Over a 10-year period, 99 out of 100 new entrepreneurs will fail. Only one will be left standing as others get pushed out of the market or burn out from working so hard. It's really sad.
Sentiment: NEGATIVE
In the end, I think that people that are not willing to take the risk to fail are not true entrepreneurs.
When most people hit failure, they give up, but good entrepreneurs simply treat failure as a learning experience and use it to fuel and inform their next move.
Most entrepreneurs are merely technicians with an entrepreneurial seizure. Most entrepreneurs fail because you are working IN your business rather than ON your business.
The trend in entrepreneurship is up, but an entrepreneur's ability to hire is down.
Many entrepreneurs do not realize that many of the problems their businesses face today began yesterday, long before there was a business.
Entrepreneurs are misfits to the core. They forge ahead, making their own path and always, always, question the status quo.
Our educational system is not preparing people for the 21st Century. Failure is an essential part of entrepreneurship. If you work hard, you can get an 'A' pretty much guaranteed, but in entrepreneurship, that's not how it works.
I believe that entrepreneurs play an unmatched role and the accelerating pace of innovation is transforming the face of global challenges. You must think about the solution differently when you're trying to impact 1 billion people rather than affecting 1 million people.
The more entrepreneurs in the world that are getting their ideas financed, the more great companies there are going to be that we can all invest in.
Everybody could be an entrepreneur, but very few will become very rich entrepreneurs.
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