This Entrepreneur Explains How He Survived 150 Rejections From Investors当资金为山姆Sisakhti土崩瓦解,他囚禁ked on 18 months of brutal rejections and learned invaluable lessons about himself, his business and the nature of entrepreneurship.

By乔>》

UsTrendy

Introducing our new podcast,Problem Solvers with Jason Feifer, which features business owners and CEOs who went through a crippling business problem and came out the other side happy, wealthy, and growing. Feifer, Entrepreneur's editor in chief, spotlights these stories so other business can avoid the same hardships.Listen below orclick here to read more shownotes.

Sam Sisakhti had an idea for an e-commerce company calledUsTrendy.It would sell clothing made by talented, unknown fashion designers from around the world—acting as a marketplace for great styles that could be found nowhere else. It didn't matter that he had no experience in fashion or building a brand. It didn't matter that he had just quit his first job out of college after only four days. What mattered was that he believed that this idea could be huge. And to get it there, he figured, he needed to raise money. A lot of money.

Initially, it seemed easy. On their very first pitch, Sisakhti and his associate landed a $500,000 offer. "Crazy," he says. But there was a catch: The VC required them to move to Silicon Valley to receive the money. Sisakhti's right-hand man didn't want to move. Sisakhti decided he'd just godo it himself.

Related:How the Founder of Baked by Melissa Recovered From Her First Holiday Sales Disaster

So he moved, failing to understand that investors buy into a team, not just an idea. He promptly lost the funding.

No matter,he thought. He'd just go get more money.

Thus began Sisakhti's real journey. He started pitching anyone and everyone, regardless of their field of expertise. It went badly. By his count, he was rejected around 150 times in a row over 18 months. Worse, he kept revising his business plan based on their feedback, reducing it to an ever-changing muddle that made it even harder to sell.

This beating culminated with a meeting with a VC who, humiliatingly, was a family friend. "He threw my business plan in the trash, right in front of me," Sisakhti says. "And I just remember thinking,Man, what am I doing?"

Entrepreneurs hear a lot of noes. In fact, it's probably the word they hear more than any other, especially starting out. It can come in torrents. It can get crushing. The key, as Sisakhti learned, is twofold: to survive it, and to learn from it.

And here's what Sisakhti realized: He needed to stop pitching. Not every business needs funding, nor is every business ready for funding.

"I was spending all my time pitching, and I wasn't spending any time building the business," he says. So he scaled back. "I went from wanting to create the next Amazon to just saying I wanted to grow a business organically," he recalls. "I just wanted to pay for a modest, middle-class lifestyle."

Freed from the ceaseless need to fund-raise, Sisakhti drew on his natural creativity and resourcefulness. He'd always thought he needed funding to help recruit young designers. But now he started to get creative. He recruited them right out of design school—using student brand ambassadors to get around rules about recruiting on campus. Soon he had a thousand. Then he linked up with London Fashion Week to do a show for emerging designers. He pitched a design competition, and that got him 3,000 more, along with a bunch of press coverage.

Now he had inventory, revenue, and exposure. He was feeling good. One night, over dinner, Sisakhti sent a magazine piece to mega-investor Tim Draper, who had rejected him twice already. Fifteen minutes later, Draper responded, saying he wanted to talk. Eureka.

Related:What Happens When You Can't Deliver Your Kickstarter Project to Backers?

"I think the reason he was interested was that I'd shown I was going to do this with or without the money," Sisakhti says. He even got a little cocky. "I told him that it's just a matter of time: "If I have your money, I'll get there faster, but if I don't, I'll still get there. And then the valuation's just gonna be that much higher to get in.'"

Draper invested $1 million in a first round, then came back for a second round. In total, UsTrendy has raised more millions since, grown by 300 percent annually in its first few years, and has worked with more than 20,000 designers from more than 100 countries. It has attracted more than two million followers on social media and other digital media channels.

Now when Sisakhti reflects on all those noes, he thinks not of rejection—but of how it changed him. How it showed him the way.

"It was awesome," he says.

In this episode ofProblem Solvershosted by executive editor Joe Keohane, Sisakhti takes us through the mistakes he made, and the big lessons he learned -- about himself, his company and entrepreneurship in general -- that drove him to become the success he is today.

Thanks to our sponsor:

Anyone who's ever had to sign and mail a paper document has wondered: There's got to be a better way to do this. And there is!SignEasyis a easy-to-use, simple and legal way to digitally sign documents. You can sign them yourself, from anywhere and on any device, or send documents to customers, partners, or colleagues for signing, and even track the progress of documents and get notified when a document is signed. And if someone's late in signing, you can send them a reminder. With SignEasy, there's no reason to deal with documents you have to print and sign and put in a mailbox. SignEasy is faster, easier, and safer. To get started for free go togetsigneasy.com/podcast.

ProsperWorksknows what everyone in sales knows: CRMs are really tedious. "Somewhere along the way," its website says, "CRM got really hard to use." And that's why ProsperWorks has built a CRM that's the opposite. By integrating with tools you're already using and eliminating repetitive tasks with automation, ProsperWorks is beautiful, easy to use and drives productivity to help you and your team sell more, faster. Try ProsperWorks for freeby using our link.

Wavy Line
乔>》

Entrepreneur Staff

Author of the book "The Power of Strangers"

乔>》is the author of the book陌生人的力量:是nefits of Connecting in a Suspicious World.He is a journalist based in New York, and was formerly the executive editor of狗万官方magazine.

Editor's Pick

相关的话题

Growing a Business

We're Now Finding Out The Damaging Results of The Mandated Return to Office — And It's Worse Than We Thought.

Companies knew the mandated return to the office would cause some attrition, however, they were not prepared for the serious problems that would present.

Business Solutions

Learn to Program an AI Chatbot for Your Business in This $30 Course

Get back-to-school savings on this AI coding course.

Money & Finance

Want to Become a Millionaire? Follow Warren Buffett's 4 Rules.

Too many entrepreneurs are counting too heavily on a company exit for their eventual 'win.' Do this instead.

Leadership

This Common Leadership Habit Will Harm Your Credibility. Are You Guilty of It?

As leaders, we're always looking for ways to build credibility among peers and employees. But this easy-to-make mistake can ruin it in an instant.

Business News

Netflix is Hiring an AI-Focused Role—and the Starting Salary is up to $900,000

The streaming giant is looking for a leader in its machine learning department.

Data & Recovery

Get 1TB of Cloud Storage for Life for $119.97 With This Back-to-School Sale

This 1TB Cloud Storage Solution Is Only $119.97 for Back to School