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Signs of an Entrepreneur

Started by Perfect, 2011-04-08 10:27

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Perfect

Do you have the right personality type to successfully implement your own business?



You need a business fire in your belly to start a business and make it succeed. Not everyone has it.



How do you know if you have what it takes to start a business? There is really no way to know for sure. But we do find things in common between the emotional and family fabric of people ready to consider a business project.



It is not necessary to seven of these categories to be a good candidate for entrepreneurship. But it probably would not hurt. In general, the more you have in common with these characteristics, most are likely to be willing to try to go it alone.



1. You come from a line of people who could not work for someone else. I do not mean that in a negative way. People who are successful in establishing their own business tend to have parents who worked for themselves. It is usually easier to get a job with a company to start his own business, people that the strike on their own often the particular example of a parent to watch.



2.You back "a lousy employee. No need to sugarcoat it. People who start their own businesses tend to have been fired from or quit more than one job. I'm not saying they were dismissed for lack of work or moves from one job to a better paying one. It has been asked to leave, or leave before they could fire him. Think of it as the market tells you that the only person who can effectively motivate and manage yourself is.



3.You see more of a definition of "job security. "I'm very envious of the few people I know who have stayed with one employer for 25 or 30 years. They are very safe. But how many people do you know who are able to stay with a company so long?" In an economy rapidly changing job security can be terribly fleeting.



4. You've gone so far as it can go or not go anywhere. Sometimes the motivation to start a new venture comes from having reached the top of the stack where it is, looking around and saying, " What's next ? "Early success can be wonderful, but sometimes early retirement can lead to energetic and motivated people totally crazy.



5. You've done the market research now. Not even talk to me about your great business idea if you have not put the time to find out if there is a market for your product or service. As the people behind any number of Internet companies will not tell, "cool" does not necessarily translate into "profitable." Do not bother its construction if you have not noticed if there's a good chance customers will come .



6. You support your family. Starting a business is stressful at best. Try it without the support of your spouse or other family members or friends significant, would probably be unbearable.



7. You know you can not do it alone. You may be highlighted in the promotion of a business. Perhaps love running the financial side of the business. It could be someone who starts a business because you have unique creative or technical expertise to create a product.



Any of the above is possible, but it is unlikely that you will excel in all these tasks - or all of the tasks involved in managing any business. Forget what she does one thing. You will need some help at some point.



The desire to get help - you have employees, partners or consultants for those areas that are not an expert - is an indicator of likely future success. "No successful entrepreneur has achieved alone," development consultant Ernesto Sirolli writes in "Waves From the Zambezi." "The person who is able to get support from others is the best chance of success."




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