Entrepreneur are born not made

sajaleahsan 2,574 views 3 slides Dec 04, 2018
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About This Presentation

A basic Idea of the statement "Entrepreneur are born or made" Its my own theory .


Slide Content

7/22/2018
Sajal Eahsan Dip
ID No: 20151112022
Accoynting & Information Systems
Bangabandhu Sheikh Mujibur Rahman
Science & Technology University,
Gopalganj.


Entrepreneur are bore not made
Submitted By

Assiginment On

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Entrepreneur are bore or made



This discussion has been done
by many people for the time Bing.
But there hasn’t any absolute
answer about this topic. But as
with many of these types of
questions, the answer obviously
lies somewhere in the middle.

Jamal Edwards, founder of SB.TV, an online youth-oriented broadcaster says that it’s a matter
of nature versus nurture. He reckoned that an entrepreneur was 5% born with innate abilities and
95% made by life experiences. Here Edwards said he worked at HMV when at school and was
frustrated by the chain of command that separated his ideas from implementation.
On the other hand Moira Vetter, founder and CEO of Modo Modo Agency
strongly disagree about the statement that Entrepreneur are made. As example
she has mentioned some name to justify her statement. The satemnt of her article
are as follows. “There are kids like Jayden Wheeler and Amaya Selmon,
founders of Kool Kidz Sno Konez and, at 12 and 11 years old, the youngest
food truck owners in Memphis. Or Leanna Archer, 17, who was just nine when
she founded a hair products business that today posts annual revenues of
$100,000+. Or Lizzie Marie Likness, 11, who founded a growing cooking
empire with a website she launched at just six years old. Or 12-year-old Keno
Lucas who was even younger when he started his first online business at five—
and launched a microfund for kid entrepreneurs with his mom at just 12 that’s
still going strong today”. Alveston, Texas’s own Madison Robinson’s Fish
Flops apparel business has grown to over $1 million in sales, putting its 15-year-old founder and
CEO in the spotlight.
But Doug Richards, founder of School for Start-ups and former investor on the TV show,
Dragon’s Den, went Totally Backward. “I wholly reject the idea that entrepreneurs are born,” he
said. “It would be one of the most limiting ideas and it would be a real shame if it was true. To my
mind, that we’re even still discussing whether an entrepreneur is born or made is sad.” People have
Nick D'Aloisio recently
sold his company,
Summly, to Yahoo! for $30
million.
What has made us really successful is this
idea that we’re not building a company.
What we’re doing is solving a problem.
Shivani Siroya,
Founder of Tala

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an enormous capacity for change, he added. As they grow and undertake new tasks, they become
more confident. There is also a significant amount of information that can be learned through
lessons. And as that knowledge expands, other intangibles such as ability to calculate risk,
perseverance, resilience and desire also grows, he said.


Reference:

01. Forbes.com
02. Frazierdeeter.com
03. Garyvaynerchuk.com