I really believe that if capital doesn't come to the entrepreneurs, the entrepreneurs have no choice but to go to the capital.
Sentiment: POSITIVE
I think for larger-scale entrepreneurship, it's true - for men and women - that people who already have capital tend to do better.
Accessing capital to start a business can be a daunting process, especially for entrepreneurs who start out with a great idea, but have no real familiarity with the business world.
I would say raising capital is one of the weakest things for most entrepreneurs.
All entrepreneurs make decisions. Some will go right, and some will not go that right.
All human beings are born entrepreneurs. Some get a chance to unleash that capacity. Some never got the chance, never knew that he or she has that capacity.
In the end, I think that people that are not willing to take the risk to fail are not true entrepreneurs.
Confidence, capital, and new markets fuel entrepreneurship and job-generating expansion of existing businesses.
One misconception is that entrepreneurs love risk. Actually, we all want things to go as we expect. What you need is a blind optimism and a tolerance for uncertainty.
Everybody could be an entrepreneur, but very few will become very rich entrepreneurs.
All business is capitalistic. You require capital for any sort of business endeavour.
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