Entrepreneur
An entrepreneur is a person who makes a business to benefit from an opportunity, rather than working as an employee. Entrepreneurs play a key role in any economy. These are people who have the skills and initiative necessary to anticipate current and future needs and bring good new ideas to market or sell
Entrepreneurs who are successful in taking on the risks of a startup are rewarded with profits, fame and continued growth opportunities. Those who fail suffer losses and become less important in the markets. Many fail, lose money, and close the business.[1] The entrepreneur assumes the risks and rewards of the venture and is usually the sole proprietor, a partner or the owner of the business or majority of shares in an incorporated venture. As the main decision maker the entrepreneur monitors and controls the business activities.
According to Joseph Schumpeter (1883 - 1950) entrepreneurs regard profit as a standard for measuring achievement or success. He discovered that they:
- Value self-reliance;
- Strive for distinction through excellence;
- Are highly optimistic;
- Favor challenges of medium risk.
Entrepreneurship is sometimes categorized among the factors of production, along with land/natural resources, labor and capital. An entrepreneur combines these to manufacture goods or provide services. He or she typically creates a business plan, hires labor, acquires resources and financing, and provides leadership and management for the business.
Entrepreneurs commonly face many obstacles when building their business. Investors are reluctant to risk their capital on something new, since the majority of new businesses fail and the owners lose their money. Some investors specialize in venture capital and many entrepreneurs get more capital by bootstrapping. While some entrepreneurs are lone players struggling to get small businesses off the ground on a shoestring, others seek partners who have greater access to capital and other resources.
Definitions of Entrepreneurship
Economists have never had a consistent definition of "entrepreneur" (the word "entrepreneur" comes from the French verb entreprendre, meaning "to undertake"). Though the concept of an entrepreneur existed and was known for centuries, the classical and neoclassical economists left entrepreneurs out of their formal models:
They assumed that perfect information would be known to fully rational actors, leaving no room for risk-taking or discovery. It wasn't until the middle of the 20th century that economists seriously attempted to incorporate entrepreneurship into their models.
Three thinkers were central to the inclusion of entrepreneurs: Joseph Schumpeter, Frank Knight and Israel Kirzner. Schumpeter suggested that entrepreneurs – not just companies – were responsible for the creation of new things in the search of profit. Knight focused on entrepreneurs as the bearers of uncertainty and believed they were responsible for risk premiums in financial markets. Kirzner thought of entrepreneurship as a process that led to discovery.[2]
Entrepreneur Media
Emil Jellinek-Mercedes (1853–1918), here at the steering wheel of his Phoenix Double-Phaeton
In 2012, Ambassador-at-Large for Global Women's Issues Melanne Verveer greets participants in an African Women's Entrepreneurship Program at the State Department in Washington, D.C.
Plaque in London commemorating Jewish entrepreneur Sir Jack Cohen who in 1919 founded Tesco, the largest supermarket chain in the UK.
References
- ↑ (in en-GB) Check if you are an entrepreneur. - Untamed Potential. 2017-08-28. http://untamedpotential.com/check-if-you-are-an-entrepreneur/. Retrieved 2017-11-22.
- ↑ Staff, Investopedia (2006-05-01) (in en-US). Entrepreneur. https://www.investopedia.com/terms/e/entrepreneur.asp. Retrieved 2017-11-22.