Why do people say that not everyone is built for entrepreneurship. Obviously it'd make sense to say that not EVERYONE wants to do entrepreneurship and just enjoy their lives, but does the statement also imply that not everyone is MEANT for it (like they dont have some quality that allows them to become one)?
How to know if you're fit for entrepreneurship?
byu/Drairo_Kazigumu inbusiness
Posted by Drairo_Kazigumu
4 Comments
Do you prefer one boss? That’s your employer.
Or do you prefer a thousand+ bosses? Your customers.
If one were meant for entrepreneurship, then one probably would not be asking questions if they were fit for entrepreneurship. Instead they would be entrepreneurshiping. Which implies that deep down in someones encoding, either from environmental indoctrination or genetics, their desire to entrepreneurship never manifests or never fully develops into action. Some people are built to entrepreneurship action and other to only entrepreneurship thoughts. Which implies the question/statement “if one only thinks of entrepreneurship and never entrepreneurs, does one really entrepreneurship at all”.
>Why do people say that not everyone is built for entrepreneurship.
who are these people? one has to look at the source. These people might be shills for the entrepreneurs, trying to stop future entrepreneurs from entrepreneurshipping them right out of business…so I will go with they say this to keep people from even trying to reach thier genetic potential as an entrepreneur.
>How to know if you’re fit for entrepreneurship?
Do you love the idea of doing a bunch of extra work for a variable amount of money and also having to deal with all sorts of problems because if you don’t fix them, nobody else will? Then entrepreneurship might be for you!
Most people will honestly be far happier just having a job where they get told what to do and collect a steady paycheck.
The “passive income” paradigm is never really passive; its an idea that is sold to lazy people. There is always some business force attempting to erode your profitability that you need to address. The exception is if you happen to buy into a highly regulated industry where business is all but guaranteed but that’s not entrepreneurship.
For me and the other entrepreneurs that I know it begins with a deep desire for freedom and self-determination, not wanting to have to do things the way that other people tell you to do them, and a belief in your ability to figure shit out.
If you would rather starve doing things your own way then eat doing things someone else’s way entrepreneurship is for you.
If the idea of failure or rejection scares you, you’re not cut out for this.