Here's a great article our CEO Mike Landram forwarded to me. Answer these questions and find out if your strengths are pointing you toward entrepreneurship. The following article comes from the March 2 issue of The Agurban, written by Jack Schultz. Enjoy. 
Should You Be An Entrepreneur?
Daniel Isenberg, a Professor of Management Practice at Babson College, recently developed a 2-minute Entrepreneur Test, to help people decide if they have what it takes to make the leap to entrepreneur. Below are Professor Isenberg's 20 questions:
- I don't like being told      what to do by people who are less capable than I am. 
- I like challenging      myself. 
- I like to win. 
- I like being my own      boss. 
- I always look for new      and better ways to do things. 
- I like to question conventional      wisdom. 
- I like to get people      together in order to get things done. 
- People get excited by my      ideas. 
- I am rarely satisfied or      complacent. 
- I can't sit still. 
- I can usually work my      way out of a difficult situation. 
- I would rather fail at      my own thing than succeed at someone else's. 
- Whenever there is a      problem, I am ready to jump right in. 
- I think old dogs can      learn - even invent - new tricks. 
- Members of my family run      their own businesses. 
- I have friends who run      their own businesses. 
- I worked after school      and during vacations when I was growing up. 
- I get an adrenaline rush      from selling things. 
- I am exhilarated by      achieving results. 
- I could have written a      better test than Isenberg (and here is what I would change ....)
If you answered "yes" on 17 or more of these questions, look at your paycheck (if you are lucky enough to still get one). If the company that issued the check isn't owned by you, it is time for some soul searching: Do you have debts to pay? Kids in college? Alimony? Want to take it easy? Maybe better to wait. Do you have a little extra cash in the bank and several credit cards? Do you have a spouse, partner, friends, or kids who will cheer you on? If so, start thinking about what kind of business you want to set up. It doesn't matter what age you are: research by the Kauffman Foundation shows that more and more over-50s are setting up their own businesses. Talk to people who have made the plunge, learn how to plan and deliver a product or service, think about that small business you might buy, talk to people with whom you would like to work, and talk to customers.
All else being equal (and all else is rarely equal in the real world), on the average, people who set up their own businesses don't make more money, although a few do succeed in grabbing the brass ring. But the "psychic benefits" - the challenge, autonomy, recognition, excitement, and creativity - make it all worthwhile.
Do you have what it takes?
 
 
1 comment:
I just read this list. I believe I have what it takes. I think it's more of a passion than a checklist though.
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