Title: Entrepreneurship and Business Strategy
1Entrepreneurship and Business Strategy
- One often hears, especially from younger, new
entrepreneurs, the exhortation - Go for it! You have nothing to lose now. So
what if it doesnt work out. You can do it
again. Why wait? - While the spirit this reflects is commendable
and there can be no substitute for doing, such
itchiness can be a mistake unless it is focused
on a solid opportunity. -
2Entrepreneurship and Business Strategy
- The Entrepreneurial Revolution
- During the last 30 years, America has unleashed
the most revolutionary generation the nation has
experienced since its founding in 1776. This new
generation of entrepreneurs (the E-Generation)
has altered permanently the economic and social
structure of this nation and the world, and has
set the entrepreneurial genetic code for future
generations.
3Entrepreneurship and Business Strategy
- The E-Generation and the Death of Brontosaurus
Capitalism - Over 95 percent of the wealth in America today
has been created by this E-Generation of
revolutionaries since 1980. By 1997, one of every
three households in America37 percent or 35
million householdsincludes someone who has had a
primary role in a new or emerging business. -
- The self-employed report the highest level of
personal satisfaction, challenge, and pride.
4Entrepreneurship and Business Strategy
- Entrepreneurship Americas Secret Economic
Weapon - Job Creation
- Since 1980, America has created over 34 million
new jobs (Europe had basically stagnant job
creation during this period), but the Fortune 500
lost over 5 million jobs. From 199396 alone,
eight million new jobs were created. Who creates
these jobs? Just 5 percent of the young and
fastest growing companies created 77 percent of
these jobs, and 15 percent of them accounted for
94 percent of all these net new jobs. - Fornune 500 employment
- 1980 (1/5 workforce) 1990 (1/14 workforce)
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6The steady upward trend in venture capital
continued in the second quarter of 2004 with
investments of 5.6 billion going into 761
companies. This figure compares to 5.0 billion
invested in the first quarter of 2004 and 5.4
billion in the fourth quarter of 2003. Over the
past two years, quarterly investing has drifted
upward at a deliberate pace, ranging from 4.3
billion to this quarters high of 5.6 billion.
7After a dip to 4.6 billion in the third quarter
of 2004, investing in the fourth quarter
rebounded to 5.3 billion. The annual investment
level fell every year beginning in 2001,
culminating in a six-year low of 18.9 billion in
2003. The increase in 2004 was largely
attributable to late stage investments jumping to
7.2 billion in 2004 compared to 4.9 billion in
2003.
8The Stock Market Explosion
9US Stock Markets Average Daily Trading
10The Poorer Get Richer
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