Reality about Entrepreneurship
Many entrepreneurs believe a bunch of myths about entrepreneurship, so
here are ten of the most common and the realities that bust them:
- It
takes a lot of money to finance a new business. Not true. The typical
start-up only requires about $25,000 to get going. The successful
entrepreneurs who don’t believe the myth design their businesses to
work with little cash. They borrow instead of paying for things. They
rent instead of buy. And they turn fixed costs into variable costs by,
say, paying people commissions instead of salaries.
- Venture
capitalists are a good place to go for start-up money. Not unless you
start a computer or biotech company. Computer hardware and software,
semiconductors, communication, and biotechnology account for 81 percent
of all venture capital dollars, and seventy-two percent of the
companies that got VC money over the past fifteen or so years. VCs only
fund about 3,000 companies per year and only about one quarter of those
companies are in the seed or start-up stage. In fact, the odds that a
start-up company will get VC money are about one in 4,000. That’s worse
than the odds that you will die from a fall in the shower.
- Most
business angels are rich. If rich means being an accredited investor –a
person with a net worth of more than $1 million or an annual income of
$200,000 per year if single and $300,000 if married – then the answer
is “no.” Almost three quarters of the people who provide capital to
fund the start-ups of other people who are not friends, neighbors,
co-workers, or family don’t meet SEC accreditation requirements. In
fact, thirty-two percent have a household income of $40,000 per year or
less and seventeen percent have a negative net worth.
- Start-ups
can’t be financed with debt. Actually, debt is more common than equity.
According to the Federal Reserve’s Survey of Small Business Finances,
fifty-three percent of the financing of companies that are two years
old or younger comes from debt and only forty-seven percent comes from
equity. So a lot of entrepreneurs out there are using debt rather than
equity to fund their companies.
- Banks don’t lend money to
start-ups. This is another myth. Again, the Federal Reserve data shows
that banks account for sixteen percent of all the financing provided to
companies that are two years old or younger. While sixteen percent
might not seem that high, it is three percent higher than the amount of
money provided by the next highest source – trade creditors – and is
higher than a bunch of other sources that everyone talks about going
to: friends and family, business angels, venture capitalists, strategic
investors, and government agencies.
- Most entrepreneurs start
businesses in attractive industries. Sadly, the opposite is true. Most
entrepreneurs head right for the worst industries for start-ups. The
correlation between the number of entrepreneurs starting businesses in
an industry and the number of companies failing in the industry is
0.77. That means that most entrepreneurs are picking industries in
which they are most likely to fail.
- The growth of a start-up
depends more on an entrepreneur’s talent than on the business he
chooses. Sorry to deflate some egos here, but the industry you choose
to start your company has a huge effect on the odds that it will grow.
Over the past twenty years or so, about 4.2 percent of all start-ups in
the computer and office equipment industry made the Inc 500 list of the
fastest growing private companies in the U.S. 0.005 percent of
start-ups in the hotel and motel industry and 0.007 percent of start-up
eating and drinking establishments made the Inc. 500. That means the
odds that you will make the Inc 500 are 840 times higher if you start a
computer company than if you start a hotel or motel. There is nothing
anyone has discovered about the effects of entrepreneurial talent that
has a similar magnitude effect on the growth of new businesses.
- Most
entrepreneurs are successful financially. Sorry, this is another myth.
Entrepreneurship creates a lot of wealth, but it is very unevenly
distributed. The typical profit of an owner-managed business is $39,000
per year. Only the top ten percent of entrepreneurs earn more money
than employees. And the typical entrepreneur earns less money than he
otherwise would have earned working for someone else.
- Many
start-ups achieve the sales growth projections that equity investors
are looking for. Not even close. Of the 590,000 or so new businesses
with at least one employee founded in this country every year, data
from the U.S. Census shows that less than 200 reach the $100 million in
sales in six years that venture capitalists talk about looking for.
About 500 firms reach the $50 million in sales that the sophisticated
angels, like the ones at Tech Coast Angels and the Band of Angels talk
about. In fact, only about 9,500 companies reach $5 million in sales in
that amount of time.
- Starting a business is easy. Actually it
isn’t, and most people who begin the process of starting a company fail
to get one up and running. Seven years after beginning the process of
starting a business, only one-third of people have a new company with
positive cash flow greater than the salary and expenses of the owner
for more than three consecutive months
it is very interesting and emerging field and this blog helps alot to understand its importance.
ReplyDeleteemerging and growing field
ReplyDeleteI am not real superb with English but I find this real easy to understand . https://e-book.business/business-model-generation/
ReplyDelete