BY Joe
Robinson | January 10, 2014|
Enter "entrepreneurial
traits" into Google, and the menu of frequent searches will complete the
query with "... of Steve Jobs" and "... of Bill Gates,"
among others. These are the forces of nature that spring to mind for most of us
when we think of entrepreneurs--iconic figures who seemed to burst from the
womb with enterprise in their DNA.
They inspire, but they also
intimidate. What if you weren't born with Jobs' creative genius or Gates' iron
will? There's good news for the rest of us: Entrepreneurs can be guided to
success by harnessing crucial attributes. Scholars, business experts and
venture capitalists say entrepreneurs can emerge at any stage of life and from
any realm, and they come in all personality types and with any grade point
average.
Contrary to conventional wisdom, you
don't have to be Type A--that is, an overachieving, hyperorganized
workaholic--or an extrovert to launch a successful business. "Type A's
don't take the risks to be entrepreneurs," says Elana Fine, managing
director of the University of Maryland's Dingman Center for Entrepreneurship,
adding that the same goes for straight-A students. "Very often it's C
students who become entrepreneurs."
However, the best entrepreneurs do
share a collection of characteristics, from tenacity to the ability to tolerate
risk, that are crucial to a successful venture. An analysis of 23 research
studies published under the title "The Big Five Personality Dimensions and
Entrepreneurial Status" found that entrepreneurs have different personality
traits than corporate managers, scoring far higher on traits such as openness
to experience (curiosity, innovation) and conscientiousness (self-discipline,
motivation) and considerably lower on neuroticism, which allows them to better
tolerate stress.
Tenacity
Starting a business is an
ultramarathon. You have to be able to live with uncertainty and push through a
crucible of obstacles for years on end. Entrepreneurs who can avoid saying
uncle have a better chance of finding their market and outlasting their inevitable
mistakes. This trait is known by many names--perseverance, persistence,
determination, commitment, resilience--but it's really just old-fashioned
stick-to-it-iveness.
"Tenacity is No. 1," says
Mike Colwell, who runs Plains Angels, an Iowa angel investor forum, and the
accelerator Business Innovation Zone for the Greater Des Moines Partnership.
"So much of entrepreneurship is dealing with repeated failure. It happens
many times each week."
When failure happens, you have to
start all over again. Jett McCandless was a partner in a fast-growing freight
logistics operation. But the rapid expansion triggered mistakes, including an
invoicing glitch that left the company without enough cash reserves. The
business had to be sold for a fraction of its value. McCandless didn't agree to
the terms and was fired. He lost the company house and car and wound up moving
into his girlfriend's apartment. "It was a very tough time," he
recalls. "I came very close to going bankrupt."
He went on 25 job interviews and got
offers for logistics positions paying $200,000 and up. But McCandless, who grew
up in Section 8 public housing, wondered, Should I take a comfortable,
secure job, or could I build something better? "I was afraid that
failure could define the rest of my life, and I wasn't going to let that
happen," he says.
So rather than accept one of those
big offers, he started over, founding a new company, CarrierDirect, in Chicago.
Hamstrung by the noncompete contract with his previous firm, he created a
wholly new space in the logistics field. Instead of matching shippers with
truckers, he switched to consulting, providing marketing and sales for
logistics companies. In two years CarrierDirect grew to $35 million in revenue.
"I'm glad I didn't take one of those corporate jobs," he says now.
Passion
It's commonly assumed that
successful entrepreneurs are driven by money. But most will tell you they are
fueled by a passion for their product or service, by the opportunity to solve a
problem and make life easier, better, cheaper.
"Most entrepreneurs I know
believe they will change the world," says Jay Friedlander, a professor of
sustainable business who works with entrepreneurs at the College of the
Atlantic and at Babson College. "There's an excitement and belief in what
they're doing that gets them through the hard times."
Passion based on your company's
specific mission is an intrinsic drive that provides the internal reward that
can sustain you between paydays. John Roulac is passionate about hemp, which
has a host of industrial and food uses and can be grown without herbicide,
making it a keystone crop for sustainable agriculture. With a mission of
providing a new market for Canadian hemp farmers, Roulac launched his company,
Nutiva, in 1999 with a hemp food bar. But he quickly ran into interference from
U.S. Customs officials who associated hemp, part of the cannabis family, with
marijuana.
"Initially, they tried to
harass us," Roulac recalls. "They would say our products couldn't
leave the warehouse; then they could. It was very hard to stay in
business." Two years later the Justice Department published a rule that
put hemp products in the same illegal category as heroin. "It was either
go out of business, keep going or go to jail," he says. "It could be bankruptcy
or humiliation."
Roulac had more than $100,000
invested in the business by this point. A lot of people told him to quit.
Instead, he decided to go on the offensive and sued the Drug Enforcement
Administration. With support from the natural-products industry, particularly
soap company Dr. Bronner's, he won the suit two years later. Roulac's belief in
the power of his mission had prevailed.
"I believed that I was on the
side of truth and that there was a government agency trying to prevent
something good happening for the country," he explains. "I feel at a
core level that this is my destiny to help create a better food system."
Today Nutiva sells a variety of
organic products, from hemp protein shakes to virgin coconut oil. Roulac's
advice when things get tough: "Dig deeper."
Tolerance
of ambiguity
This classic trait is the definition
of risk-taking--the ability to withstand the fear of uncertainty and potential
failure. "It all boils down to being able to successfully manage
fear," notes Michael Sherrod, entrepreneur-in-residence at the Neeley
School of Business at Texas Christian University.
He sees the ability to control fear
as the most important trait of all. "Fear of humiliation, fear of missing
payroll, running out of cash, bankruptcy, the list goes on."
Jill Blashack Strahan knows the fear
factor. The founder and CEO of Tastefully Simple, a direct-sales company for
gifts and easy-to-make meals, remembers the calls to her bank when she was
three months overdue on her mortgage. "That fear that I would lose my house
almost controlled me," says Blashack Strahan, who also had to overcome the
deaths of her brother and then her husband shortly afterward. "The night
after the funeral of my husband, I thought maybe I should give up, get a job
and be a mom."
This is where the ultimate
entrepreneurial test takes place, on the mental battlefield. You can go with
the fear and quit, or push through it. "I said no; this idea is going to
work," Blashack Strahan says. "We have the power to control our
thoughts. When we commit mentally, our action follows." She made a
conscious decision to push through the fear. Her company had sales in 2012 of
$98 million.
While many would feel powerless in
the face of such adversity, "the entrepreneur looks at the situation and
knows he has some control over the outcome," says Jonathan Alpert, a
psychotherapist and author of Be Fearless: Change Your Life in 28 Days.
Vision
One of the defining traits of
entrepreneurship is the ability to spot an opportunity and imagine something
where others haven't. Entrepreneurs have a curiosity that identifies overlooked
niches and puts them at the forefront of innovation and emerging fields. They
imagine another world and have the ability to communicate that vision
effectively to investors, customers and staff.
Many people would be satisfied with
a couple of successful businesses, but Eldad Matityahu saw beyond his two
thriving frozen-yogurt stores. He'd been reading about the fiber-optic space
and decided he wanted in on the technology sector that surrounded him in
Silicon Valley. So he sold his yogurt shops and his Harley and got into a field
he knew nothing about. He took a job with a fiber-optic company to learn the
business and discovered his niche there.
Customers told him they were
frustrated that they couldn't have access to see who was on their
networks--important for security. "I realized there was no solution on the
market addressing this pain point," Matityahu says. "I took the time
to figure out why."
The products Matityahu created made
activity on the network easily visible and also protected the system. He
bootstrapped his company, Net Optics, with $100,000--the proceeds from his two
yogurt stores and Harley (along with a small investment from family
members)--turning down venture capitalists along the way. In October 2013 he
sold the company for $190 million.
"Entrepreneurs often face
naysayers, because we see the future before the future plays out,"
Matityahu says. "You have to be several steps ahead of the market."
Self-belief
Self-confidence is a key
entrepreneurial trait. You have to be crazy-sure your product is something the
world needs and that you can deliver it to overcome the naysayers, who will
always deride what the majority has yet to validate.
Researchers define this trait as
task-specific confidence. It's a belief that turns the risk proposition
around--you've conducted enough research and have enough confidence that you
can get the job done that you ameliorate the risk.
"You have to have a lot of
self-confidence. Be willing to take a risk, but be conservative," says
Jason Apfel, founder of FragranceNet.com, an e-commerce site for beauty
products. Apfel didn't know anything about the beauty world when he started the
company, but he believed he could create a solid website to sell such products.
"I thought selling a commodity online at the most competitive price would
work," he says. His company has outlasted well-funded competitors and sees
$145 million in annual sales.
Flexibility
Business survival, like that of the
species, depends on adaptation. Your final product or service likely won't look
anything like what you started with. Flexibility that allows you to respond to
changing tastes and market conditions is essential. "You have to have a
willingness to be honest with yourself and say, 'This isn't working.' You have
to be able to pivot," says Colwell of Plains Angels.
While still a student at Babson
College, Matt Lauzon wanted to digitize the process of designing personalized
jewelry. After raising $500,000 from Highland Capital Partners, he launched a
custom jewelry design platform for retailers in 2008; however, a year later
there was no payoff in sight.
"In theory, it was a perfect
match, but in practice we found that we simply couldn't change the jewelers'
focus on selling the expensive inventory they had sitting in their display
cases," Lauzon recalls.
He reached out to his jeweler
customers to solicit feedback. "One of them actually said, 'You have built
something so amazing, with so much potential, you should let people use it directly,'"
he says.
Lauzon decided to do exactly that,
and with additional rounds of financing, relaunched the Boston-based company as
Gemvara.com, selling the custom jewelry experience directly to consumers. He
won't disclose sales, but he has raised $51 million to date, including
additional millions from Highland Capital, which backed his initial concept. He
has even hired away executives from the jewelry world's biggest retail force,
Tiffany & Co.
Rule-breaking
Entrepreneurs exist to defy
conventional wisdom. A survey last year by Ross Levine of the University of
California, Berkeley, and Yona Rubinstein of the London School of Economics
found that among incorporated entrepreneurs, a combination of
"smarts" and "aggressive, illicit, risk-taking activities"
is a characteristic mix. This often shows up in youth as rebellious behavior,
such as pot-smoking. That description would certainly hold true for some of the
most famous entrepreneurs of recent years.
In fact, simply starting a business
breaks the rules, as only about 13 percent of Americans are engaged in
entrepreneurship, according to a Babson College report. Doing what the majority
isn't doing is the nature of entrepreneurship, which is where the supply of
inner resources comes in.
Are these traits in you? There's
only one way to find out.
1 comment:
If you have all these traits then you can definitely become a successful entrepreneur. There are some of the really inspiring stories of young entrepreneurs like Varun Manian who at the young age managed to take the real estate sector of Chennai to a higher place. Varun Manian Radiance group is one of the top real estate builders in Chennai and have delivered till now some of the finest projects in the country.
Post a Comment