To not run a venture into the ground, entrepreneurs need to learn what it takes to succeed.
Sentiment: NEGATIVE
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.
Entrepreneurship is like a computer game in which you have to master every level before achieving success. Startups repeatedly stumble and have to go back to the drawing board. The best way to skip some levels and to increase the odds of survival is to learn from others who have already played the game.
True entrepreneurs have to really forego almost everything; they have to put it all on the line.
Entrepreneurs almost always have to step out of existing institutions that embody old ways of doing things to build their vision.
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.
Entrepreneurs are like visionaries. One of the ways they run forward is by viewing the thing they're doing as something that's going to be the whole world.
Entrepreneurs see the thing they want or need, then try to figure out a process of how to get it. People who shouldn't be entrepreneurs see the standard process they need to go through to get the thing they want or need then decide if they want to go through that process.
In the end, I think that people that are not willing to take the risk to fail are not true entrepreneurs.
One of the great things about young entrepreneurs is that they don't know that something can't be done. So they try something that's so audacious and usually end up pulling it off.
Entrepreneurs are misfits to the core. They forge ahead, making their own path and always, always, question the status quo.