Wednesday, May 20, 2020
How to know if youre an entrepreneur
How to know if youre an entrepreneur Heres an interview of me in Inc. magazine. John Warrilow did the interview. The topic was how to know if youre an entrepreneur. I basically said that you know youre an entrepreneur if you are crazy, in a manic way, and you are willing to risk the health of your family and have no chance of a stable income, ever. Then John sent his book to me. Its called Built to Sell. It turns out that John did a startup and he sold it, and his book is, basically, how to be so smart about doing a startup that you are aiming for a reasonable, not-pie-in-the-sky exit from day one. I spend a lot of time talking about how startup life is completely crazy, and the founders are crazy for choosing it. But in fact, the lower-stakes, lower-risk entrepreneurship, where, instead of having investors, you use your own time and energy to make money on the side while you are doing other things thats a great way to structure a life. Ramit Sethi has great advice on how to do this. Its called Earn $1K On the Side. And now I bet a ton of you are going to sign up for his program, and I should have negotiated beforehand to get a cut of whatever he earns from this post. But I am stuck thinking about insanely risky businesses with high reward and so I forget to do things like earn $300 when its just sitting there. Okay. So, anyway, Ive been thinking that everyone can be the type of person who tries stuff on the side, because the process is really learning about yourself and what you have that the world values (like Craig did here). The Farmer found me because he was researching about entrepreneurship; farming is an incredibly low-margin business, so farmers have to be great entrepreneurs in order to stay solvent. The Farmer showed my eight-year-old how to feed a baby calf for a year so that he could sell the calf at market. My son earned $400 for that calf at a cattle auction, and I swear, we watched my sons self-confidence grow right there, in front of our eyes as he collected his check from the auctioneer. My five-year-old asked why he doesnt have a calf. The Farmer suggested that since the five-year-olds job is to collect eggs every evening, he could start and egg-selling business. Besides, my youngest sons talents are probably less on the animal husbandry side and more on the sales side. He caught people in the school parking lot and asked if they wanted to buy eggs. People asked questions: How much, how are the chickens raised, what color are the eggs. My son loved knowing the answers. Someone asked him what hes going to do with the money he earns. My son thought about it. Then he said, I guess Ill build a hot tub. Sold. He organized each carton so there were many different colored eggs. I told him to be very careful during the egg delivery because he wont be able to make as many sales if he breaks a lot of eggs. He took the advice very seriously: He got so good at selling eggs, that one day, he had a friend over and an egg order came in. My son told his friend that if he helps collect the eggs and deliver them, theyll earn $4 and the friend can have half the money. The friend said yes, they put on their superhero capes, and they were off to the chicken barn. So, after only a few weeks in the egg business, my son discovered what I think are the best parts of entrepreneurship: Building friendships, having fun, and taking joy in each small success. Watching my son makes me really believe that everyone can be an entrepreneur if the expectations for huge payout are small and the expectations of the joys of self-discovery are huge.
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