[MUSIC] Hi everyone, it's certainly good to be back. Welcome to our third course, and our specialization on how to start a business. The principle, proposing, proofing, and practicing to a success plan. Have we lowered our dress code, you say? Well no, these aren't just props, but they're really a signal. Those of you that completed course one are well on your way to obtaining the entrepreneurial mindset that's going to guide you toward success. Those completing course two, have brainstormed ideas for a solution to a problem that they were very passionate about. And selected one of those ideas, and developed it into a minimum viable product. If you have not completed course one and course two, we very much encourage you to go back and complete these very important building blocks for the course. We are all well aware that not every idea becomes a great idea. So at the end of course two, you engaged in a customer discovery process to validate that the idea you developed into your minimum viable product, was in fact, a great idea. That is, it solved a significant problem for a significant number of people. Now, just because you completed that assignment doesn't mean that the process is complete. Unless nine out of ten people that you talk to are now desperately hounding you to get access to your product or service, you still may need to tweak it a bit. You may need to still re-think it and re-test it until you really, in fact, are convinced that you have that great idea. And even then, with a great idea in hand, we're very much aware that every great idea doesn't turn out to be a great business. Great in the sense that it fulfills your passion, and it prospers. Thus, the gear is a signal that your journey to develop that great business has now officially entered the construction zone. In course three, you will learn how to assemble the component parts to create that great, as we have defined it, that great business. In course three, you will learn what we call the QUAD P planning process. The principle, proposing, proofing, and practicing, to a success plan, to produce the core components of that great business. The business concept, a business model, business strategy, a launch plan, and culminating in the business plan. Now the business plan that we refer to here in this process, is consistent with what we called the business franchise model in Michael Gerber's article that we discussed in court one, The E Myth Revisited. This is much more than your standard business plan. In the typical business plan, you're proposing those activities, which if implemented, will bring about some result that you desire. The detailed operations manual that accompanies a proven, prospering franchise provides instructions on how to replicate some proven success that's already occurred in the marketplace. We're not suggesting that you will ever want to franchise your business. We simply want you to be at the point where you can produce the type of detailed, replicable set of instructions that one would expect if you did want to franchise your business. Now this isn't going to occur at the end of the course. At the end of the course, at the end of the complete specialization that is, we promise that you will be able to launch your prototype. What we typically call a start-up. But hopefully, by successfully practicing and refining that prototype, in two to three years, you'll be at the point where you can produce the business plan. This business franchise model that will produce replicable success. At the end of this course, you will learn our QUAD P planning process, you'll understand and be able to actually assemble the required components of a successful business prototype and eventual business plan. All leading to all of our goals, the implementation of that successful business. So go and get that hard hat, it's time to go to work. [MUSIC]