Ask HN: Is Entrepreneurship WRONG for me?
I've been doing a lot of thinking lately. When I look around at the successful entrepreneurs, I feel like most of them never really intended to be a business owner. They never set out with THAT goal. Instead, becoming a business owner appears to have been a side-effect of pursuing something that they were intrinsically interested in.
To that end, it would seem as though I am not a good candidate for entrepreneurship. I am deliberately searching for, and trying to start, a business of some kind. It's the business that is my goal, instead of the side effect. I wonder more and more, if I have it completely backwards, and if I truly have a snowballs chance in hell of starting a company, as a result.
I know there are many founders on HN, so I would love to get some perspective from you all (or anyone else). Am I crazy? Should I abandon my direct efforts and instead let the wind blow where it may?
7 comments
[ 3.6 ms ] story [ 26.8 ms ] threadOn the contrary, I know so many people that are not that interested in owning a business. They stumble on some sort of idea, but end up failing because they aren't willing to sacrifice and put the work into actually running it.
A business is tough. If you aren't interested in it, you won't make it in the long-run.
Sadly, what interests me is constantly in flux. It's hard to form a business around ideas that are fleeting.
1. Wealth / Retirement 2. Product ownership 3. Autonomy
After just writing those out, it's clear that what I really want is FREEDOM. I realize that's WHY I want to be a business owner. Because what I really want, is the FREEDOM to do what I want.
Took 10-15 years. Found the right business opportunity. The job itself did not look that interesting, but played on my strengths/skills, and looked like a serious business that could make money. Got it going. Liked being on my own. Liked growing the business, servicing my clients. Found the core part of the business annoying, the tech part interesting.
Still going at it, many years later. Very happy since, very happy now.
Don't abandon your direct efforts, let the wind blow where it may. Not incompatible.
Finding that balance is perhaps the hard part. I don't want to let me lack of owning a business now, be a source of unhappiness. Yet, if I let myself become complacent, I may struggle to ever start a business.
I had money in the bank to live 12 months without salary, because i always wanted to start my own business, and money helps.
When the opportunity arised, i was ready. It worked out, i got lucky. If it did not, my reasoning was that 12 months later, i would get a better job because of the experience and lessons learned.