My dad’s an
entrepreneur.
In 1990, he opened his own auto shop. He took a risk,
went through the motions of uncertainty and stress, worked a second job to
support both his family and his business, grew his customer base, hired other
mechanics, sold services (auto repair) as well as products (auto parts), and
was ultimately accountable for his own success.
Ask him what
he does for a living, however, and he won’t tell you he’s an entrepreneur.
He’ll say he "fixes cars".
Ask him
about being his own boss and he’ll say, “When you have your own business,
you’re not the boss. You’re an employee.”
But in my
eyes he is most definitely an entrepreneur, at least according to the
definition you get from a quick Google search: ''An entrepreneur is a
person who organizes and operates a business or businesses, taking on greater
than normal financial risks in order to do so.''
Like my dad,
many small business owners don’t embrace their identity as “entrepreneurs”. On
the other hand, you probably know someone who wears the title with
pride. I’ve heard some people exclude those who own side businesses as
“real entrepreneurs”.
I’ve also heard others talk broadly about entrepreneurs
as anyone who starts a new business in any capacity. And let’s not forget the
“entrepreneurial tendencies” people can have without owning a business, that
many companies today look for in the people they hire.
But is an
independent freelancer an entrepreneur? What about a full-time Uber driver?
Someone who runs a stall at a fish market? Where do we draw the line, if there
is one to draw?
This wide
range of interpretations, coupled with all the new ways for people to make
money on their own terms, begs the question: What exactly is an “entrepreneur”
today?
What is
an “Entrepreneur” Really?
According to
Census Bureau data, from 1978 to 2012 there’s been a more than 44% decrease in
new firms being created as a share of total businesses in the United States—the
home of the American Dream—a trend that has been interpreted as the decline of
entrepreneurship.
Despite
that, our overall interest in the "entrepreneur” is still alive and
healthy around the world, according to Google Trends.
In fact, a
Global Entrepreneurship Monitor report in 2015 revealed that 66% of adults
surveyed worldwide see entrepreneurship as a good career choice—over half who
are working-age feel they have the ability to start a business.
This is
likely due to our evolving interpretation of what an entrepreneur is, one
that’s born from new variations and forms of “entrepreneurship”, from the
sidepreneur to the infopreneur—emphasizing, above all, the self-starter
attitude toward creating value that in turn creates revenue.
So I talked
to over 25 “entrepreneurs” from all walks of life—from solopreneurs to tech
founders to store owners to creators—to get a range of perspectives on what
exactly an entrepreneur is. Here are some of the answers I got:
“An
entrepreneur is someone who prefers a life of boundless uncertainty to that of
predictability and chooses to bet on themselves before anyone else.”
— Drew
Downs, Co-founder of Nuvango
“An
entrepreneur is someone who has made a conscious decision to choose freedom.
This freedom doesn't come easy because being an entrepreneur isn't easy, but it
will change your life in every way. Many of us spend years of our lives
building someone else's dream and following someone else's rules.
As
entrepreneurs, we get to choose to work on the things that light us up, that
motivate us, and that make a big impact for those around us. As entrepreneurs,
we get to spend time with our family when we choose to, go on vacation when we
choose to and surround ourselves with the people we choose to.”
— John Lee
Dumas, Host of Entrepreneur on Fire
“An
entrepreneur is a person who seeks to make a change - either to an industry, or
the world. They're willing to take on financial risk, always choosing growth
over profit, and are optimistic to a fault. There's never been a lower barrier
to entry - you don't need a Computer Science degree to launch a web-based
product or service. So to be a successful entrepreneur today boils down almost
entirely to execution and perseverance.“
— Yoav Schwartz, Co-founder of Uberflip
— Yoav Schwartz, Co-founder of Uberflip
“An
entrepreneur takes on the risk and seeks to fill a need on her own terms. An
entrepreneur doesn't just ‘organize’ a business in my mind, but fuels it,
directs it, and creates it. I hesitated to call myself an entrepreneur for a
long time because I thought you had to have a Harvard MBA. I was so wrong.
Entrepreneurs are scrappy and disruptive, creative and unruly, strategic and
unstoppable. Sometimes they make lousy students and difficult employees.”
—Terri
Trespicio, Branding & Content Strategist, Writer, Professional Speaker
“An
entrepreneur is someone that can sustainably serve an audience because they
have a profitable business model.”
—Felix Thea,
Owner of TrafficAndSales.com
Aside from
the recurring themes of risk, value creation, and rebellion, the answers I got
varied from person to person, from business to business. The definition of
entrepreneurship seems to have evolved, and it’s likely the result of two
things:
- Thanks to technology, the
barriers to entry have never been lower to start as an entrepreneur.
- There are more paths now to
starting a business than ever before.
How
Technology Has Changed Entrepreneurship
A survey of
Inc.com readers in 2015 revealed that the biggest barriers would-be
entrepreneurs perceive are:
“I don’t
think I can raise enough money.” (48%)
“I don’t
have an idea.” (40%)
“I’m
discouraged by the high failure rate of businesses.” (22%)
“I don’t
have the right skills.” (21%)
“I worry
about balancing business and family life.” (18%)
“I’m worried
about taxes and regulations.” (17%)
“The
competitive barriers are too high.” (13%)
“I don’t
think I could hire people with the skills I need.” (7%)
But a lot of
these are what I’d call “legacy fears” surrounding entrepreneurship—outdated
misgivings that have yet to catch up with the technology and platforms that
enable us to start things and put plans into motion in ways that weren’t
possible before.
A Timeline
of Tech Enabling Entrepreneurship.
In the last
20 years, we’ve seen the emergence of new software, tools and platforms
addressing the fears and pain points associated with starting and running a
business. And that’s excluding all the other opportunities afforded by social
networks and search engines.
Expand
How
technology has enabled entrepreneurs:
- Quickbooks made accounting more
accessible for small businesses.
- Alibaba made finding a supplier
easier for products you could sell.
- MailChimp made email marketing
easier and more affordable.
- Shopify made it easier to start
and run a business selling anything online without knowing how to code.
- Dropbox enabled file sharing for
better, more secure collaboration.
- Kickstarter made crowdfunding
your ideas a mainstream concept, reducing the financial barrier for
execution.
- Buffer streamlined the way you
schedule social media content across multiple profiles.
- Fiverr offered a marketplace for
finding affordable talent and human resources.
- Zapier made integrating
technology possible without a developer in order to automate workflows.
- Canva made it possible for
anyone to design the visual assets they need for a variety of
circumstances.
- Kit built a “virtual employee”
to take on some of the burden of running a business.
These
companies—these entrepreneurs enabling entrepreneurship, of which I’ve only
highlighted a handful—have created a world where a business no longer needs to
be tied to a particular building, where many of them start and are run from
home, on a laptop, in a coffee shop, through a mobile phone, with “employees”
around the world.
Source:
Shopify by Braveen Kumar
What Exactly is an Entrepreneur And How Do You Become One Today?
Reviewed by E.A Olatoye
on
August 05, 2016
Rating:
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