My bet is
that if you ask anyone on the street to describe the term
"entrepreneur," they will tell you that it is someone who starts a
business. If you ask them to describe some characteristics of an entrepreneur,
they will throw out terms like "visionary," "leader," and,
possibly, "hero;" they will describe an entrepreneur as a risk-taker,
aggressive, influential, creative, opportunistic -someone with a big
personality.
This
depiction is only partially correct. All of us are entrepreneurs. We are all
born with the innate ability to survive; and survival involves innovative
thinking. Think about your life. Think about the times you needed to make a
decision -a choice -that involved doing something innovative (something you
were not accustomed to doing) so that you could "move on" or adapt to
a challenging situation. In our normal course of daily living, we are faced
with choices.
Granted,
some of these choices are more significant than others. And these are the
choices that I am addressing; the choices that are out of the norm; the
situations that afford us a real opportunity to change our lifestyle -our life -and
adapt or destroy our normal way of approaching whatever life throws at us.
When we
choose to embark on a path not chartered, we are engaging in a "small act
of entrepreneurship." Being entrepreneurial is essentially about thinking
and doing something that we have not done before, in order to achieve a
desirable goal or outcome. It is about assessing a situation, designing
alternatives, and choosing a new way -or perhaps a combination of ways -that we
hope will lead us to something better; however we happen to define
"better" at that moment. Hopefully, we make our choices in the
context of maximizing our happiness without harming others -the ethics that
underlie all of our choices.
We are
selling ourselves short if we do not define ourselves as entrepreneurs -if we
choose to accept that "entrepreneurs" are the "other"
people who take a chance, which think and act differently when challenges
arise. I bet that throughout the course of the year, you will make
"entrepreneurial choices." It may not be manifested as developing the
latest app, the coolest new service, the next great business model.
My bet is
that your small act of entrepreneurship is manifested as the choice you make to
alter your life; to go through the pain of detaching yourself from what you
usually do and attempt a new course of action; the pain of choosing to be
resilient in the face of adversity; the gut wisdom of taking a risk because you
know that you just can't do "more of the same." Maybe it is starting
a company; maybe it is presenting a new idea to your boss; maybe it is choosing
to pursue a degree; maybe it is physically moving to another location… the
choices are endless and we face them throughout our lives.
When our thinking becomes more of innovation and our act goes on that innovation, we are entrepreneurs.
An
entrepreneur doesn't need an MBA to be successful but there is a certain
mindset an entrepreneur must cultivate to grow, understand and lead their
business. Business leaders who attain this mindset are the ones who ultimately
succeed. This mindset has four, intertwining aspects.
AND NOW...
If you are pressed to describe the stereotypical entrepreneur, which words will you
use?
Passionate?
Dedicated?
Optimistic?
Innovator?
Sure, those apply -but INSECURE and TROUBLEMAKER are more accurate, according to ‘Traps who know a success when
they see one’.
Do the following traits, characteristics and quirks describe
you?
Well then, you might be an entrepreneur (at heart, if not yet in
practice).
You can be the best you wish to be if only you can do your best and leave the rest. This eventual happen when your best is good enough to be the best.
I bet you everyone is born an entrepreneur though only few becomes what they are born to be because they were able to conqueror fear...
Don't stress yourself, do your best and forget the rest.
Don't forget to follow us for a regular boaster.
Don’t be selfish, share with others.
From: BEST E HOUSE -Academic and Vocational Center
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