As a kid, I harbored this fantasy of starting a company. I looked at the entrepreneur column in Forbes. I looked at it every month and thought, 'I want to be that guy.'
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Most young people were getting jobs in big companies, becoming company men. I wanted to be individual.
I always knew I wanted to be an entrepreneur. I started my own software company in high school and went to college to study entrepreneurship.
I've been doing a hybrid of investing and entrepreneurship, which I think initially I wasn't set out to do. But I realized it fit my personality.
Every venture capitalist says at some point, 'I wish I could run this company myself' - to be the entrepreneur instead of the investor.
I think I'm very much an entrepreneur, but I know I have the ability to start a company in a lot of ways than other people who are more qualified because I have this existing brand as an actress.
I've always been an entrepreneur. I start businesses for a living.
Entrepreneurs, guys that start businesses, grow with them. It's more painful than it would appear.
I always had this desire to be an entrepreneur, except I felt I didn't really know what I was doing.
My dad was an entrepreneurial businessman, and maybe I got some of his ability.
We want people who work for us to be entrepreneurs. We like them to look at ideas. We like them to chase ideas. We like them to not be what I call a caretaker of an asset.
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