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CH 6 | Series: Start. Scale. Exit. Repeat. Reflections | Author: Brent Parker, Resilience Repurposed LLC

Posted by Brent Parker on May 25, 2025 11:12:06 AM

Chapter 6 Breakdown: Can You Build a Moat Around Your Idea? — Creating Defensible Businesses

Series: Start. Scale. Exit. Repeat. Reflections | Author: Brent Parker, Resilience Repurposed LLC

🛡 Welcome to Chapter 6 of the Start. Scale. Exit. Repeat. Reflections Series
Growth is great. But what protects you from competitors once they see your success? In Chapter 6, Colin Campbell explores how to build a “moat” — a strategic advantage that keeps copycats at bay while you scale.

This chapter breaks down types of moats, real examples, and a defensibility rating system that you can use today to evaluate your own startup’s protection plan.

🔐 Defensibility Is About Protection, Not Perfection

Campbell explains that you don’t need to build an impenetrable wall around your business — just enough of a moat to slow down or deter competitors (Campbell, 2023).

🏰 Types of Moats

  • Legal Protections: Patents, trademarks, copyrights.
  • Exclusivity: Exclusive supply or distribution deals.
  • Brand Loyalty: Reputation, trust, or emotional connection.
  • Technology: Proprietary platforms or processes.
  • Data: Unique or hard-to-replicate datasets.
  • Search Engine Dominance: Ranking for key terms in your niche.

📏 Defensibility Rating System

Use this scale to measure how defensible your idea is:

  • 1 – No Moat: You have no idea how to protect it.
  • 2 – Conceptual Moat: You know of ways to defend it but haven’t acted yet.
  • 3 – Basic Moat: You’ve taken one or two protective steps.
  • 4 – Strong Moat: You have multiple protections in place (e.g., a patent + exclusivity).
  • 5 – Ironclad Moat: Patents, contracts, SEO dominance, and industry trust.

⚙️ Moats Must Be Built Early

Waiting to protect your idea until it’s “worth” protecting is a trap. Campbell urges founders to think defensibility early — especially before fundraising or launching public campaigns.

💡 Final Takeaway:

Chapter 6 is a reality check: if your idea catches fire, people will try to clone it. Building your moat early may be what separates your success from someone else’s copycat win.

🔁 Coming Next: Chapter 7 – Stage Gates

In the next breakdown, we’ll examine how to use stage gates to evaluate, validate, and scale your startup step-by-step without burning out or getting lost.

💬 Rate Your Moat

Drop a comment or tag me on LinkedIn @Brent Parker and let me know your defensibility rating. Let’s compare strategies and build better businesses together.

📚 References (APA Style)

Campbell, C. C. (2023). Start. Scale. Exit. Repeat. Wiley.

 

Tags: Industry 4.0, Situation Analysis, Entrepreneurs, START. SCALE. EXIT. REPEAT.

CH 5 | Series: Start. Scale. Exit. Repeat. Reflections | Author: Brent Parker, Resilience Repurposed LLC

Posted by Brent Parker on May 25, 2025 11:09:05 AM

Chapter 5 Breakdown: Pick an Idea That Can Scale — Why Growth Potential is Non-Negotiable

Series: Start. Scale. Exit. Repeat. Reflections | Author: Brent Parker, Resilience Repurposed LLC

📈 Welcome to Chapter 5 of the Start. Scale. Exit. Repeat. Reflections Series
Not all businesses are created equal — especially when it comes to growth. In Chapter 5, Colin Campbell breaks down what it really means to build a scalable business and how to choose an idea that can grow without breaking you.

In this chapter, we explore different business models, their scalability ratings, and how to rate your own idea to determine whether it has room to expand — or if it’ll trap you in a hamster wheel of hustle.

⚖️ Scale Comes With Trade-Offs

Campbell warns that scalable businesses often require more upfront effort and risk, but the upside is exponential. On the flip side, unscalable businesses tend to cap your freedom and profits (Campbell, 2023).

📊 Scalability Rating System

Campbell presents a simple 1–5 rating system to evaluate the scalability of your idea:

  • 1 – Brick-and-Mortar: Restaurants, schools, retail. Challenges: High overhead, location-dependent.
  • 2 – Time & Materials: Consulting, services. Challenges: Limited by labor, not easily repeatable.
  • 3 – Product/Service-Based: E-commerce, online training. Challenges: Inventory, fulfillment, production delays.
  • 4 – Recurring Revenue: Subscriptions, SaaS. Challenges: Customer retention, initial build costs.
  • 5 – Digital Assets: AI content, domain marketplaces, scalable platforms. Challenges: Global competition, market saturation.

💡 Rate Your Own Idea

Use Campbell’s chart as a sanity check. If you’re pursuing a 1 or 2, be aware of the constraints. If you’re aiming for a 4 or 5, gear up for early investment and longer development time — but with potentially massive returns.

🎯 The More Scalable, the Higher the Risk — and Reward

Campbell makes it clear: you can build a great business at any level. But if your vision includes freedom, passive income, or an eventual exit — scale has to be baked in from the beginning.

💡 Final Takeaway:

Chapter 5 is about being honest. Are you building something that frees you or something that traps you? Use the rating chart, get real about your goals, and make your decision with eyes wide open.

🔁 Coming Next: Chapter 6 – Can You Build a Moat Around Your Idea?

We’ll shift focus from growth to defensibility. How do you protect your business from copycats, competition, and collapse?

💬 Share Your Score

What’s your business idea’s scalability rating? Post it or tag me on LinkedIn @Brent Parker — and let’s compare notes.

📚 References (APA Style)

Campbell, C. C. (2023). Start. Scale. Exit. Repeat. Wiley.

 

Tags: Industry 4.0, Situation Analysis, Entrepreneurs, START. SCALE. EXIT. REPEAT.

CH 4 | Series: Start. Scale. Exit. Repeat. Reflections | Author: Brent Parker, Resilience Repurposed LLC

Posted by Brent Parker on May 25, 2025 10:48:48 AM

Chapter 4 Breakdown: Focus on Something You (and Others) Love — The Power of Passion in Startups

Series: Start. Scale. Exit. Repeat. Reflections | Author: Brent Parker, Resilience Repurposed LLC

Welcome to Chapter 4 of the Start. Scale. Exit. Repeat. Reflections Series
You can build something fast, lean, and disruptive — but if your heart isn’t in it, you won’t last. In Chapter 4, Colin Campbell dives deep into why passion isn’t just a “nice-to-have” — it’s a business survival tool.

This chapter explores how love for your idea affects resilience, decision-making, and long-term success. It also warns against shiny object syndrome — hopping from one startup to another without conviction. If you're a builder, a dreamer, or a serial entrepreneur, this one’s for you.

💔 Don’t Fall in Love with the Business — Fall in Love with the Problem

Campbell warns against getting emotionally attached to your first business. Instead, stay focused on the problem you’re solving. That’s where lasting value comes from (Campbell, 2023).

♻️ Serial Entrepreneurs Must Avoid Being Serial Quitters

Many founders don’t have a problem coming up with ideas — their challenge is commitment. This chapter reminds us that the ability to stay the course is more valuable than brainstorming a dozen startups a year.

🛡 Love Will See You Through Hard Times

When the money slows, when team members bail, when everything feels stuck, love for your mission is what keeps you showing up. Campbell frames passion as a tool for grit, not fluff.

🧘🏽‍♂️ Love = Patience

There’s overlap between love and patience. You’ll tolerate growing pains, pivots, and slow starts when you genuinely care about what you’re building.

🧭 Your Idea Should Reflect Your Values

Campbell challenges founders to ensure their business aligns with their personal values. If your company succeeds but violates your ethics, what have you really built?

💡 Final Takeaway:

Chapter 4 isn’t just about loving your idea — it’s about building something worth being proud of. Passion fuels perseverance, and perseverance is what keeps you in the game when others quit.

🔁 Coming Next: Chapter 5 – Pick an Idea That Can Scale

We’ll explore the concept of scalability, examine real business types, and help you assess your idea’s true growth potential.

💬 Are You Building What You Love?

Let’s talk about it. Tag me on LinkedIn @Brent Parker or comment below with what fuels your fire. You never know who’s watching or where that conversation will lead.

📚 References (APA Style)

Campbell, C. C. (2023). Start. Scale. Exit. Repeat. Wiley.

 

Tags: Industry 4.0, Situation Analysis, Entrepreneurs, START. SCALE. EXIT. REPEAT.

CH 1 | Series: Start. Scale. Exit. Repeat. Reflections | Author: Brent Parker, Resilience Repurposed LLC

Posted by Brent Parker on May 24, 2025 11:44:31 AM

Chapter 1 Breakdown: Ideas Are Everywhere — What Colin Campbell Gets Right About Entrepreneurial Vision

Series: Start. Scale. Exit. Repeat. Reflections | Author: Brent Parker, Resilience Repurposed LLC

When it comes to launching a business, most people wait for a million-dollar idea. However, Colin C. Campbell argues in Start. Scale. Exit. Repeat that this mindset is flawed. Great ideas are not rare — they are everywhere — if you train yourself to see them (Campbell, 2023).

🧩 Ideas Begin with “Why”

Campbell starts the chapter from the most ordinary place — a hotel room minibar. His “aha” moment came not from dreaming big, but from noticing minor design flaws and asking, “Why hasn’t someone fixed this?” That question — why — is the gateway to entrepreneurial thinking.

🔍 Opportunities Are Everywhere (If You’re Looking)

Observation is your superpower. Whether it’s waiting in line, fixing something at work, or facing a daily frustration, these are idea incubators in disguise. As Campbell notes, “The best entrepreneurs scan for problems others ignore” (Campbell, 2023).

📖 Ideas Come From Experience

What’s second nature to you might be confusing or frustrating to someone else. That gap is your business opportunity. At Resilience Repurposed, I have leveraged years of field experience to create laser-focused products for clients who didn’t even know what was possible until they saw it done better.

🛠 Ideas Come from Solving Problems

Campbell stresses that the best ideas aren’t always the most exciting — they’re the most useful. If you can remove a bottleneck, simplify a process, or remove friction for someone, you’re on to something (Campbell, 2023).

🔁 Transforming Problems Into Opportunities

This shift is key. Noticing problems is passive. Solving them is entrepreneurial. Campbell argues that the best founders look at pain points and ask, “How can I build something that flips this into value?”

❤️ You Need to Love Your Idea

If you don’t love what you’re building, you won’t make it through the hard days. Campbell is not being sentimental here — he is being practical. Passion gives you staying power when nothing else does (Campbell, 2023).

🧑‍🏭 Ideas Can Come from Your Job or Business

Do not quit your job to find your idea. Look at your job as the idea. Whether it’s manufacturing, teaching, logistics, or customer support, real businesses are born from real-world experience. That’s how most of Resilience Repurposed started — not from fantasy, but frustration.

🧠 Final Insight: Ideas Are Everywhere — If You Train Your Mind to See Them

The secret isn’t inventing something new — it’s seeing what’s already broken and fixing it better. As Campbell writes, “Ideas are everywhere, but most people aren’t looking for solutions” (Campbell, 2023).

📚 References (APA Style)

Campbell, C. C. (2023). Start. Scale. Exit. Repeat. Wiley.

Parker, L. B. Jr. (2025). Start. Scale. Exit. Repeat. by Colin C. Campbell (Book cover) [Photograph]. Resilience Repurposed Blog. https://blog.resiliencerepurposed.com

 

 

💡 Final Takeaway:

Chapter 1 doesn’t just teach you how to find good ideas — it rewires your brain to think like a problem-solver. You don’t need to invent the next Tesla. You need to notice what’s broken, imagine what’s possible, and take the first step.

 

🔁 Coming Next: Chapter 2 – From Idea to Action

We will explore how to turn your idea into momentum, with strategies on execution, naming, and knowing when to pull investors into the mix.

 

💬 Share This With a Future Founder

Know someone sitting on a great idea? Forward them this post or tag them in the comments. Let’s build a community of doers, not just dreamers.

 

📬 Subscribe to Resilience Repurposed

Want early access to future breakdowns, bonus content, and exclusive interviews with veteran entrepreneurs? Hit subscribe on the blog or follow me on LinkedIn @Brent Parker.

 

Until next time — keep building, keep solving.

 

Tags: Industry 4.0, Situation Analysis, Entrepreneurs, START. SCALE. EXIT. REPEAT.

CH 2 | Series: Start. Scale. Exit. Repeat. Reflections | Author: Brent Parker, Resilience Repurposed LLC

Posted by Brent Parker on May 24, 2025 11:34:53 AM
 

Chapter 2 Breakdown: From Idea to Action — Making Your Startup Vision Real

Series: Start. Scale. Exit. Repeat. Reflections | Author: Brent Parker, Resilience Repurposed LLC

 Welcome Back to the Start. Scale. Exit. Repeat. Reflections Series
In Chapter 1, we explored how to identify high-potential ideas in everyday life. Now in Chapter 2, we shift gears from thinking to doing. Because let’s face it — an idea without execution is just a daydream.

In this breakdown of “From Idea to Action,” we will explore the psychological shift required to start building, the common traps founders fall into early on, and how to take bold first steps without setting yourself up for failure. Let’s get tactical.

💭 Ideas Are Worthless. Acting On Them Is What Matters.

Campbell starts strong: having an idea means nothing if you’re not acting on it. Entrepreneurs get paid to execute, not to brainstorm (Campbell, 2023).

🗣 Share Your Ideas

Don’t protect your idea as if it were buried treasure. Sharing it allows you to refine your pitch, find early feedback, and build connections. As Campbell writes, “Sharing your ideas with others is the first practical action you can take” (Campbell, 2023).

🏛 Use Accelerators & Incubators

Look for local startup accelerators and incubators in your area. These communities often provide seed funding, mentorship, and access to early-stage resources, supporting entrepreneurs in their development.

🧠 Visualization Is Key

Before you build anything, visualize it. Campbell encourages founders to develop clarity on what they want to create, including customer experience, pricing, delivery, and branding.

📛 Your Name Tells a Story

Your company’s name should be memorable and meaningful. Campbell emphasizes that names should communicate your purpose, not just sound cool.

🚫 Don’t Bring in Investors Too Soon

It’s tempting to chase capital early. However, if you have not validated your idea, this could backfire. Campbell urges founders to prove product-market fit before giving up equity.

😴 Sleep On It

Not every action needs to be immediate. Some of the best decisions are made with rest and distance. Campbell reminds us that sometimes pausing briefly is more strategic than pushing forward mindlessly.

🚀 Taking Action Creates Innovation

Ultimately, Campbell closes with a powerful reminder: innovation doesn’t happen in your head. It happens through motion, trial, error, and iteration.

💡 Final Takeaway:

Chapter 2 is a wake-up call to take your idea off the shelf and into the workshop. The world doesn’t reward the best idea — it rewards the boldest execution.

🔁 Coming Next: Chapter 3 – Catching the Next Wave

In the next post, we will break down how timing can make or break a business — and how to position yourself to ride the right wave at the right time.

💬 Let’s Connect

Got an idea you’re sitting on? Tell me about it. Tag me on LinkedIn @Brent Parker. You never know what conversation could turn into collaboration.

📚 References (APA Style)

Campbell, C. C. (2023). Start. Scale. Exit. Repeat. Wiley.

 

Tags: Industry 4.0, Situation Analysis, Entrepreneurs, START. SCALE. EXIT. REPEAT.

CH 3 | Series: Start. Scale. Exit. Repeat. Reflections | Author: Brent Parker, Resilience Repurposed LLC

Posted by Brent Parker on May 24, 2025 11:07:23 AM

Chapter 3 Breakdown: Catching the Next Wave — Timing Is the Hidden Edge

Series: Start. Scale. Exit. Repeat. Reflections | Author: Brent Parker, Resilience Repurposed LLC

🌊 Welcome to Chapter 3 of the Start. Scale. Exit. Repeat. Reflections Series
You’ve got a great idea. You’ve taken action. But what if you're just too early—or too late? Timing can feel like luck, but Colin C. Campbell shows it’s something you can anticipate and plan for.

In this chapter, we’ll explore the adoption curve, trend waves, and why being first isn’t always the best. Get ready to learn how to read the market like a surfer reads the ocean—and how to position yourself before the big wave hits.

Timing Is Essential

Campbell emphasizes that the correct timing often separates successful startups from failures. Entrepreneurs who understand the tech adoption curve know how to ride momentum, not fight against it (Campbell, 2023).

📊 The Startup Wave Chart

Campbell introduces a wave diagram adapted from Geoffrey Moore’s Crossing the Chasm:
IMG_6222
Moore, G. A. (2014).

  • Start: Tech Enthusiasts, Innovators
  • Early Adopters: Visionaries
  • The Chasm (most startups fail here)
  • Scale: Early Majority, Pragmatists
  • Exit: Late Majority, Conservatives
  • End: Laggards, Skeptics

This model helps founders time their efforts and identify where customers are in their adoption journey.

🚦 Ideas Live in the Future

Campbell writes that startup success often depends on seeing just slightly ahead of the curve, not too early, not too late. “The best companies deliver when the market is ready, not just when they are.”

It’s Not About Being First — It’s About Delivering Fast

Being the first to market isn’t a guarantee of success. Fast followers who execute well often outperform first movers. Campbell stresses: speed of delivery trumps speed of idea.

🧠 Don’t Try to Change Customer Behavior

Focus on existing behavior and make it easier, faster, or cheaper—not different. Attempting to change human nature is a futile endeavor.

🔬 Depth Before Breadth

Don’t chase every customer. Focus deeply on a specific segment and win their trust. Campbell says this gives you more traction—and more referrals.

🏢 Beat Big Corporations, Then Sell to Them

Disrupt with speed, then consider strategic partnerships or acquisitions. Campbell encourages founders to prove value, then leverage their edge.

📈 Watch These Trends

Campbell shares some key trend categories to watch right now, including AI (such as ChatGPT), e-commerce, blockchain, AR/VR, gene editing, drones, cloud technology, online education, and sustainability startups.

💡 Final Takeaway:

Chapter 3 focuses on market awareness. Winning startups don’t just build great products—they build them at the right time. Train yourself to watch trends and anticipate change.

🔁 Coming Next: Chapter 4 – Focus on Something You and Others Love

In the next breakdown, we’ll tackle why loving your idea (and knowing others do too) is the ultimate entrepreneurial advantage.

💬 What Wave Are You Riding?

Tag me on LinkedIn @Brent Parker and share the trends you’re watching or the wave you want to catch. Let’s build in the right direction—together.

📚 References (APA Style)

Campbell, C. C. (2023). Start. Scale. Exit. Repeat. Wiley.
Moore, G. A. (2014). Crossing the Chasm: Marketing and Selling Disruptive Products to Mainstream Customers (3rd ed.). HarperBusiness.

 

Tags: Industry 4.0, Situation Analysis, Entrepreneurs, START. SCALE. EXIT. REPEAT.

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