I believe strongly in the impact of timing. When I incorporated CCAW, it was spring 2007 and the economy was going strong. I figured this trend would continue, so a few months later I made a leap of faith and quit my job. And you know what happened next. In 2008 the country was in financial crisis. Things looked bleak. No one was buying my products and my last employer was laying people off (no way would it rehire me). For the next two years or so, I was in survival mode.
For CCAW’s business model to work as I envisioned, I had to pitch a new way of doing business to automotive vendors. In 2007, most of them weren’t receptive. But in 2009, they were open to almost anything. I seized the opportunity and never looked back. We took that new way of doing business, added some technology, and over the next decade built a company with eight-figure revenue.
Looking back, I can see what happened. I finally got the timing right. In 2007, I was too early. My vendors were doing well financially, so they had no incentive to try new things. A year or two later, they were desperate for new ideas—with revenues down 30%–40% they were looking for ways to grow again.
I believe you can be too early, too late, or right on time. Sometimes this means you have a good idea but your timing is off. Recognize when you’re too late or too early and adjust accordingly.