspires to convince the ambitious, creative, and undefeated (male) readers into following their dreams, or at least, Johnson's dreams. I stopped reading at page 90: “Fatherhood and the entrepreneur”. For a book that was first published in 2011, I am saddened by the sexist slant Johnson has taken with his writing, and the abundance of male entrepreneurs he quotes and values as his hero’s of ambition, hero’s of which made their millions or billions many decades ago. I personally would find it more worthwhile to learn from the young and diverse entrepreneurs of today, young not in terms of age, but young in terms of their careers and success in the 21st Century.
Profile Image for Amanda Broughton.
112 reviews14 followers
April 20, 2020
Quite a contrast to the last book I read, Lean In. This one is written from a male perspective so career advice is to always relevant when you don't have to factor in having a baby and maternity leave, not being taken seriously, etc.

The section about recessions was good, and the list of things that the author looks to answer before investing in a company. Far less name dropping than Black Swan and SO much easier to read. Makes Capitalism look like sunshine and butterflies in the final chapter.

This was one of the only books on business in my local library, not too bad of a read if you want to cover the basics of starting a business.
Profile Image for Bilal Hafeez.
20 reviews1 follower
January 24, 2016
Luke Johnson is the the man behind Pizza Express, Strada, Giraffe and Patisserie Valerie. He was also Chairman of Channel Four and a one-time columnist for the FT.

For all us salaried corporate types, it's always nice to imagine a life free from the shackles of office politics and feelings of insignificance. Here are his main points on how to achieve it:

1. Your salary is the payment to sacrifice your dreams. Get out of an industry in structural decline.

2. You often need less capital to start business than you think. You don't need a radical new idea, rather it's the execution that matters. Imitate and continuously improve.

3. Partnerships are less isolating. A 50:50 split is the easiest way to divide the spoils. Be careful of disputes, especially later fights over people taking credit for success. Get a mentor.

4. As a leader, making decisions is more important than having charm.

5. Hire people who have front-line experience, rather than slick internal-facing corporate types.

6. Beware of becoming beholden to stars in your staff.

7. Know the personal life of your employees, especially mid-life crises.

8. HR, legal, IT etc are expenses and lead to bureaucracy. Keep these costs low and outsource. Don't rent expensive offices. Use PR, rather ads.

9. Starting a business will take time away from your family

10. Politics flourish when there is less work to do .

11. Never personally guarantee your company'd debt.

12. Know your competitors. Customer service is everything.

Perceived failures are not actual failures they are set-backs and are inevitable

Good luck!

Bilalhafeez.com
Profile Image for Dgg32.
146 reviews6 followers
November 24, 2011
General tips, more like an self help encourage book. If you are looking for a guideline or a step-for-step manual for creating your own startup, look somewhere else.
1 review
January 10, 2012
A brilliantly straight and honest discussion of entrepreneurship. If you're after some encouragement, or just a good read, this will do the trick.
Profile Image for Jack Rowlands.
1 review
November 13, 2023
Self help for the business community. Good if you need general non specific motivation to get on track with your plans to leave PAYE employment.

But if you want to open anything other than a pizza restaurant you wouldn’t find this helpful. I don’t think there’s a single chapter on finding prospects or making sales.
12 reviews
August 16, 2022
One of my favourite books about business. As many in the genre it's more of a motivational book. But has a lot of websites and references which you can use (I read it in 2017 so it might be outdated by now). Can tell the author is trying to persuade people to build a business.
Profile Image for Michaël.
7 reviews7 followers
January 11, 2017
Ma lecture de "Start It Up", un livre du multi-millionaire Luke Johnson a été parsemée d'embûches, du début à la fin. J'ai lu le livre en version originale (anglais britannique), et ait été confronté à un vocabulaire très varié mais souvent incompréhensible pour le non-spécialiste.

En effet, ce livre n'est pas une introduction au monde de entrepreneuriat, comme pourrait le suggérer la quatrième de couverture, la couverture ou même l'introduction.

Je recommande la lecture de ce livre, uniquement pour la première partie "Beginnings" et la dernière "Entrepreneurs at large", où Johnson est percutant, énonce des idées novatrices et prend un point de vue global sur le monde de l'entreprise.

Si le titre "Start It Up" semble alléchant, car on pense avoir affaire à un traité sur les start-up, c'est plutôt une série de remarques désordonnées autour du monde de la restauration et des entreprises conventionnelles qui se cache dans l'essentiel de ce livre. Certes, le multi-millionnaire sait écrire, et ne cesse de montrer l'étendu de sa culture en enchaînant des citations sans les approfondir, mais trop souvent on n'arrive pas à deviner où il veut aller, ce qu'il cherche à démontrer.

Cela m'a amené à m'ennuyer de la deuxième partie à l'avant dernière partie, où Johnson escamote les détails concernant les entreprises qu'il a dirigé, toutes plus ennuyeuses les unes que les autres (Pizza Express ou Channel 4).

Je laisse tout de même une note de deux étoiles parce que le premier et le dernier chapitre sont vraiment bien écrits, que l'auteur a des idées novatrices et qu'il est percutant et original.

Profile Image for Vairavel.
142 reviews4 followers
May 12, 2016
I picked up this book in the library without knowing a thing about the book or the author. Once in a while, you have to do such a thing because you do not know where a diamond is hidden!

I am really happy that I picked up this book to read. Whether you are thinking of doing a start-up or even if you do not want to do a start-up, but want to excel in whatever you are doing, this is a fantastic read.

What I liked most about this book is that it does not turn to be prescriptive and start giving you steps on how to start and run a business. I think there are umpteen number of books that can do that for you. What this book offers is practical advice on how to start up and run a business.

The author does that in a no-nonsense, conversational style. He also makes it clear on whether starting a business would suit you or not. The whole book is littered with several practical tips that one need to learn while running their own business or someone else's business.

I would highly recommend this book to everyone - whether you are an established business man or a wanna be or if you are just content with managing someone else's business.

I will be picking up a copy (a Kindle one, of course) for keeps to be in my reference library!
Profile Image for David Delaney.
Author 1 book477 followers
April 11, 2015
This was a really nice read and hugely motivational when thinking of starting your own business. Luke's candid view of his successes and failure as well as the many insights into the realities of setting up a small business was refreshing as much as it was informative.

Well worth a read for those wanting their own business.
2 reviews
February 16, 2021
Luke brings some useful insight into his life learnings of running businesses, though I find it in places quite narrow-minded and blind sighted to the downsides of capitalism. In my personal opinion, the book discusses more of Luke's personal experience and bias as oppose to really engaging with the title.
Profile Image for Emily.
15 reviews2 followers
May 19, 2013
A few decent insights, and a quick read, but basically didn't deliver what the title promises - ie any discussion of why it's not so hard to start a business (let alone how to do so). Also, rather disjointed and stream of consciousness.
3 reviews3 followers
May 6, 2014
Its a motivational book for beginners to have a rough idea about what they might face if they choose this path. Sadly it does not really teach HOW should things be done to startup a business which I believe most of the buyers would need and expect from the book.
Profile Image for Pavan Sharma.
8 reviews
April 4, 2017
Decent all round advice for running a start up. There isn't an actual blue print or step by step guide, but it does provide some solid advice on staying motivated, sources of finance, startup successes and general management. Easy to read and very short, worth picking up for a quick read.
Profile Image for Dmytro.
11 reviews1 follower
December 17, 2012
Easy to read, straightforward, insightful - for people who want to start a business or have doubts about it.

Profile Image for Ahmed.
20 reviews26 followers
April 18, 2013
A beginners guide to starting your own business and different types of businesses.

It's not that detailed and isn't too insightful if you've read many business nooks before.
Profile Image for Callum Bannister.
1 review
January 24, 2016
Not a fantastic book. A few helpful pointers. A bit hit and miss. I wouldn't really say this is a how-to book either. I was disappointed by this read.
Profile Image for Azhar Ali.
Author 4 books5 followers
July 10, 2017
Not one of the best but certainly the best book about entrepreneurship and business. Easy to understand and it covers all the important issues of the discipline.
Displaying 1 - 21 of 21 reviews

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