Entrepreneurship: Dark Side Revealed
Introduction
Every
entrepreneur dreams of becoming a leader for others, has an earnest need of
creating a unique identity for him and a compelling dream to create a better
future. There are exactly no two same entrepreneur. Some have been brought up
in loving families, others might have survived abusive ones. Some are married,
others being single. Many are brilliant students while others are incorrigible
cut-ups. Over-all everyone has a healthy tolerance for risk, appetite for change
and challenge, and strength from important matter in life which is not money
always.
There are
many sources of difference like educational, cultural, social environment and
family tradition. But in the end, it's their overconfidence that drives them to
be entrepreneurs. The
super-achiever entrepreneur get up each morning for two primary reasons: (1) to
improve the very meaning of life (2) to perform this in a manner which reflects
they are "the best and the brightest."
There's
a even one more reason to it. Many successful entrepreneurs become coaches and
advisers for the next generation of go-getters in their fields. A decent return
on investment is acceptable to a normal person but what they really want is realization
of vision --even if it means fighting through rejection and failure.
There
are four characteristics that may hold disruptive implications for
entrepreneurs:
- Overbearing need for control
- Sense of distrust
- Overriding desire for success
- Unrealistic optimism
Relevance
It is
very important to understand for a future entrepreneur what it takes to
overcome those obstacles which would provide a clearer view of their own
chances of entrepreneurial success. Entrepreneurial personality is hard to hear
but a handful of core attributes can explain the obvious differences between entrepreneurs
and the rest. These differences are so vital that our economy depends on them.
Some
entrepreneurial characteristics when taken to their extreme exhibit a ‘dark
side’ of entrepreneurship which could result in destructive behaviours. The
rewards, successes, and achievements of entrepreneurs are a great one to
listen. However, there is a ‘dark’ side of entrepreneurship. This
entrepreneurial profile may or may not have a destructive line that exists
within the energetic drive of successful entrepreneurs. There are a number of
major traits that characterize this dark side.
Need for control
Entrepreneurs
are driven by a strong desire to control both their venture and their destiny.
They have a preoccupied notion with controlling everything. Entrepreneur’s
obsession for control and autonomy may cause entrepreneurs to work in
structured situations only when they have created the structure on their terms.
It is as such in India entrepreneurs are either early entrants in 20s or in
late 30s. The notion of family commitment is very strong.
Sense of distrust
Entrepreneurs
try to anticipate and act on developments that others will recognize too late.
This state can result in their focusing on trivial things, causing them to lose
sight of reality, distort reasoning and logic and take destructive actions.
E-commerce boom is a classical example of this nature. In India, today there
are numerous E-commerce companies but barring the few top ones all are in
losses.
Desire for success
The
entrepreneur’s ego is involved in the desire for success. He rises up as a
defiant person. He creatively acts to succeed and takes pride in demonstrating
that success. There lies the seeds of possible destructiveness. It leads to the
danger that the individual will become more important than the venture itself. It's
their overconfidence in their ability. Their risk avoidance is superseded by
their confidence.
External optimism
Entrepreneurs
maintain a high level of enthusiasm that gives off an external optimism that
allows others to believe in them during rough periods. However, this optimistic
attitude can lead to a fantasy approach to the business. A self-deceptive state
may arise in which the entrepreneur ignores trends, facts and reports and
deludes him- or herself into thinking everything will turn out fine.
Entrepreneurs
with low capabilities and high optimism enter ventures, they're likely to fail
in the end because they have overestimated their abilities. For example, look
at the airline industry. There's much uncertainty, and it's volatile. Still, we
see a lot of entrants into it because they think they understand the industry.
They think they have a higher ability then the other guys. They say, "I
will be the next Southwest Airlines." Of course, [the venture] is a
failure for the entrepreneur, but the average person benefits. Overconfidence
encourages [entrepreneurs] to enter an uncertain industry, and their low
ability in it may lead to failure. But without that, the average person
wouldn't enjoy the creativity of the entrepreneur and their innovations that
lead to lower prices due to competition
Stress
In
order to achieve their goals, however, entrepreneurs are willing to tolerate
stress (see STRESS). It is important to recognize four causes of
entrepreneurial stress: (1) loneliness; (2) immersion in business; (3) people
problems; and (4) the need to achieve.
Risk
Starting
or buying a new business involves risk, and the higher the rewards, the greater
the risk entrepreneurs usually face. This is why entrepreneurs need to evaluate
risk very carefully. There are a number of different types of risk faced by
entrepreneurs.
These can be grouped into four basic areas: (1) financial risk;
(2) career risk; (3) family and social risk; and (4) psychic risk.
Conventional
wisdom assumes entrepreneurs have great risk tolerance compared to the rest of
us, in controlled experiments that tracked attitudes to risk, we consistently
found that they aren't really that different. In some cases, they're even more
risk averse, and yet they continue to bear risk. Entrepreneurs, like everybody
else, hate uncontrollable risks, but on the other hand, they're overconfident
in their own abilities -- they think they can control their abilities in a
random drawing of people. They think they're above the average. Entrepreneurs
appear to be risk seeking with respect to their ability. For example, if there
are two industries and one has a high cost of ability uncertainty and the other
has a low cost of ability uncertainty, the entrepreneur will choose the first
case because of his overconfidence
HEALTHY EGO : A Different Perspective
Entrepreneurs
need a very healthy ego to succeed. Many might be self-effacing and
humble. But there still has to be a deep-seeded, positive sense of self and
ego. Few might call it drive. That is a part of it. One must have courage and
belief in his own abilities. Natural leadership qualities and a desire to lead
are driven by ego. Without a healthy ego entrepreneurs don’t have the necessary
internal reserves to survive the daily rigors of startup life.
But they
generally are not attached to huge egos without the parallel humbleness that
should come with it and the recognition that any real success involves multiple
factors. It’s very rare that one person can take all the credit (or all the
blame). A successful person openly recognizes that other factors impacted their
success like luck, for example. Entrepreneurs like other people have healthy
ego, the kind of ego that helped drive that person to succeed without putting
them over the edge.
They
are the types of people whom people want to work with. They believe they would
be successful no matter what. They don’t flaunt that on a regular basis. They
acknowledge others for their success. On a contrary when they’re not
successful, they accept it whole heartedly and just move on.
Egos
do get in the way of success. It becomes ugly. It gets personal. That’s when
ego is at its worse. Phrases like “he said, she said” or “that can’t
work together”. Egos at that level need to be put aside for the greater good.
There
are only two possibilities according to these souls. They either believe they
can be hugely successful or they don’t. If they don’t they try to analyse
the reason for the same. It might just be there, a tiny spark of ego just
waiting to explode. If you do believe you can be hugely successful, that’s
great, you’ve got the makings of an entrepreneur. But don’t get caught in your
own ego. Don’t get overwhelmed by your “greatness”. Use that inherent quality
of ego (which too few people truly possess) and leverage it. Hilariously there
are entrepreneurial ventures even to solve this problem. One of them is foundrs.com.
They have developed a Co-Founder Equity Calculator to help startups to resolve
on the issues of CEO selection among the founder members.
CONCLUSION
It is
not possible for everyone to start a business. Keeping aside the perceived
risks to your personal finances, lifestyle and career, some folks find it
difficult to cope with the thought of failure. Damaging one’s personal brand
(basically, the ego) is a devastating thought. But it can be managed before,
during, and even after your entrepreneurial experience.
The
primary concern for most non-entrepreneurs is the fear of failure. If they fail
they would become known as the guy who couldn’t cut it on his own. They are
worried that others will view them as an utter failure. They might lose whatever
credibility they had before. They think that their old industry contacts may
question their competence. Even finding a job after failure in business might
be difficult.
The fact
is that going out on your own is one of the most difficult decisions one can
make. You are putting yourself on the line for a shot at a better life. Most
people will respect that, even if you fail. Those that don’t are probably
envious because they don’t have the spine to do it themselves. For those who
choose to think less of you for striving for independence, just remember that
they likely have a tendency to cut everyone down for one thing or another –
somehow it just makes them feel better about themselves.
Most
people will be impressed at your willingness to try. In general, entrepreneurs
hold high esteem in our society, even those that don’t quite succeed the first
time out. It is important to avoid the mistake of disappearing once you commit
to your startup full-time. One should be in touch with their professional
contacts, including employers, colleagues, and clients. Not only can these
relationships provide references for your new venture, but they will keep you
connected to the outside world. Most fear of failure is in our own heads, and
maintaining communication with others who believe in your abilities and ideas
can go a long way in mitigating the risk to your personal brand.
The
trick to coping with possible failure comes down to how you handle it. For
successful entrepreneurs, failure is good news – now they know what not to do.
A vast majority of the most successful business owners failed multiple times
before finding the right formula. Fortunately, much of the information they had
to learn by trial and error is now readily available to help you succeed that
much sooner.
If
your first startup does fail, do not let it destroy your will for independence.
If anything, a business failure should provide enough valuable lessons to send
you eagerly back to the lab to get to work on the next idea. If you have to go
back to work for someone else, the relationships you maintained during your
startup should be good references for finding a decent job. Those that
supported you likely respect the characteristics that make you an entrepreneur
and see their value in the workplace.
The
best defense against ego or personal brand damage is just not to fail. True
entrepreneurs are rabidly risk-averse – they will do whatever it takes to
remove risk from their ventures. The more work you put into the front end of
your business idea, the more you increase your odds of success.
REFRENCES
1. Entrepreneurship
A South Asian Perspective By Mr. D.F.Kuratko and Mr. T.V.Rao
2. Entrepreneurial
Perspective by South-Western, a
division of Thomson Learning.
Websites like www.foundrs.com.