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Dr. Pearse Lyons, President of Alltech Inc., speaks at the Entrepreneurial session on Tuesday afternoon.
Lexington, KY -
Someone said they hoped the room was big enough to hold the two giants of Kentucky’s entrepreneurial world — Dr. Pearse Lyons, founder of Alltech, the animal health and nutrition company based in Central Kentucky; and the legendary Jim Host, founder of sports marketing giant Host Communications and now CEO of iHigh.com.
The pair spoke to attendees of Alltech’s Symposium 2012, which drew 2,900 delegates from 42 states and 72 countries.
Lyons and Host were asked to present their views of the entrepreneurial world, regarding jobs, opportunities and ideas for starting new businesses, along with absolute dos and don’ts necessary for success.
Born in Ireland and a yeast biochemist by trade, Lyons worked on better ways to use yeast in distilling, but he wanted to start his own company. He moved to Lexington in 1979 to found Alltech, a worldwide animal health company and much more. It employs 2,650 people and does business in 128 countries, with revenues exceeding half a billion dollars annually.
Lyons began by telling the audience how much he admired another entrepreneur, Steven Jobs, the late founder of Apple. Lyons read Jobs’ biography five times, took careful notes and sent them to his colleagues.
“Everything we do today, this man impacted. He changed the world,” said the Alltech founder.
Point made.
Who are the entrepreneurs who create jobs? Lyons noted that age is no barrier to being successful, with the average age being 55-64.
A handout at the seminar listed 10 of Lyons’ rules for entrepreneurship, but the Alltech chief actually presented 20. Among them: If you want to launch a new career as an entrepreneur, quit or be fired.
“There’s no stigma to being fired,” he said. “It’s quite an experience — a good opportunity.”
Lyons urged attendees to “take a chance, any chance. I don’t care what it is. Just go and do it. What have you got to lose?”
He cautioned entrepreneurs not to offer shares of the company to others. He said partners rarely align their individual dreams, but he also advised entrepreneurs to make sure they are adequately financed.
“Sell, sell, sell” was the next tip.
“It’s an honorable profession,” he said. “Do what you have to do.”
Lyons also lauded partnerships, like the one Alltech forged with the University of Kentucky, among many.
Lyons suggested that entrepreneurs should work to “appear successful.”
“It all starts with you — how you look, your image, attitude, confidence, humor and creativity,” he said. “Who wants to buy from someone who (appears miserable)?”
Other tips offered by Lyons included “expect and be prepared for change,” “be a leader,” “show your employees the way,” and “run from naysayers.”
Lyons also stressed “getting there early,” referring to beating the competition to markets (he mentioned China) and building the brand. Lyons cited Alltech’s sponsorship of the 2010 World Equestrian Games in Lexington and the 2014 Games in Normandy, France.
The seminar included a brief video in which Lyons and Host discussed entrepreneurs.
“If you can’t sell Kentucky as a place to do business, then you are not in any way, shape or form a salesman. It’s an easy sell,” Lyons said.
Host told the audience about his early business career. While not exactly rags to riches, it heralded the beginning of a college sports industry that never existed before.
After serving in state government in the late 1960s, Host ran for lieutenant governor in 1971 and lost — badly, as he recalled. Burdened with heavy campaign debts, nearly broke and with a family, he launched Jim Host & Associates (there weren’t any “associates” yet) from a one-room office over a Lexington barber shop. It grew into Host Communications, which reinvented the world of college sports marketing, promotions and broadcasting.
“I never lost faith because if you don’t have faith in yourself, how in the world can you succeed doing anything,” Host asked the audience. Fear of failure also motivated him.
Host has several fundamental business rules. In regard to meeting times, he said, “Fifteen minutes ahead of time is on time. On time is late.”
Host also urged people to “under-promise and over-deliver,” and he insisted on positive attitudes.
“I’ll take five people with great attitudes and beat five Michael Jordans any day of the week in business,” he said.
Another key piece of advice: 80 percent of the sale is preparation; 20 percent is presentation.
“I drill our people incessantly before sales presentations — prepare, prepare, prepare. When you’re through preparing, prepare more,” he said. “If you don’t know more about the business you’re presenting to than they know about themselves, how can you communicate effectively?”
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Jim Host, Chairman and CEO of iHigh.com in Kentucky, speaks at the Entrepreneurial session Tuesday afternoon.
Host lectured that you build a great entrepreneurial atmosphere on integrity and character. He’s famous for firing people on the spot whom he thought misrepresented something to a client or fibbed on an expense account. No second chances.
Some workaholics say, “I’ll sleep when I’m dead.” Host says, “I can’t sleep fast enough.”
“Am I having fun?” Host asked. “Yeah, I’m having fun. I love every minute of every day that I have the good fortune to live in this world.”