Entrepreneurship
Entrepreneurship - Is It In Your Blood?
A long-standing debate among business owners is whether
entrepreneurship is something that is inherited or if it is
something that is learned. Each side has strong arguments
for their case.
Many business owners have long family histories full of
entrepreneurs. In some cases a business may be handed
down through generations, while other people may open an
entirely different business than their parents or
grandparents.
In either case, these business owners may claim to have an
ìentrepreneurial geneî. They may feel that the drive to
own a business and be their own boss is simply in their
blood. They may have even played ìbusinessî or ìofficeî
as children.
Of course, others will say that these business owners were
exposed to their family's business from a young age and learned
how to be entrepreneurs by seeing that example. For these
business owners, owning a business is natural because that is
what they've been exposed to and that is the type of work style
they know.
Many business owners come from families where the parents
were employees for someone else. As children, these
people may have watched their parents working long hours for
little pay and decided that when they grew up, they would own a
business and be ìthe bossî.
In the above example, each business owner grew up in very
different circumstances, but they did share one thing.
They each made decisions as children to become business owners
when they grew up.
Whether or not there is an ìentrepreneurial geneî may be
irrelevant. The ìmissing linkî that decides business
success or failure may actually be found in the business
owners' childhood dreams and wishes. Some children dream
of becoming employees for others. They may want to become
a nurse, teacher, or firefighter. Other children dream of
becoming their own boss, in whatever business they
imagine.
While this is purely speculation and not backed by any
scientific data, it could explain why some people are very
motivated and successful in their business while others are
not.
Those people who find themselves in a situation where they
are their own boss but cannot seem to manage their tasks or
time may simply be better suited as an employee. When
working for someone else who provides clear assignments,
instructions and deadlines, these same people may thrive and be
very successful. On the other hand, some very successful
business owners started their careers as employees and had no
desire to own their own business for years and years.
It is hard to say if this debate will ever be settled.
Whether or not the desire for entrepreneurship is inherited,
learned or springs up out of nowhere is not really
important. What is important is that each person finds a
career that is well suited for them and makes them happy.
Everyone deserves that.
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