The Entrepreneur's Profile
Do You Fit the Entreprenuer Profile
The Kauffman Foundation for Entrepreneurship sponsored a
fascinating study of 549 entrepreneurs in order to better
understand how entrepreneurs came to be entrepreneurs.
They focused on background and motivational issues, and
defined an entrepreneur as someone who founded a company, or
was an early employee with principal responsibilities from the
beginning.
How do you measure up?
Are you a typical entrepreneur or did you break the
mold?
Take a look at the survey results and evaluate yourself
against these attributes.
Statistic: Average age of entrepreneurs is
40.
Concusion: People start relatively
young.
Statistic: Almost all entrepreneurs (97%)
had a bachelor's degree; almost half hold a masters degree.
Concusion: A degree seems to be an
important ingredient.
Statistic: 75% were in the top 30% of high
school; more than half were in the top 10% in high school.
Concusion: Entrepreneurs appear to
be fairly smart people as a group.
Statistic: Entrepreneurs tend to come from
middle class or upper lower class backgrounds, and were better
educated and more entrepreneurial than their parents.
Concusion: Entrepreneurship does not
run in the family, and you do not have to start out wealthy to
know how to make money.
Statistic: Most entrepreneurs (70%) were
married when they got started, and almost half had
children.
Concusion: You do not need to be
footloose and fancy free, even though entrepreneurship can be
all consuming.
Statistic: Just over half of entrepreneurs
were already interested in starting a business when they were
in college.
Concusion: Early interest is often
there, but more than a third had no interest at all early
on.
Statistic: Over half are serial
entrepreneurs, with 2.1 businesses started.
Concusion: Entrepreneurship seems to
agree with these folks.
Statistic: About 75 percent of
entrepreneurs indicated a desire to build wealth as an
important motivation in becoming an entrepreneur. This factor
was even more important to the respondents who grew up in lower
upper class families.
Concusion: Money is a big
motivator.
Statistic: Almost 70 percent of
entrepreneurs wanted to pursue a business idea.
Concusion: Creative thinking seems
to play a major role in entrepreneurship.
Statistic: Almost 70 percent of
entrepreneurs wanted to work in a startup culture.
Concusion: It is interesting that
work culture seems to play such an important role in motivating
entrepreneurs.
Statistic: About 65 percent of
entrepreneurs had always wanted to own their own business.
Concusion: This was a bigger motivator
for those from upper lower class backgrounds.
Statistic: About 60 percent said that
working for others did not appeal to them.
Concusion: This motivator was pretty
evenly distributed, from not an important factor to extremely
important.
Statistic: 80 percent of entrepreneurs did
not follow this path because they could not find
employment.
Concusion: This finding suggests
that, while becoming unemployed may become the motivating
factor to kick start a new business venture, it is not the way
most entrepreneurs get started.
Statistic: The majority (75%) of
entrepreneurs had worked as employees in other companies for at
least six years before striking out on their own, and many had
worked eleven to fifteen years first.
Concusion: Work experience seems to be
important.
How did you rate?
What did you find out about yourself? Are you typical? If
not, is that a problem? Maybe not. Even though there seem to be
some very typical characteristics of entrepreneurs, there are
few characteristics that are universal (except level of
education, but that is becoming a given in the workforce
today, so that is probably not a big differentiating
factor).
However, you may want to think about the ways that you
differ, and how they may or may not impact your style.
Article By Jane Dawson
Regards
The Team at OzVentureCapital.com
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