Can You Teach Entrepreneurship?
from the maybe...-but-not-always dept
Paul Kedrosky has a thought-provoking post, discussing how various entrepreneurship programs don't seem to be producing more entrepreneurs. He's finding that when he talks to people in those programs, they're often more interested in participating in the ecosystem around entrepreneurship (such as by becoming a venture capitalist) rather than being entrepreneurs themselves. To be honest, I don't find this all that surprising. Most entrepreneurs I know are pretty driven to start a company now and not wait around for however long it takes to go through a schooling program. If I didn't have the opportunity to tack on business school right after undergrad (unlike most b-schoolers), I doubt I would have gone back (and I spent way too much time in business school talking to others trying to convince them to start businesses). I don't think entrepreneurship programs are a bad thing, per se, but I'd imagine the real help is in assisting those already in the process of building a business, rather than studying to be entrepreneurs. Also, while Paul talks about the importance of "creating more entrepreneurs," I'm not sure that makes sense. I think the people who are meant to be entrepreneurs become entrepreneurs.Thank you for reading this Techdirt post. With so many things competing for everyone’s attention these days, we really appreciate you giving us your time. We work hard every day to put quality content out there for our community.
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Filed Under: education, entrepreneurship, learning
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I totally agree with you
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Better ways to do this
Taking money from an entrepreneur when they don't have any to spare is not a good program to start with. I am not advocating free consulting to entrepreneurs, I think they are intuitive enough to find the information on their own or can at least find someone to ask.
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Rejected
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That's why we need to teach practical courses in H.S.
Germany learned the hard way. You can't have your populace as a whole seek to stay in school until they're 30, retire when they're 50, and actually compete in the world.
As far as the need to actually teach entrepeneurship, you either already have that spirit or you never will. It's like spending all your time learning a tool BUT never actually using it. What good is a tool that is so hard to learn, it never produces anything?. Entrepenuership is all about having the personal discipline and self-motivation to strike out on one's own and make their own way. If you're waiting on someone else to make you do it, you might as well just be satisfied with the lower-middle income government "clerk" job watching the clock for he next 30 years.
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Its a gift
You can't teach art either but don't get me going on that one ....
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Re: Rejected
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Re: Rejected
Hmm...
The only thing I can think of is that we just got hit with a massive spam attack (about 1,000 comments that got through the filters in the last couple of hours -- something we've never seen before), and a bunch of us were going through and deleting the spam. I know I saw your comment in the middle of it all and made sure *not* to delete it as spam, but maybe someone else accidentally did? Yikes. I hope not, but it's possible (to give you an idea, our comment admin shows 500 emails at a time, and 486 of them were spam, which is awful -- our filter catches probably 99.999% of the regular spam normally, so this was extraordinary). So we scrambled to delete the spam, and I'm worried that maybe yours got caught in the sweep. :(
I feel awful about it, but could you maybe repost your original comment?
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Re: Re: Rejected
In place of staid agreement with Mike, I felt inspired to make an entertaining parody. Well, I thought it was amusing.
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Re: Re: Rejected
It was the sort of comment that an overly fastidious moderator would reject as frivolous, hence me wondering if you were raising the quality bar for commenters.
I'd simply parodied a hypothetical tutor's welcome to their students highlighting the irony of their effective self-deselection from the necessary attributes of entrepreneurship (implying that rather than entrepreneurs they were gullible saps being soaked of their spare cash). They were also invited to enrol in follow-up courses, e.g. 'An introduction to self-development' and 'How to run a start-up on a shoestring'.
It wasn't exactly a masterpiece of humour. Someone else can write a better script.
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Could barely wait to get through Undergrad
12 years on and we're still going strong.
I never got around to taking a business or economics course, and have no intention of going back to school. I surround myself with people who give me advice, but credit school mostly with giving me the critical thinking skills I need to evaluate that advice and select which bits I agree with and which bits fit my goals.
Hardest lesson: Not all advice is free, some of it is very, very expensive when it's wrong.
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Teaching the willing
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I think that planting the entrepreneurial seed at an early age is the key to creating more entrepreneurs.
For me that time was around twelve years old when my father allowed me to sell excess produce from our garden door to door and keep the money. It made a big impression on me. At nineteen I started my first business doing commercial sound systems for churches, VFW and similar organizations.
Ronald J. Riley,
Speaking only on my own behalf.
President - www.PIAUSA.org - RJR at PIAUSA.org
Executive Director - www.InventorEd.org - RJR at InvEd.org
Senior Fellow - www.PatentPolicy.org
President - Alliance for American Innovation
Caretaker of Intellectual Property Creators on behalf of deceased founder Paul Heckel
Washington, DC
Direct (810) 597-0194 - (202) 318-1595 - 9 am to 8 pm EST.
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Re: I totally agree with you
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Entrepreneurship
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Re: Entrepreneurship
I have taken entrepreneurship courses (after I'd made one or two stabs at starting a business myself), but on the whole found them to be counterproductive. The reason? They are extremely discouraging, and tend to focus on all the reasons that startups can fail.
This makes sense from an academic point of view, of course -- understanding what it takes to succeed is really understanding what it takes to fail. But I really think it harms the fundamental requirement to be a successful entrepreneur: blind, insane drive.
It's like falling in love. Yes, most relationships end in heartbreak and odds are that any given new one is no exception. But it's worth being delusional enough to think that this one is the exception, because sooner or later you'll be right.
Starting and running a business does require certain skills that can (and should) be learned, of course, but I argue that one should damn-it-all and start the business first, then pick up the skills as you go. Otherwise, it's too easy to never start it at all.
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Re: Not totally
And you can decrease enthusiasm for those who shouldn't do it - and that may be a useful service, too.
A bunch of case studies can help entrepreneurs prepare for what they will face. Tools such as (erghh) how to patent, how to register as an S-corp (or whatever), how to hire, how to structure ownership, etc, are all very useful.
But I agree with Mike's post that the most entrepreneurial won't be in that classroom. However, many *future* entrepreneurs may well be. We all go through different phases in our lives. We're ready for different things at different times. I went to B school a year before Mike, and at the time was not interested in starting a biz. I wanted to cut my chops in a big tech biz. That done, four years later in 2001, I started up my consulting business.
Now, I help entrepreneurs, and it's clear that "on the go" training fits well with their modus operandi.
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Re: Better ways to do this
We often consult for equity.
Often, staff from my firm will take a (temporary) card-carrying role in the startup (VP marketing), because the small ones need more than advice - they need staff and deliverables.
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Re:
It feels...kinda uncomfortable. Like sliding down the rope in gym class.
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Re: Re:
Like TechDirt and the related businesses I also did some consulting work for large businesses. That was many years ago. I learned very early, actually in junior and high school when I was hanging at at General Motors Institute (now Kettering). This was in the sixties and GMI's facilities were phenomenal. I learned Algol on the Tech Center's GE mainframe, followed by FORTRAN on an IBM (1130?). My first exposure to a Laser was there and many years later I had the pleasure of getting to know the inventor, Gordon Gould. He was a very pleasant man, perhaps in part because he suffered thirty years of abusive litigation at the hands of patent pirates. His case is a perfect example of why the speed of the East Texas court is so important to independent inventors.
One thing which the professor mentors instilled in me was not to every become an employee of GM or other large companies. GMI treated me very well, and years later GM was one of a handful of companies who ripped off my mono-rail control technology collectively to the tune of about 30-40 million bucks. They also played a big role in persecuting Gordon Gould for thirty years.
Ronald J. Riley,
I am speaking only on my own behalf.
Affiliations:
President - www.PIAUSA.org - RJR act PIAUSA.org
Executive Director - www.InventorEd.org - RJR at InvEd.org
Senior Fellow - www.PatentPolicy.org
President - Alliance for American Innovation
Caretaker of Intellectual Property Creators on behalf of deceased founder Paul Heckel
Washington, DC
Direct (810) 597-0194 / (202) 318-1595 - 9 am to 8 pm EST.
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Re: Re: I totally agree with you
Setting up a business without help from a qualified attorney and CPA is penny wise and pound foolish. It is likely to cost far more to fix the mistakes, perhaps hundreds fold than it costs to do it right the first time.
It does make a great deal of sense to study the legal issues in order to use the professional's time wisely. www.Nolo.com is an excellent source of books. A very good web site is www.tenonline.org and every aspiring entrepreneur should take advantage of www.SCORE.org.
Ronald J. Riley,
I am speaking only on my own behalf.
Affiliations:
President - www.PIAUSA.org - RJR act PIAUSA.org
Executive Director - www.InventorEd.org - RJR at InvEd.org
Senior Fellow - www.PatentPolicy.org
President - Alliance for American Innovation
Caretaker of Intellectual Property Creators on behalf of deceased founder Paul Heckel
Washington, DC
Direct (810) 597-0194 / (202) 318-1595 - 9 am to 8 pm EST.
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Re: Re: Re:
You gotta keep it black or white. I prefer to demonize people with no shades of grey.
Oh well. Next time.
Derek.
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