Year 1 was the year I proved to myself that I could actually run a business. Before that, I worked retail and lived on someone else's schedule. Starting my own company forced me to take ownership of every hour and every outcome, and that shift changed everything. The biggest thing I learned that first year was what truly makes a service business work. Being on time mattered more than anything, and I had to learn the rhythms of traffic, weather, neighborhoods, and customer expectations firsthand. Communication became my edge. Talking to parents, understanding what they needed, and guiding them toward the right choices helped us stand out. Year 1 taught me the craft of the work. You cannot learn that by hiring people to do it for you. You learn it by showing up, delivering the service, and noticing the small details customers react to. What I loved most was the joy it created. Watching a kid's face light up as their backyard became the highlight of their day made every long shift worth it. Seeing parents relax because the event was turning out exactly how they hoped showed me the real impact we were making. What I did not love were the growing pains. Year 1 forces you to learn from disappointing people because it is unavoidable in a small business. Employees who do not show up, vendors who fail you, plans that fall apart. You experience it once, and you try like hell to never repeat it. Those moments are uncomfortable, but they shape you as a founder more than the wins do. Year 1 taught me that entrepreneurship is equal parts skill and resilience. You learn what your customers value, what you are capable of, and what you refuse to tolerate. It was hard, exhausting, and easily one of the most transformative years of my life.
Year 1 of entrepreneurship felt like being shoved onto a moving treadmill and deciding, mid-sprint, that I was going to learn how to dance on it. I didn't start my business with a trust fund or a six-month runway—I started it after losing a corporate job. That first year taught me that entrepreneurship is less about having the "perfect brand" and more about being useful fast and being braver than is comfortable on a daily basis. I said yes before I felt ready, sent invoices that made my palms sweat, and had calls where I was absolutely winging it on the inside while sounding calm on the outside. I learned to manage expectations, set boundaries, and communicate clearly—skills that would later become the backbone of my agency. What I loved was the creative freedom and the surreal feeling of watching something that only existed in my head—a service, a message, a client result—suddenly exist in the world. What I didn't love was the emotional whiplash, the financial uncertainty, and the loneliness of building something most people in my life didn't fully understand. One day I felt unstoppable; the next, I was convinced I'd ruined my life. But the biggest lesson from that first year was simple: clarity comes from motion, not from overthinking. I didn't find my passion by waiting for the perfect idea—I found it by doing the work in front of me, paying attention to what lit me up (and what drained me), and being willing to evolve. Year 1 wasn't glamorous, but it was the year I stopped outsourcing my future, and that changed everything.
Starting Made Man Barbershop felt like stepping into a new style every day. It was exciting, challenging, and at times unpredictable. In that first year, I learned patience, resilience, and how much attention to detail matters. Creating a space where people feel confident and welcome isn't just about perfecting a fade or a beard trim. Every interaction, every corner of the shop, and every little process, from booking appointments to keeping tools in order, affects the experience. Balancing the creative side of barbering with the responsibilities of running a business pushed me in ways I hadn't expected. What I loved most was seeing the community we were building. Watching regular clients trust us with their hair, catching up with them, and seeing them leave with a smile made all the long hours worth it. The part I didn't enjoy as much was the administrative details, like scheduling, payroll, and inventory. Those things aren't glamorous, but they're necessary, and dealing with them taught me discipline and how to stay organized without losing focus on our clients. One of the biggest lessons was learning to trust my team. Made Man Barbershop isn't a one-person show, and giving others space to lead and grow made the shop stronger and helped me grow as a leader. Every haircut, shave, and conversation became a step toward something lasting. Year one showed me that entrepreneurship isn't about avoiding mistakes, it's about learning from them and using them to get better. At Made Man, that mindset shapes how we work, how we care for our clients, and the experience we give every single day.
During my first year, I became very aware that developing a hiring platform for restaurants and hotels is mostly about patience. Owners would like quick results, but they also need a partner who listens. I learned that making consistent progress - fixing slow response times or improving match rate - was more meaningful than any large feature release. What I enjoyed most was seeing small places win. One family owned cafe in Miami filled important roles in four days, after weeks of looking for help. It was impactful moments like that, that showed we can solve hiring problems in hospitality and infectiously energized me to improve the platform. What I enjoyed the least was the pressure of doing everything in one day. I was taking product calls, customer support for users and taking sales calls all in the same day. It forced me to begin creating clearer working hours and protecting my evenings to help create boundaries. I didn't realize how hard being "at work" was, and that boundary helped be stay focused and in turn, be a better partner to the restaurants we support.
Founder - Ecommerce / 3PL / Manufacturing / Marketing at PaulShrater.com
Answered 3 months ago
One of the most difficult aspects of being in the early days (year) of entrepreneurship is in working with employees. They dictate corporate culture. I learned that having even one person that can disrupt a good corporate culture can permeate throughout a small company and have strong negative effects. Working with employees as a de-facto therapist was not one of the hats I had expected to wear, and it often felt like it was taking away time from growing the brand, sales, marketing, operations, etc. But, over time, as the company has grown and I have less direct interaction with each person, I've come to learn that by developing and supporting that positive corporate culture it helps to create a "system" that you can rely upon that ends up supporting growth by having a strong core to feed the sales into that system.
Year One as an entrepreneur was absolutely eye-opening for me. I learned that building Mailfence wasn't just about writing code or designing a great product; it was about cultivating trust. We weren't just launching another email service; we were offering a private, encrypted alternative that people could rely on for their most sensitive communications. That responsibility weighed on me deeply, but it also kept me laser-focused. What I loved was the freedom of building something that truly aligned with my values. As someone who has always believed fervently in encryption and privacy, to create a company that embodies that belief, and to see others embrace it, was deeply rewarding. On the flip side, I sometimes underestimate how long it takes to earn trust. In those first months, explaining OpenPGP, managing key servers, and reiterating our commitment to "no backdoors" was hard work. Another lesson: persistence matters more than brilliance. There were days when growth was slow, when friction with users over usability made me question our direction. But each small improvement, each user who switched to us because they cared about privacy, that was motivating. Overall, Year One wasn't glamorous. It was long hours, uphill battles, and constant trade-offs. But every challenge reinforced why I founded Mailfence: to defend privacy in a world that often gives it away too cheaply.
The first year of my real entrepreneurial journey actually started after a failure. My first "business" was not even a legitimate company, and it collapsed very fast. I had no structure, no legal setup, no idea what I was doing. The real lesson started when I opened my first official business: an adult store called Cleopatra. That first year, with Cleopatra, was when I really realized how little I knew about my real target audience. I had one idea in my head of who my customers would be, and people who actually came into the store were very different. That year, I listened and asked questions, testing different ways to reach them-both online and offline. That is how I learned what works for my niche, not just what looks good on paper. I also came to realize that being cheap on crucial issues such as the website, branding, and overall look and feel cannot be afforded. Every time I tried to save on something critical, it came back as a much higher cost later on in lost trust, low conversions, or rework. What I loved about that first year was the speed at which I was learning. What I did not like was how painful some of those lessons were. But without them, I would not have the businesses I run today.
(1) During our first year, I dedicated most of my time to understanding our customers, developing service operations, and building local trust. We intentionally avoided any attempts to expand during that period. What we learned was that maintaining high-quality standards brings far more value than rushing to grow. When homeowners trust our services, they naturally become our best promoters by referring others, which drives sustainable growth. (2) What brought me the most satisfaction was the direct contact with customers. Hearing positive feedback from families about the quality of our work helped me better understand our mission with each passing day. On the flip side, dealing with vendor delays and permit issues was challenging--mainly because it forced us to improve our communication methods far more than I had anticipated. (3) In your first year, it's essential to stay closely connected to every part of your operations. The success really lies in managing all the small elements--like tool inventory and script training programs--which collectively contribute to long-term achievement. Building your team should happen through personally recruiting skilled professionals. There are no shortcuts here.
My first year building Lower Street was a crash course in doing things badly before I learned to do them well. I came from the audio world, but running an actual business was a whole other skill set. I was in every department: sales, marketing, production, and client relations. What I loved most was working directly with my clients. Every project in year one felt personal. I worked with founders and marketing teams on their business stories. I felt the same kind of satisfaction when I saw how happy my coworkers were when an episode really connected with our audience. Thanks to this research, the "quality first" brand strategy was born and remains a top priority. My biggest struggle was constantly having to prove myself. There's nowhere to hide when you're a small business. One missed deadline or poor production can affect your reputation for months. But it also forced me to tighten our systems, hire the right employees, and have the right structures in place.
The greatest takeaway from Year 1 has been the requirement to develop scalable systems that will promote traceable quality within the healthcare administration system. In the world of healthcare administration, time cannot be traded for the sake of improving quality; therefore, Year 1 was heavily focused on creating redundancy in the long-term for every system created. It has been incredibly gratifying to receive the direct and immediate feedback regarding how we were able to enhance the clinical quality of care provided and create a welcoming environment for our clients, especially considering the positive feedback validated our reasons for launching Alpas. The biggest challenge I faced was attempting to change very well-entrenched practices throughout many layers of the healthcare industry; the process of developing an effective, efficient operation is extremely lengthy due to myriad layers of regulatory navigational challenges.
My first year as an entrepreneur, I loved the freedom and the thrill of building something from scratch, but I was not ready for the constant problem-solving. One month, I felt like a genius, the next month I wondered if I had made the biggest mistake of my life. The biggest lesson I learned was that progress is rarely smooth. Some weeks, you feel like nothing is working, then one small win suddenly changes your direction. What I loved most was the sense of ownership. Every success, even the small ones, felt earned. What I did not enjoy was the loneliness that comes with being the one responsible for every decision. Over time, I learned to ask for help, talk to mentors, and build a small support group. Year one taught me patience, resilience, and the value of celebrating small victories.
Year 1 taught me an important lesson about the value of authentic networks and the trust they generate versus the need for large marketing budgets to effectively generate outreach. As a result of limited resources, reputation and personal commitment often are the only two assets possible to possess in order to obtain outreach. I was captivated by the immediate feedback I received from our community related to how seamlessly our mission is being fulfilled through the development of the program into an effective solution for people. The most frustrating and overwhelming component of the initial year was managing all operational aspects of the business; as such, I spent little time on direct outreach and business development, which were two significant reasons why I was so committed to pushing forward toward our mission.
My first year as an entrepreneur was a whirlwind of challenges and growth. I learned pretty quickly how important it is to be flexible and have a clear vision for where you're headed. Building TradingFXVPS from scratch showed me that solid partnerships are everything for long-term success. What I really loved was seeing our strategies actually help our clients succeed. It was incredibly rewarding to understand what they needed and build solutions just for them. Of course, trying to scale quickly while keeping things running smoothly was a constant struggle. That first year taught me that you need a good plan, but you also have to be willing to roll up your sleeves and get things done.
The first year of entrepreneurship is like being thrown into an ocean and finding yourself swimming and being drowned simultaneously. The biggest thing I learned during this first year is that uncertainty is not a problem in entrepreneurship but is actually part and parcel of entrepreneurship. The moment I stopped expecting to feel safe, I became much more proactive. The best part is being able to build something exactly how you envision it should look like, it is a very liberating experience. The part that is less liked is having to live with every choice you make on your own mind. This is what helps you sharpen yourself.
I realised that action beats perfection. We spend 8 months on perfecting the design we wanted for our water pitcher duryn , but in the end we realised had we launched 6 months before with a "good enough" version than trying to perfect our design we could have got more sales and more revenue in the meantime and could have made minor updates on the way. Now I have decided to follow simple rule: ship first, refine continuously.
My first year as an entrepreneur was thrilling, draining, and jam-packed with hard-learned lessons. I rapidly discovered that resilience is more important than perfection; errors are chances to grow rather than failures. The ability to implement ideas and observe their effects firsthand was what I cherished most, but I found it challenging to deal with the uncertainty because there was no clear plan, making every decision feel like high stakes. I wouldn't change anything about it, though, because that first year influenced how I handle opportunities and challenges now.
I learned that it sucks big time. Everybody is looking at you like you are crazy or just stupid to believe whatever you are doing is going to work. Then you started to think maybe they are right, maybe this idea sucks and this is not going to work. Then the worst and the best thing happens; your early customers start to tell you how much they like your product. Now you are conflicted, is this thing a bad idea and not going to work or is it gonna change the world and your life. The worst part about the year 1 is, you are probably not making a lot of money and its very hard to be visionary when you are thinking about the rent. So the first year sucks. Another thing I learn from the first year is nobody knows anything, peter thiel, paul graham, elon musk, sam altman they dont know anything, their advice that you applied sucks big time. They are in the same game as you are, they are trying to work it out too and there is no guarantee that because you are working hard you will be successful. The world is full of hard working unsuccessful people. Entrepreneurship sucks, thats what I learn in the first year. You have to really believe what you are doing is good for the world even though everyone and their mother says the opposite and there is a very big possibility that they are right. And you really have to be having fun because that might be only thing you will walk away with.
(1) The first year of my experience proved to be a learning experience. My experience in manufacturing made me underestimate the amount of time we would need to dedicate to listening to customers and suppliers and investors and scientific data. The company made an immediate change in its product development after discovering that multiple supplement ingredients lacked human studies and showed poor absorption rates. Our R&D approach now requires evidence to be the top priority. (2) The collaborative nature of our work process brought me great satisfaction. Our team members along with our partners and manufacturing partners showed readiness to study vaginal microbiome science which most people avoid. The women's health industry operated as separate sections which made me unhappy. The market contained fragmented data which led to widespread incorrect information that even retailers spread. The experience showed us the importance of conducting original research while maintaining complete transparency about restricted data availability. (3) Trust development takes time to build but it creates exponential growth. Customers base their product evaluations on both product ingredients and ingredient explanations and production methods and their willingness to disclose product weaknesses. The company maintained its focus on customer needs through all challenging times because of this approach.
Year 1 taught me that sales and cash flow beat everything, pick one offer, ship it fast, and keep a tight handle on invoices and expenses. I love having a feedback loop: talk to customers in the morning, improve the product by afternoon. What I didn't like was the constant context-switching, so I put in simple systems (weekly pipeline review, 2 focus blocks a day, short SOPs) to stay steady and keep momentum.
(1) The pandemic restrictions were still in place when we launched Oakwell in January 2021. That first year felt like running a marathon while building the track at the same time. It taught me that reality reshapes all plans, but by staying composed and showing empathy through tough moments, you can turn chaos into meaningful connections. The stress of the world brought guests to our doors, and I found renewed energy in helping them relax. (2) One of the most rewarding parts was watching customers realize that our "beer spa" was more than just a gimmick--it offered genuine relaxation and luxurious moments. On the other hand, dealing with plumbing emergencies late at night and working fourteen-hour shifts while worrying about disappointing those first customers was definitely not enjoyable. But each hard moment offered a lesson. You build resilience, you learn to value everything, and you start to develop an unexpected passion for the whole journey.