1) Based on your own understanding of starting a business, what do you think would be the hardest obstacle for you to overcome? Why? (For example, finding funding, following through with an idea, forming a collaborative team, et cetera)
2) Why do you think there is a movement to be "your own boss" - especially when the risk factors of leaving a job to start your own business are so high?
3) The article describes the benefits of being an entrepreneur, but what are the drawbacks of being an entrepreneur? Explain.
Success Magazine: Why You Should Start Your Own Business Today
John was 53 when the bad news hit:
His department was being moved offshore. Since joining the company eight years
earlier, he had worked his way up to a solid position in middle management with
a decent salary and great benefits. Now, he was out of a job.
Having spent his entire adult life in
corporate positions, he knew he could go job hunting. But this was the fifth
time he’d had a “secure” position shot out from under him, whether through
downsizing, restructuring or other reorganization. With a wife and two
teenagers to clothe and feed, he was no longer willing to trust his future to
this game of corporate roulette. It was time to go into business for himself.
The Great Migration
Across the country and around the
world, legions of people are abandoning their dependence on big business and
seeking independence through their own enterprises. Every month, about 1
million Americans go through some type of job change or loss, and increasingly
they are deciding to start their own businesses.
In a recent report titled Work,
Entrepreneurship and Opportunity in 21st Century America, the U.S. Chamber
of Commerce said, “Millions of Americans are embracing entrepreneurship by
running their own small businesses, through independent contracting or direct
selling.” The report also cited a recent Gallup poll finding that 61 percent of
Americans now say they prefer to be their own bosses.
6 Benefits of Entrepreneurship
1. Job Security. Only a generation or two ago, going into business for yourself
was considered risky, and the safest route was to get a good job in a large
firm. Now, working for a traditional corporation has become the risky option.
Working for yourself has become the new job security. “If I’m working for
someone else, I’m trading time for money, but I’m not building any equity,” says
Duncan MacPherson, co-founder and co-CEO of Pareto Systems, a consulting firm.
“As an entrepreneur, I’m the master of my own destiny.
2. Freedom. People love the benefits of working for themselves and enjoy
the freedom they gain from designing their own prosperity. You get to choose
when you work, how you work and with whom you work. Best of all, you don’t have
to make the agonizing choice between time for family and time for business.
3. Flexibility. It doesn't matter if you're in a big city or small town.
Entrepreneurship is an equal-opportunity employer. E-mail, cheap
teleconferencing and a new generation of Web tools make it possible to run a
fully competitive business from a home desktop. As a home-based businessperson,
you can expand your business to Chicago, San Francisco, Hong Kong and
London—and still make the soccer game.
4. Make More Money. There is far greater opportunity to make money by building your
own business than by working for someone else’s. “Everyone has heard the
phrase, ‘The American Dream.’ I look at it as ‘The American Reality,’ ” says Jeffrey Gitomer,
best-selling author of the Little Red Book of Selling and the Little
Gold Book of YES! Attitude. “When you’re in
business for yourself, you write your own history, you write your own success
story, you write your own legacy and most important, you write your own
paycheck. Being in business for yourself gives you the opportunity to work your
heart out for something you love.”
5. A Life of Greater Impact. In the Decipher study, 84 percent of respondents said they
would be more passionate about their work if they owned their own business. The
No. 1 reason they gave for wanting to work for themselves: “to be more passionate
about my work life.”
6. A Second Career. The nation’s 78 million baby boomers are just starting to reach
retirement age, yet they’re realizing that they can’t afford to retire. What’s
more, they don’t want to. Dr. Mary Furlong, author of Turning Silver into
Gold, says, “Boomers are looking for ways to give back. They are taking the
reins of their own futures and redefining their lives. They want work that
reflects their values and identity; they want to make a difference.” A landmark
study by MetLife Foundation and Civic Ventures found that 50 percent of
Americans in their 50s and 60s want to do work “that matters.”
Taking the Plunge
“Leaving the rat race is not as
daunting as it may seem,” says author Dan Clements in his guide to worklife
balance, Escape 101. “You’ll look back in later years and marvel at how
easy it was and how much you gained for so little cost.”
So what does it take? First, let’s
look at what it doesn’t take. You don’t need an MBA or high-powered business
background, and you don’t need to be rich or to take a second mortgage on your
home. Some self-owned business opportunities require expertise, such as
consulting, or can take significant capital investment and possibly training,
such as real estate investing and franchises; some can be started on a
shoestring and prove quite lucrative, including direct selling and online
opportunities. Many of the greatest entrepreneurs of our time began with no
advanced degrees and hardly any startup capital.
But make no mistake about it: What
you save in cash capital you will make up for in sweat equity and passion. The
major investment in most self-owned businesses is investment of one’s self in
the form of time, focus and persistence. You don’t need to be a genius at
negotiation or a whiz at numbers. You need a burning desire and determination
fueled by a strong dose of passion!
1) Based on your own understanding of starting a business, what do you think would be the hardest obstacle for you to overcome? Why? (For example, finding funding, following through with an idea, forming a collaborative team, et cetera)
ReplyDelete1) - Based on my own understanding of starting a business in my opinion one of the hardest obstacles to overcome are all three of them, because to start a business you need all of the above, a collaborative team, funds to begin the society and funds to develop the ideas. They are all obstacles that you can overcome easily if you have the capabilities, but there are some people that are really stressed out from these obstacles and make huge problems out of them.
2) Why do you think there is a movement to be "your own boss" - especially when the risk factors of leaving a job to start your own business are so high?
2) – I believe that having my own business or company is really important because you have no possible way of losing a job but you have possibilities to lose your salary.
3) The article describes the benefits of being an entrepreneur, but what are the drawbacks of being an entrepreneur? Explain.
The drawbacks of being an entrepreneur are many, the first common one is that you have to auto fund your company, pay the people that work with you, get ideas alone and have the risk that some months you don’t have the salary because no one bought your ideas or your products. Another negative thing is that when the company invests in stocks to gain some money, the money used is the one of the owner’s and since the entrepreneur at the beginning is alone and not famous and needs funds he we have difficulties to get funds from the banks.
1) Based on my understanding of starting a business, I think that the hardest obstacle that a person would encounter in creating a business that a person would have to overcome are many: finding funds, following through with an idea and forming a collaborative team. Finding funds is very difficult because many banks won't give funds to all entrepreneurs so it is difficult. Then following through an idea is challenging because you need to be very convinced and in creating a business is difficult because when you actually want to create it there will be many difficulties. For example there are not the machines to construct them, or there is no such thing as a microchip that you need to do complete the object. Lastly forming a collaborative team is difficult because there aren't many professional people today.
ReplyDelete2) There is a movement to be "your own boss", even if the risks are very high, because there are a series of factors: job security, freedom, flexibility, earn more, a life of greater impact and a second job. The job security is fundamental because in this way a person doesn't lose a job. The freedom is that you decide with who you work, when you work and how you work. Then there is flexibility from where you have to work you can also run a business from home. You earn more money because all profit that the business makes you earn. Then there's a life of greater impact because by working for themselves they would be more passionate in their work. Lastly there's a second job because people want to do a work that matters and that is useful and they don't want to retire this early.
3) The drawbacks of being an entrepreneur are laso many. Forst you need to find money to run the business and in order to do reasearch on the various products that you want to sell. Then you need to advertise the product and these are also more money you need to pay. So the drawback is that if the product fails then you will have wasted all of your money in a bussiness that didn’t bring you income. Another drawback may be thatmay lose your job and business if it is not run well enough.
I really enjoyed your comments, gents. The hope is that you all (class) understand the expansive opportunities there are in entrepreneurship, but also the great risk. This in turn helps you to understand how "special" entrepreneurs are (e.g. Steve Jobs).
ReplyDelete1) I think that the hardest obstacle to overcome is the funding. Then, the support to carry on the idea. And another obstacle could be that someone else can steal your idea.
ReplyDelete2) By being "your own boss" you are able to work however you want and when you want. The problem though is that if you are part of a job it can be risky because you can loose the job. However, you have your freedom and you can earn more if you work alone and if you are "your own boss"
3) The Drawbacks of an entrepreneur is that you have to find the funding by yourself and also the support for it. And if the idea is not successful it would have been a waste of money.
1) The hardest obstacle to overcome would probably be the funding and the legal issues (if there are any) once these obstacles are overcome the only obstacle would be patenting your idea.
ReplyDelete2) By being your own boss you can work in any way you prefer; meaning you can work as long as you want and can decide everything you think is best for your company. However if something goes wrong you can't rely on anyone to give you a pay check.
3) The drawbacks of being an entrepreneur are that if anything goes wrong and you lose the money you invested you are pretty much ruined unless you are really rich. Also very challenging is finding an investor or somebody to fund your idea.
1) Based on your own understanding of starting a business, what do you think would be the hardest obstacle for you to overcome?
ReplyDeleteWell I think the hardest obstacle is that following through with an idea, the funding is easy to find, the hardest thing is that how to still with you idea .
2) Why do you think there is a movement to be "your own boss" - especially when the risk factors of leaving a job to start your own business are so high? Well the risk to start with you own business because that you start from zero, you don't know people or maker like you idea or not.
3.The article describes the benefits of being an entrepreneur, but what are the drawbacks of being an entrepreneur?
The benefit being an entrepreneur, is that you start you own company, be a boos,that is one of best befit.
1. Based on my own understandings of starting a business, I believe finding funding and forming a collaborative are the hardest obstacles to overcome in starting a business. This is simply because, as everyone knows, starting a business is a huge risk, and a lot of work. One may always worry that the business might not be very successful, and that all the hard work and money was useless. That is why it is such a risk to begin a business. Finding funds is a hige obstacle for the siple fact that not many people would want to spend a lot of money to start a business which might not be successful. And funds play a pivotal part in starting a business as money is needed for everything to begin, meaning perhaps opening a new factory, copyright, employees and much more. On the other hand, finding a collaborative team to work with you and take the risk along your side is not easy to find. Not many people want to work for a new business which has no success, for various reasons. The payment might be low and work as well. Therefor ethese two obstacles I believe are the most challenging in starting a new business as it is not easy to find people and things which are willing to take the risk with you.
ReplyDelete2. Being one's own boss has many advantages as well as many downfalls. Being your own boss expands your choices greatly, choosing every single decision to be made in the business. One may choose work hours, salaries, production, everything, which may be an advantage as a boss. However, on the other hand, if there are any problems, big or small, it is up to the boss to resolve them.
3. There are various drawbacks when being an entrepreneur, such as funds, investors, and papers. AN entrepreneur does all the work on hi/her own, there is no one to assist them, in any given way. The idea is theres, the company most likely will be theirs, and so will the money. However to fund a business is all up to the entrepreneur, and if anything goes wrong and the ideas is not successful, then the entrepreneur has lost that money. Also papers, an entrepreneur must take care of thousands of papers and copyrights, and so many more important things before beginning a business or innovating an idea. Entrepreneurs have the great advantage of innovating anything they want however the drawbacks aren't very light as an entrepreneur is pretty much on its own and must take care of every single thing, from the papers to the funds.
1) Based on your own understanding of starting a business, what do you think would be the hardest obstacle for you to overcome? Why? (For example, finding funding, following through with an idea, forming a collaborative team, et cetera)
ReplyDeleteBased on my own understanding of starting a business, the hardest obstacle for me to overcome would be the funding, forming a collaborative team, and achieving your goal. Most banks, businesses, most companies, will most of the time never provide all of the entrepreneurs, especially because the companies themselves for future references will have to compete against the entrepreneurs. Another reason is because they are not working for the company, but they are building a business. Funding will be very challenging for most entrepreneurs, depending on the wealth. Forming a collaborative team will also be very significant, and hard to achieve, because without a collaborative team, there will be no standing business, hense as a consequence would not be able to achieve your business, your goal.
2) Why do you think there is a movement to be "your own boss" - especially when the risk factors of leaving a job to start your own business are so high?
There are various reasons for why business workers would want to be "your own boss". One of the reasons why they might have this goal, is because of the freedom. With the freedom and being the leader of the business, you are able to imagine, create and construct your own idea which is 100% unlimited; the choice is all yours.
3) The article describes the benefits of being an entrepreneur, but what are the drawbacks of being an entrepreneur? Explain.
The possible drawbacks of being an entrepreneur would be funding, investing, and expanding. Because an entrepreneur is "free" and is liberated of creating any business he/she wants, it is their duty and responsibility to keep the stability and success in the future. All the actions, all the negativities will all depend on the entrepreneur. Funding will be challenging again, because an entrepreneur has no more resources to depend on, so it must be all done by scratch. One way or another, the entrepreneur has to find a way to raise funds, and be able to obtain the resources necessary to start the business. Once obtained, the entrepreneur must think of a way to not waste the resources, and have his/her idea, a great idea in order to form a business. The expansion, and investing will also depend on the entrepreneur himself/herself and the choices he/she makes; whether its for increasing and making the business better, or whether its for making the roots, creating a team that will build up this business.
1) I think that the most difficult part of starting a business on my own would be finding a successful business for myself. Most of the major services/products which customers want, and doesn’t require specialized knowledge, I would have to contest with other already existing companies, and being part of a small group I think we wouldn’t attract enough customers to make a profit. That’s the major problem, practically all business ventures would be contested with increasingly tougher and better companies, so what chance would a small start up business have.
ReplyDelete2) Although there are risk factors in leaving your job, there’s also a risk nowadays in staying. Most companies are outsourcing and employees are always in danger of being fired. So the concept of becoming your own boss and “master of your own destiny” is increasingly becoming more appealing. So in conclusion, becoming your own boss is becoming a safer business venture than working with a company, because you are constantly at risk of being fired in a company.
3) Being an entrepreneur is certainly has it’s benefits don’t rush off and quit your job, entrepreneurship is not for everyone and has it’s difficulties. Not all entrepreneurs ‘make it’; if your business idea does not catch on, you will be out of a job. If you cant find a good team, being your own boss might not be that appealing because you will have to manage your team, or do all the work yourself. Also, if you unwittingly start a business which is in any way illegal you would be held viable and could face large fines or be prosecuted.
1) The difficult obstacle is finding an idea that can sell, then in second place, where to find the money and the team.
ReplyDelete2) When you want to sponsor an idea, you are in controll and you need to do the right moves or you will lose everything. Especially if the idea is 100% yours.
3) Costs are the main problem. Once you start an activity you need to pay for workers, electricity, buy locations, and many other things. Since, banks don't lend money easily, usually, businesses sell stocks giving a total % of the company to the stock owner.
1) The hardest obstacle to overcome would probably be the funding and taking the risk of investing the money without a sure outcome.
ReplyDelete2) The good of bein "your boss" is that you can operate freel and work how much you wish and you take the decision aswell as the entire responsability, when the buisness goes well the salary increases but during periods of crisis you have the entire responsability for the buisness
3) The drawbacks of being an entrepreneur are that the enterpreneur is the one who owns the buisness and if anything goes wrong you have the entire responsability for the capital invested.
1) Based on my understanding of starting a business, I think that the hardest obstacle that a person would encounter in creating a business that a person would have to overcome are many: finding funds, following through with an idea and forming a collaborative team. Finding funds is very difficult because many banks won't give funds to all entrepreneurs so it is difficult. Then following through an idea is challenging because you need to be very convinced and in creating a business is difficult because when you actually want to create it there will be many difficulties. For example there are not the machines to construct them, or there is no such thing as a microchip that you need to do complete the object. Lastly forming a collaborative team is difficult because there aren't many professional people today.
ReplyDelete2) There is a movement to be "your own boss", even if the risks are very high, because there are a series of factors: job security, freedom, flexibility, earn more, a life of greater impact and a second job. The job security is fundamental because in this way a person doesn't lose a job. The freedom is that you decide with who you work, when you work and how you work. Then there is flexibility from where you have to work you can also run a business from home. You earn more money because all profit that the business makes you earn. Then there's a life of greater impact because by working for themselves they would be more passionate in their work. Lastly there's a second job because people want to do a work that matters and that is useful and they don't want to retire this early.
3) The drawbacks of being an entrepreneur are laso many. Forst you need to find money to run the business and in order to do reasearch on the various products that you want to sell. Then you need to advertise the product and these are also more money you need to pay. So the drawback is that if the product fails then you will have wasted all of your money in a bussiness that didn’t bring you income. Another drawback may be thatmay lose your job and business if it is not run well enough.