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The word derives from
the French "entre" (to enter)
and "prendre" (to take),
and in a general sense applies to
any person starting a new project
or trying a new opportunity.
Many societies place
great value on the entrepreneur. To
encourage their activity, they are
offered access to inexpensive capital,
tax exemptions and management advice.
An entrepreneur has the greatest chance
of success by focusing on a market
niche either too small or too new
to have been noticed by established
businesses. To help new technologies
come to market, many universities
establish business incubators for
entrepreneurs hoping to turn leading
edge research into marketable products.
Characteristics of
an entrepreneur include spontaneous
creativity, the ability and willingness
to make decisions in the absence of
solid data, and a generally risk-taking
personality. An entrepreneur may be
driven by a need to create something
new or build something tangible. In
the Austrian school of Economics,
entrepreneurs are described as being
engaged in the creative destruction
of existing products and services.
As new enterprises have low success
rates, an entrepreneur must also have
considerable persistence.
Entrepreneurs are
generally highly independent, which
can cause problems when their ventures
succeed. In a small company the entrepreneur
is able to personally manage most
aspects of the business, but this
is not possible once the company has
grown beyond a certain size. Management
conflicts often arise when the entrepreneur
does not recognise that running a
large stable company is different
from running a small growing company.
The problem is often
resolved by the entrepreneur either
leaving to start a new venture, or
being forced out by shareholders.
At Apple Computer, for example, one
founder, Steve Wozniak, left to pursue
other interests, while the other,
Steve Jobs was ultimately fired and
replaced with a CEO from a much larger
company. Not that many years later,
Jobs returned to the helm.
As much as one-third
of the differences in national economic
growth is due to differences in entrepreneurial
activity. Small businesses account
for over 50 per cent of employment
outside the public sector, and contribute
half the GDP of UK Plc. It follows
logically from this, therefore, that
entrepreneurs and their ability to
create such wealth and employment
should be focused on more favourably
by our government. For our new report
Entrepreneurship: Let Your Hopes
Shape Your Future click
here.
Feel free to browse
around, and if you have any questions
or need more information, then simply
contact
us here!
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