
The First-Time Founder's Blueprint
by Marcus Whitfield
Narrated by Brigid Wexler
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About this book
<p><b>The First-Time Founder's Blueprint β Audiobook Β· Narrated by Brigid Wexler.</b></p> <p>π§ Listen time: 6 hours 9 minutes</p> <b>First-time founder guide: how to start, fund, and grow a profitable small business β step-by-step startup playbook covering idea validation, LLC vs S-Corp setup, cash flow survival, sales, and the operating habits that make year two possible.</b> <p>The first time Marcus Whitfield tried to start a business, he lasted seven months. He quit a stable job in March 2009, convinced the math worked, and burned through his savings building a product nobody had asked for. "What killed it was that I had skipped roughly twelve things the survivors do," he writes. He closed in October, spent two years reverse-engineering every mistake, started again in 2012, and sold that company in 2019. This book is the conversation he now has with first-time founders, written down β organized in the order you actually face the decisions, not the order an MBA program teaches them.</p> <p>About 35% of new businesses fail because no market wanted what they built; about 30% because they ran out of cash. Both are preventable. This step-by-step startup guide for entrepreneurs covers the full first 12 to 24 months end to end: how to find an idea with a real market, validate it before spending money, choose between LLC and S-Corp, set up taxes in the first 30 days, price without underselling yourself, find your first ten customers, market on a zero budget, close sales without pressure, manage cash flow with a 13-week forecast, decide between bootstrapping and outside money, hire the right first employee, and build the weekly operating rhythms that compound into a real business. Every chapter ends with specific exercises, because listening about validation without doing validation is exactly how Whitfield burned through seven months of savings in 2009.</p> <h4>Inside this first-time founder business guide:</h4> <ul> <li><b>Validate before you build</b> β Six weeks of structured customer conversations that prevent building the wrong thing, the single biggest cause of first-business failure (35% of startups, per CB Insights)</li> <li><b>The legal and tax setup nobody explains clearly</b> β LLC vs. S-Corp vs. C-Corp decision tree, plus the 30-day tax checklist including quarterly estimated payments, the 30% tax-savings account method, and the 2024 BOI report that carries $500/day penalties if missed</li> <li><b>Pricing without underselling yourself</b> β How to state price plainly, hold it under pressure, and offer non-price concessions before discounting β the habit that separates profitable businesses from break-even ones</li> <li><b>Your first ten customers</b> β Concrete tactics for getting paying customers when you have no audience, no ad budget, and no brand recognition</li> <li><b>Cash flow in the first six months</b> β The 13-week forecast that shows you a negative cash week before it arrives, how to cut Days Sales Outstanding from 60 to 45 days, and the reserve-building discipline that determines whether you survive your first shock</li> <li><b>Sales for people who hate selling</b> β A five-phase diagnostic selling framework modeled on doctor-patient conversations; follow-up discipline that lifts close rates from 10% to 40-60%</li> <li><b>The operating rhythms that make year two possible</b> β Weekly Monday reviews, monthly books close, and quarterly planning that grew one founder's revenue from $18K to $58K per month between year one and year two</li> </ul> <p>The failure patterns of a first business are predictable, which means they are preventable. Founders who talk to customers obsessively, make small decisions fast and big decisions slowly, write things down, protect their cash, and keep going...
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