Title: What is an Entrepreneur
1What is an Entrepreneur?
2Andrew Carnegie
- Son of Scottish Immigrants who worked in cotton
mills - Worked his way up from telegraph operator to
superintendent of military railroads telegraphs - Founded Carnegie Steel which vertically
integrated with other industries to become giant
U.S. Steel - Gave lots of money to charitable organizations
such as libraries and universities
3Sir Richard Branson
- Started selling discounted records out of the
trunk of his car - Record business would become Virgin Records
which included both retail and recording labels - Founded Virgin Airways, Virgin Mobile, Virgin
trains, etc.
4Walt Disney
- Sold drawings laugh-o-grams in high school to
make extra money - Pooled money to start a Hollywood cartoon studio
- Developed many characters including Mickey Mouse
and some of feature length cartoons - Studio became entertainment empire including
theme parks
5Mary Kay Ash
- After long career in direct sales she decided to
write a book to help women in businessended up
with a dream plan - Used 5000 life savings to start Mary Kay
Cosmetics - Company became among largest Cosmetics sellers
provided women with a part time business
opportunity
6Bill Gates
- Dropped out of Harvard to work on BASIC
programming language which would become
foundation of Microsoft - Created operating system MS-DOS and the Windows
for the IBM computer - Among worlds richest people, he started the Bill
Melinda Gates Foundation
7Steve Jobs
- College dropout who founded started business
making computers in his parents garage - Founded and managed Apple whos Macintosh
Computers were the first to use a Graphical User
Interface (GUI) - Interest in graphics resulted in the founding of
Pixar from the graphics division and Apple
8Richard W. Sears
- Sold watches at railroad stations
- Moved watch company to Chicago where he could
take advantage of railroad and communication
systems to centrally manage his company - First mail order catalog that sold directly to
peoples homes.
9Russell Simmons
- Started managing local hip-hop artists in New
York - Founded Def Jam records which mass marketed hip
hop for the first time - Expanded company into Rush Communications which
includes clothing, movie, television, magazines,
etc.
10Sam Walton
- Son of Oklahoma farmers during Great Depression
- Opened a variety store that kept prices low by
cutting out the middleman and buying bulk from
wholesalers - Large Walmart stores had strategically
centralized distribution centers and computerized
inventory system
11Oprah Winfrey
- Poor single teenage mother got career start as
local news co-anchor - Talk show AM Chicago became the Oprah Winfrey
Show which became most popular daytime talk show
at time when almost all shows were anchored by
white males - Adopted less tabloid style and tackled womens
issues - Developed production company which includes film,
magazines, radio, cable, etc.
12- Who else do we think of when we think about the
prototypical entrepreneur? - What do these people have in common?
13Common Assumptionsup by the bootstraps
- SHANE, SCOTT. THE ILLUSIONS OF ENTREPRENEURSHIP.
2008. P.1 - Theres the story about the penniless
high-school dropout who comes to America with 10
in his pocket and starts a construction company
that makes him a multimillionaire, or theres the
one about the engineers who invent an Internet
phone, get some venture capital, and build a
billion-dollar company
14Horatio Alger Story
- 19th century Unitarian Minister turned dime
novelist - Rags to Riches stories about young poor men who
work had to achieve success
15Common Assumptionsa rare breed
- SHANE, SCOTT. THE ILLUSIONS OF ENTREPRENEURSHIP.
2008. P.3 - Our myths tell us that entrepreneurs are a rare
breed, a kind of genius who is born, not made. - BARBARA BIRD, PROFESSOR AT THE KOGOOD SCHOOL OF
BUSINESS AT AMERICAN UNIVERSITY
16Common AssumptionsThe Engine of the Economy
- TOZZI, JOHN. THE ENTREPRENEURSHIP MYTH.
HTTP//WWW.BUSINESSWEEK.COM/SMALLBIZ/CONTENT/JAN20
08/SB20080123_809271.HTM. JANUARY 23, 2008. - Entrepreneurship creates jobs and drives the
U.S. economy, making smart founders and savvy
investors rich in the process
17Assumption Solution to unemployment / economic
downturn.
- SENATOR MURRAY. JULY 14, 2008. SENATE REPORT
110-418 110TH CONGRESS, 2D SESSION 110 S. RPT.
418 - To promote economic development, create jobs
and increase housing capacity the Committee
has provided an increase of 12,000,000 for
for the purpose of conducting economic
development and entrepreneurship activities .
This funding should be used for such activities
as the establishment of revolving loan programs,
business planning and development and for
increasing affordable housing.
18ASSUMPTION entrepreneurs tend to be high-tech
and innovative
- STEVEN A. GEDEONM PROFESSOR OF BIZ_at_ RYERSON U.
19ASSUMPTION many entrepreneurs drop out of school
and get rich quick
20Shane Summarizes our Assumptions
- Common sense notions about entrepreneurship
- America leads the world in entrepreneurial
activity - Most start-ups are tech firms
- Most start-ups get venture capital
- Immigrants start most new businesses
- Business owners tend to be wealthier than
non-business owners - Entrepreneurs can rely on charisma and networking
to achieve success
21Characteristics
- GADBALL VIDEO CHARACTERISTICS OF ENTREPRENEURS
/ WHAT IS AN ENTREPRENERUR
22America The Land of the Entrepreneur
- Are we in the midst of the most entrepreneurial
era in American History? - Do we assume that small business is on the rise
in the U.S.? - Do Americans start more businesses than people in
other parts of the world?
23America The Land of the Entrepreneur
- Premise small businesses are not engines for job
growth. - Premise entrepreneurship is America not on the
rise. - Premise the United States is less
entrepreneurial than we might think. - Why do countries with higher wages and living
standards have lower rates of entrepreneurship?
24- Premise Most American start-ups are not in
business hot spots such as Silicone Valley - Premise Start-ups do not tend to be high-tech or
particularly innovative. - Premise Availability of venture capital does not
increase business start-ups in an area
25Summary Key Myths and Realities from Chapter 1
- America isnt becoming a more entrepreneurial
place the rate at which new start-ups are
created in this country is actually declining - The United States is not one of the most
entrepreneurial countries in the world - People are more likely to start companies in
poorer and more agricultural places than in
places that are richer and more reliant on
manufacturing - People in places with high rates of unemployment
are more likely to start businesses - Capital availability doesnt increase the number
of start-ups in an area
26Who Becomes and Entrepreneur?
- Premise Entrepreneurs are not a rare breed
27The Myth of Entrepreneurship
- Why should we be concerned about the common
narrative of entrepreneurship vs. the empirical
reality?