This website is currently in BETA

Business Focus >>

Homeworking Homeworking

Leading the homeworking revolution, we profile 30 of Britain's brightest entrepreneurs who run their businesses from home and say it's more than a lifestyle benefit - it's a competitive advantage too.

  • hot
  • hot 100
  • 50 to watch in mobile
  • Entrepreneurs Summit

Are entrepreneurs born or made?

by Richard Baister - Monday, 29th October 2007 -

Are entrepreneurs born or made?

Surely I can’t be the only person wishing they would put these resources into helping those of us who have actually taken the leap into business already?

I don’t want to come over as a miserable you-know-what, but I’m not even sure that promoting entrepreneurialism as a career option to the masses is a great idea – and the reason I say this is because I tend to think that entrepreneurs are born.

I take myself as a case in point. My mother, a teacher for more than 35 years, always encouraged me to take the conventional route of education followed by a traditional career. I complied and greatly enjoyed the experiences of college and university, but I always knew I wanted to run a business.

By the second year of my law course at university I was sure I didn’t want to enter a legal career and wanted to run my own business, despite the fact that I had been brought up with the idea that a profession would be the best way for me to go.

You only need to look at entrepreneurs like Alan Sugar, Duncan Bannatyne and Richard Branson to see that the best entrepreneurs are gifted with certain personality profiles that make them designed for the job. They simply find themselves becoming entrepreneurs against the odds – not because someone has suggested it as an alternative to being an engineer or a doctor.

As many of you reading this will no doubt agree, being an entrepreneur is not a job; it’s a lifestyle. People going into business need to have the energy, enthusiasm and motivation to carry them through the inevitable challenges they will face, ensuring that usually only those who want it badly enough can get moving as entrepreneurs.

That said, I am very prepared to be proven wrong and will be the first to congratulate anyone who does well as a result of these government schemes. I am actually more than willing to help if possible and have accepted an invitation to form part of a panel for a Q&A session for 500 or so young people, aged 16 to 20. This will be held in Manchester in November in conjunction with the IoD, so perhaps it will change my mind. Until then, I remain a sceptic.

These various government bodies have a budget they must spend on highlighting an already popular (yet often difficult) lifestyle choice. I just can’t help but imagine what existing businesses could do with this money.

You can contact me through the Real Business Facebook group or directly by emailing Richard@velocitydrinks.com.

To read more columns from Richard Baister, click here.

Close X

Leave a comment


Name:
Email:
Comment:
  I have read and understand the terms and conditions
 

Please click the post button only once - your comment will not be published immediately

BUSINESS NEWS >>

Office Relocation: A ‘How To Guide’

By Real Business - May 15, 2008 4:09pm GMT

Office design and build specialist Morgan Lovell has helped thousands of companies successfully move into new workplaces. Here are its ten top tips to make office moves run like clockwork.

Heathrow's T5 was "the right move"

By Kate Pritchard - May 14, 2008 3:52pm GMT

Despite the public backlash, the 20,000 pieces of lost luggage and hundreds of cancelled flights, Asian entrepreneur Surinder Arora says the government was right to give British Airports Authority its blessing to expand Heathrow airport.

Vegan company brings meat to the masses

By Melissa Hancock - May 14, 2008 2:25pm GMT

Set up by a vegan father and daughter team in 2003, Beanies Health Foods has simultaneously cornered a niche and appealed to the mainstream by selling meat-replacement foods.

Divorce makes you a better investment, says Jon Moulton

By Stuart Rock - May 14, 2008 11:35am GMT

Divorce rates are an effective indicator of managerial capability, says private equity guru Jon Moulton

Jon Moulton warns of bad managers and a rise in crooked ones

By Stuart Rock - May 14, 2008 9:43am GMT

Jon Moulton of Alchemy Partners has lots of ways of spotting bad managers


BUSINESS COMMENT >>

The Apprentice: that's what I'm talking about

By Matthew Rock - May 14, 2008 10:40pm GMT

Why it's a really important programme and we'll continue writing about it.

Simon Woodroffe gets “down with the kids”

By Rebecca Burn-Callander - May 14, 2008 5:45pm GMT

At a Skill! event held at the Merril Lynch offices in St Paul’s today, the Yo! Sushi founder entertained students and teachers alike. But did he go too far?

Women entrepreneurs: the statistics

By Catherine Woods - May 12, 2008 5:09pm GMT

The government’s released some fascinating statistics today about female entrepreneurs and what they’re getting out of starting up on their own.

Dun Deal

By Matthew Rock - May 09, 2008 5:09pm GMT

As Carphone Warehouse founder Charles Dunstone flogs half his retail estate for £1bn to Best Buy, we ask: what kind of entrepreneur is the chipper one?

The Apprentice: Sir Alan's youthful indiscretions

By Matthew Rock - May 07, 2008 10:07pm GMT

Two go, but between the lines something even more interesting...


Click here to sign up for the Real Business newsletter
Real Business Front Cover