Because you have an idea for a product/service that you think people will want/need enough that they'll pay for it?
Because you think you can create the product/service before you go bankrupt, and that you can then sell it for a price the market can bear that will allow you to make a profit?
It's not just a coin flip, which is the impression you get looking at statistics too much.
You may have a vision for creating a product or service that you believe requires starting a company, and you believe you have a compelling business model that will sustain the company. Failure may happen, but the drive for getting that product or service out there may overcome fears of failure.
The world may be a different place had Steve Wozniak decided to remain an engineer at Hewlett Packard's calculator division instead of creating a company to sell the computer he worked on as a side project, though it did take a lot of convincing from Steve Jobs.
It can still be fun and rewarding when it doesn't succeed. The fact that it will eventually end doesn't mean it wasn't worthwhile or impactful. "the journey is more important than the destination" and all that
10 comments
[ 3.9 ms ] story [ 24.9 ms ] threadBecause you think you can create the product/service before you go bankrupt, and that you can then sell it for a price the market can bear that will allow you to make a profit?
It's not just a coin flip, which is the impression you get looking at statistics too much.
The world may be a different place had Steve Wozniak decided to remain an engineer at Hewlett Packard's calculator division instead of creating a company to sell the computer he worked on as a side project, though it did take a lot of convincing from Steve Jobs.
Don't expect the first one to be a home run.
Remember OpenFeint? the founder of that failed successfully into an acquisition which later on the founder made something called Discord.
You can always try again.
-- D. Fogelberg