quarta-feira, outubro 23, 2013

Creating Extraordinary Value

"results are what matters in entrepreneurship, not laurels. The bar is always raised, often by entrepreneurs themselves. Actual value creation as an outcome, and not the intention to create value, is essential. If value is not created, then the entrepreneurship is not complete; the market, having judged at the outset that what he or she is doing is worthless, impossible, or stupid, might just as likely have been correct. So I conclude that entrepreneurs do not get an A for effort. If they did, a lot of goofy efforts would have to be called entrepreneurship.
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entrepreneurs always live on the market precipice, peering over into the abyss of potential failure. (Moi ici: Lembrei-me logo da fauna dos direitos adquiridos)
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The “necessity” of accepting failure as a likely, even a vital, feature of entrepreneurship has become a popular topic. Indeed, from a societal perspective, there is evidence of a positive relationship between the sheer quantities of ventures that fail when they are young (the more the better) and the quality of failure (the quicker and less costly it is to fail, the more venture formation occurs), and the ability of a society to foster successful ventures in sufficient quantities. So to encourage entrepreneurship, society must make failure structurally easy—legally, administratively, and culturally. Labor flexibility and liberalizing bankruptcy make exit from failures easy. Governments that implement these few reforms discover that it does indeed help create a flow of new aspirants; high failure rates and high success rates (more of the latter) go hand in hand with high value creation."
Trechos retirados de “Worthless, Impossible, and Stupid" de David Isenberg

1 comentário:

Carlos Albuquerque disse...

O empreendedorismo ao serviço das pessoas e da sociedade ou as pessoas e a sociedade ao serviço do empreendedorismo?

http://www.publico.pt/mundo/noticia/papa-francisco-pede-a-lideres-mundiais-que-acabem-com-culto-do-dinheiro-1594633