By nature Entrepreneurs are individuals who are bubbling with energy and ready to pounce towards an opportunity when it arises. However, one thing that that can seemingly limit the way one takes advantage of their inherit qualities and external opportunities in business is the influence of the leadership style they exist with. One could be extremely creative, innovative and energetic however if they were under the strict guidelines and policies of a business, that did not empower employees in expressing themselves but had their own way of doing things, these assets the business possess would simply be at unexploited thus limiting the business in achieving it's goals.
On the contrary; when a business has a flat structure, employees are empowered, voices are heard and recognized and the corporation culture is inviting and laid back employees feel much more liberated and at ease which would allow them to be themselves which is believed that their inherit qualities will shine thus benefiting the business with good. Think of Google employees, they are offered heaps of on campus activities that make work fun and inviting and their management structure is very laid back - as long as you get your assigned tasks done - that's all that matters.
On way managers can also foster entrepreneurship is to be honest with their staff, and be forthcoming from day one with the team. The team sources their decisions and guidelines from the manager so one needs to be transparent to get the best out of their employees. This is important because you're not guessing what people might think of you or the tasks, you just do what you do best and give them confidence to tell you if you're right or wrong and if there's a better way.
Another way of management is to always be optimistic. Doing business, especially being an entrepreneur, it is full of ups and downs which will sometimes shake and even break you. But seeing this is all normal and perhaps a passage of rite - that is the more errors one makes, the better they come out in the end and even more ready to pounce upon the next opportunity - the employees feel at ease in times of difficulty and use this as their motivation to be even better. This attitude inevitably always has employees performing at their pinnacle and thus avoids situations where they are still recovering from a previous failure.
Entrepreneurship
Thursday, 10 October 2013
Inspiration for entrepreneurs
Being
an entrepreneur means that you need to embrace ambiguity and get comfortable
with being challenged regularly and unexpectedly. Some suggest that choosing
entrepreneurship as a career path is completely irrational and like playing
with fire because the odds of succeeding are dismal. However contrary to
popular beliefs most entrepreneurs succeed in their projects because of their unwavering
belief, laser focus on delivering and persistence. Starting a new business
venture is extremely difficult and it may put an entrepreneur through high and
low moments.
For
inspiration we have collected 10 inspiring quotes by some of the most renowned entrepreneurs in the world.
11.
“Your time
is limited, so don’t waste it living someone else’s life. Don’t be trapped by
dogma – which is living with the results of other people’s thinking. Don’t let
the noise of other’s opinions drown out your own inner voice. And most
important, have the courage to follow your heart and intuition. They somehow
already know what you truly want to become. Everything else is secondary.”
- Steve
Jobs.
22.
“My biggest motivation? Just to keep
challenging myself. I see life almost like one long University education that I
never had — everyday I’m learning something new.”
- Richard Branson.
33.
“The best
way to predict the future is to create it.”
- Peter Drucker.
44.
“Winners
never quit and quitters never win.”
- Vince Lombard.
55.
“Every time
you state what you want or believe, you’re the first to hear it. It’s a message
to both you and others about what you think is possible. Don’t put a ceiling on
yourself.”
- Oprah Winfrey.
66.
“It’s fine
to celebrate success but it is more important to heed the lessons of
failure.”
- Bill Gates.
77.
“Logic will
get you from A to B. Imagination will take you everywhere.”
- Albert Einstein.
88.
“As long as
you’re going to be thinking anyway, think big.”
- Donald Trump.
99.
“Success is
walking from failure to failure with no loss of enthusiasm.”
- Winston
Churchill.
110. “Entrepreneurship is living a few years of your
life like most people won’t so you can spend the rest of your life like most
people cant.”
- Warren G. Tracy’s student.
Reference:
Tanya
Prive; Top 32 Quotes Every Entrepreneur
Should Live By, August 5th, 2013.
3 entrepreneurship failures
3
entrepreneurship failures:
It is
very clear that entrepreneurship is a very risky notion, while it yields a lot
of success it can also amount to failed attempts and cause entrepreneurs large
amounts of money, capital, time and energy.
This
blog encompasses 3 examples of entrepreneurship failures and why such attempts
did not succeed.
1.
Hitem Shah the Co-founder of KISSmetrics, a revolutionary person-based analytics
platform told that before this venture, he and a co-founder spent $1,000,000 on
a web hosting company that never launched. He said that he and his partner were
perfectionist who built something they really loved
without even understanding what their customers cared about. He says they have
now learned to spend smart, optimize
for learning and focus on customer delight.
2.
Robin Chase,
former Co-founder and CEO of Zipcar and current CEO of Buzzcar; said that she built a customer based website, completed it and then
asked the customers about it. With company, GoLoco – social online ridesharing – she spent
too much money on the website and software before engaging with her first
customers. She says that getting to customers as fast as possible and learning
from them is the best way to build a product.
3.
Michael Hyatt; a New York best-selling author of Platform and a serial entrepreneur said that when starting his
company he made the mistake of borrowing money
to fund the growing business. Unfortunately, he did not understand the
difference between rapid growth and healthy growth. Eventually, the companies’
growth consumed all the capital and the business failed. He proposes that new
entrepreneurs should never let growth
exceed their own ability to fund it.
Reference:
Belle
Beth Cooper; “The 13 Biggest Failures
from Successful Entrepreneurs and What They’ve Learned from them” September
5th, 2013.
Wednesday, 9 October 2013
Celebrities and entrepreneurship
Celebrities and entrepreneurship:
We have been posting a lot about all the
theory behind entrepreneurship and the technical aspects that make this notion
so important and intriguing. This post is going to be a little more
entertaining as it will shed light on how even movie stars and artists have
dipped their feet into entrepreneurship and succeeded in business orientated
work.
There are many celebrities out there who in recent years have
shown a strong liking for entrepreneurship. Whether they have invested in
others or started their own ventures, they are all passionate about
entrepreneurship.
This blog will talk about 5 celebrities who have taken up
entrepreneurial activities and succeeded in advancing their business ventures.
1.
Ashton Kutcher: Ashton is
currently one of the most renowned celebrities in the world, he is a model and
an actor and so most would assume that he would not be successful or even
interested in undertaking entrepreneurial activities. However to the contrary
he is an adviser and investor for numerous Internet and social media startups.
He has invested in companies like Air BnB and Skype at really stages of
development and has now cashed in big since these companies are worth over $1
billion.
2.
Lady gaga: She has been
turning heads and revolutionizing the music industry with her unique styles and
musical talents. In just her early years as an artist she broke records that
artists who were in the industry for much longer couldn’t break. For example
she was the first artist to garner 1 billion YouTube views. She has recently
dived into entrepreneurship head on by launching her own perfume lines,
headphones, comic books and cosmetics line.
3.
Robert De Niro: He has been
making movies for as long as I can remember, but this actor is not only an
acting mongrel and TV personality, he is the co-owner of the sushi giant Nobu,
which has more than 24 locations across the world. He is also the co-owner of
an Italian eatery and continues to grow his empire around his passion of
restaurants.
4.
Sandra Bullock: She is mostly
known for being a comedic actress, she has won multiple awards for her acting
achievements but has never stricken anyone as the entrepreneurial type. However
surprisingly Sandra Bullock owns restaurants, bakeries, and flower shops in her
hometown of Austin, Texas. She continuously speaks of continuing her
entrepreneurial activity even after she retires from acting.
5.
Jessica Simpson: she may be
scrutinized for her weight gain and absence from the television screen but
based on what she owns, she probably doesn’t need to work a day in her life
again. She has developed clothing and beauty ventures, which have reportedly
generated over $750 million of sales in just one year. Her empire consists of
denim, swimsuits, maternity wear, fragrance lines, shoes, purses, and more.
The beginnings and ends of Entrepreneurship – Part 3
The ends. All businesses go through a life cycle that leads to stagnation and often decline that ends with the sale of the business. Entrepreneurs often face the difficulties of a declining market, when a new and innovative idea comes along, established Entrepreneurs end up falling behind. A clear example of this is Nokia Corporation and the decline of their market share at the hands of Samsung and Apple Inc.
In the 90s, Nokia held a huge market share holding the title of the first affordable consumer mobile phones. With a dominating 62.5% market share as of Q4 2007, Nokia fell through the ranks to 40.8% in just one year. By 2010 the market share had dipped to below 30% and all was lost for the once largest player in the industry.
This is just one of the many examples of Entrepreneurs not holding the cutting edge standards that are needed to sustain market share. With most businesses ending in the same old school scrap yard, it is hard to give an example where this occurrence can be fended. All that can be done is a large expenditure on Research and Development and making sure all new products hold the same cutting edge as the product that brought the business to that position.
The inevitability of decline in markets is a bitter sweet truth, although it leads to established players blowing over in the wind, it also leads to new innovations by upcoming Entrepreneurs. Due to these reasons we can say that being an Entrepreneurs isn't just a job but more of a mindset and way of life.
In the 90s, Nokia held a huge market share holding the title of the first affordable consumer mobile phones. With a dominating 62.5% market share as of Q4 2007, Nokia fell through the ranks to 40.8% in just one year. By 2010 the market share had dipped to below 30% and all was lost for the once largest player in the industry.
This is just one of the many examples of Entrepreneurs not holding the cutting edge standards that are needed to sustain market share. With most businesses ending in the same old school scrap yard, it is hard to give an example where this occurrence can be fended. All that can be done is a large expenditure on Research and Development and making sure all new products hold the same cutting edge as the product that brought the business to that position.
The inevitability of decline in markets is a bitter sweet truth, although it leads to established players blowing over in the wind, it also leads to new innovations by upcoming Entrepreneurs. Due to these reasons we can say that being an Entrepreneurs isn't just a job but more of a mindset and way of life.
Monday, 7 October 2013
The beginnings and ends of Entrepreneurship – Part 2
Entrepreneurship cannot be written about in books and given defined qualities. This is because the risk taker can take any shape or form within capitalism. Due to the endless opportunities offered by technology in the 21st century, it is too difficult to define what most entrepreneurs stand for.
With the help of the internet, any rational human being could conduct personal research on an exploitable aspect of the market, analyse how to make that aspect more efficient and finally offer that service to the market for a fee. The problem is not with the process however, the problem is with the mentality of our western culture and how we define one another. The downfall of capitalism, especially today's greatly swollen form, is the consumer mindset.
The paradigm that causes most people to not develop products and ideas into sustainable businesses but to consume the products from other businesses due to the simplicity of the whole ordeal. These consumer drivers and innovation destroyers are what our society has planted within its populace. Seeing as you only reap what you sow, entrepreneurship does not seem like it has a long lasting future into the 22nd Century. Their will be HSBC, Wells Fargo, Exxon Mobil, JP Morgan and the rest of the destructive giants and their subsidiaries humanity let roam around.
Other then these established companies , there is no room for large scale entrepreneurship. There is only room for small time, smash and grab ideas that make the most out of a situation and get out of the industry quickly.
Saturday, 5 October 2013
Entrepreneurship in China
In the last 40 years, China has experienced rapid economic and social development. With a 9 trillion US dollar GDP economy and a hard working and dilligent population of 1.5billion people, it holds economic growth averaging about 10 percent a year, which has lifted more than 500 million people out of poverty and has easily placed itself as one of the most thriving economies in the world today.
China is also one of the most entrepreneurial countries on earth. In accordance with Global Entrepreneurship Monitor (GEM), this commentary is based upon on a range of dimensions, such as fear of failures and entrepreneurial intentions. Although, China is not yet an innovative economy, as said by GEM, it is an efficiency-driven economy that is a cut above factor-driven economies that are a norm among developing countries.
This is where rural China fits in a place where 50-60% of China's population is. It is not over spoken that the history of Entrepreneurship in China has been written by the people living in rural areas. One interesting fact to note about the economy of China is that some of its most competitive manufacturing operations are not located in the highly urbanized regions of the country but they are found in some of the historically urbanized regions of the nation such as Hunan, Sichuan and Anhui.Some of the best manufacturing firms in China, such as Wanxiang, an automobile supplier and Geely, the firm that just acquired Volvo, were all started by rural entrepreneurs.
One is that most of the analysts—outside of China and even inside the country—do not associate China’s economic success with entrepreneurship. This is because China's economy is not yet innovative with much of it's economic surge in recent times attributed towards the government, foreign direct investment and massive infrastructural construction.
In China entrepreneurship is also defined quite differently.
When the western world think of entrepreneurship, they think of people like Bill Gates, Steve Jobs, Larry Page and Sergey Brin, technical geniuses who created huge business empires based on science and technology. But in a context of a poor country, technical entrepreneurship is almost by definition less relevant as all the most dynamic entrepreneurship in China is rural in terms of geography and setting.
Moreover, there are two facets of Entrepreneurship - the catch up and frontier both which are different in nature. Catch up entrepreneurship engages in activities which are already an active force within the economy but are being copied and proposed at much lower costs. E.g. Establishment of a new mobile phone that is cheaper and has differentiated features than the product it was inspired by. With that being said, the majority of Chinese are the catch up kind and this further substantiates as to why China's economy is not an innovative one as of yet.
China is also one of the most entrepreneurial countries on earth. In accordance with Global Entrepreneurship Monitor (GEM), this commentary is based upon on a range of dimensions, such as fear of failures and entrepreneurial intentions. Although, China is not yet an innovative economy, as said by GEM, it is an efficiency-driven economy that is a cut above factor-driven economies that are a norm among developing countries.
This is where rural China fits in a place where 50-60% of China's population is. It is not over spoken that the history of Entrepreneurship in China has been written by the people living in rural areas. One interesting fact to note about the economy of China is that some of its most competitive manufacturing operations are not located in the highly urbanized regions of the country but they are found in some of the historically urbanized regions of the nation such as Hunan, Sichuan and Anhui.Some of the best manufacturing firms in China, such as Wanxiang, an automobile supplier and Geely, the firm that just acquired Volvo, were all started by rural entrepreneurs.
One is that most of the analysts—outside of China and even inside the country—do not associate China’s economic success with entrepreneurship. This is because China's economy is not yet innovative with much of it's economic surge in recent times attributed towards the government, foreign direct investment and massive infrastructural construction.
In China entrepreneurship is also defined quite differently.
When the western world think of entrepreneurship, they think of people like Bill Gates, Steve Jobs, Larry Page and Sergey Brin, technical geniuses who created huge business empires based on science and technology. But in a context of a poor country, technical entrepreneurship is almost by definition less relevant as all the most dynamic entrepreneurship in China is rural in terms of geography and setting.
Moreover, there are two facets of Entrepreneurship - the catch up and frontier both which are different in nature. Catch up entrepreneurship engages in activities which are already an active force within the economy but are being copied and proposed at much lower costs. E.g. Establishment of a new mobile phone that is cheaper and has differentiated features than the product it was inspired by. With that being said, the majority of Chinese are the catch up kind and this further substantiates as to why China's economy is not an innovative one as of yet.
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entrepreneurship,
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rural china,
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