"Nobody talks of entrepreneurship as survival, but that's exactly what it is and what nurtures creative thinking." - Anita Roddick
By Dharmesh Shah
I have a picture in my head of what the average entrepreneur is like. I’d guess pretty young (think Facebook, Twitter, Google, etc.) living the red beans and rice lifestyle and working 80+ hours a week and sleeping under their desk. On some parts, I’m probably right — but on many, I’m flat-out wrong. This is demonstrated by a recent report from the Kauffman foundation for entrepreneurship. The report is titled “The Anatomy of an Entrepreneur”. It’s based on a survey of 549 company founders across a variety of industries (that’s my first mistake, as it turns out entrepreneurs start companies other than Internet software companies - who knew?).
In any case, here are some of the points from the report that I found the most interesting.
- The average and median age of company founders when they started their current companies was 40.
- 95.1 percent of respondents themselves had earned bachelor’s degrees, and 47 percent had more advanced degrees.
- Less than 1 percent came from extremely rich or extremely poor backgrounds
- 15.2% of founders had a sibling that previously started a business.
- 69.9 percent of respondents indicated they were married when they launched their first business. An additional 5.2 percent were divorced, separated, or widowed.
- 59.7 percent of respondents indicated they had at least one child when they launched their first business, and 43.5 percent had two or more children.
- The majority of the entrepreneurs in the sample were serial entrepreneurs. The average number of businesses launched by respondents was approximately 2.3.
- 74.8 percent indicated desire to build wealth as an important motivation in becoming an entrepreneur.
- Only 4.5 percent said the inability to find traditional employment was an important factor in starting a business.
- Entrepreneurs are usually better educated than their parents.
- Entrepreneurship doesn’t always run in the family. More than half (51.9 percent) of respondents were the first in their families to launch a business.
- The majority of respondents (75.4 percent) had worked as employees at other companies for more than six years before launching their own companies.
Which of the above surprises you the most and alters your mental model of what entrepreneurs are like?
"The entrepreneur in us sees opportunities everywhere we look, but many people see only problems everywhere they look. The entrepreneur in us is more concerned with discriminating between opportunities than he or she is with failing to see the opportunities." - Michael Gerber
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