Industry Articles
Interpretation:
What Traits and Characteristics Make a Successful Entrepreneur
Numerous studies have been made of
small business managers over the years. Many look at traits and
characteristics that appear common to most people who start their own
businesses. Other studies focus on characteristics that seem to appear
frequently in successful owner-managers.
First, consider those characteristics that
seem to distinguish the person who opens a business from the person
who works for someone else. These studies investigated successful and
unsuccessful owners, some of whom went bankrupt several times. Some
were successful only after the second or third try. The
characteristics they share might almost be said to predispose a person
into trying to start a business. Of course, not all of these
characteristics appear in every small business owner-manager, but the
following seem to be most predominate.
People who start their own business may be
members of different political parties, feel differently about
religion, economics and other issues. They are like everyone else. The
difference is they usually feel and express themselves more strongly.
This is consistent. If you are going to risk your money and time in
your own business you must have a strong feeling that you will be
successful.
These strong feelings may also cause
problems. If you want to start your own business you probably have
mixed feelings about authority. You know the manager must have
authority to get things done, but you're not comfortable working under
someone. This may also have been your attitude in a scholastic, family
or other authority structure.
If you want to open your own business you
are likely to have a strong "Need for Achievement". This "Need for
Achievement" is a psychologist's term for motivation and is usually
measured by tests. It can be an important factor in success. The
person who wouldn't think of starting a business, might call you a
plunger, a gambler, a high risk taker. Yet you probably don't feel
that about yourself.
Studies have shown that very often the
small business owner doesn't differ from anyone else in risk avoidance
or aversion when measured on tests. At first thought this seems
unreasonable since logic tells us that it is risky to open your own
business. A management expert once explained this apparent
contradiction very simply. "When a person starts and manages his own
business he doesn't see risks; he sees only factors that he can
control to his advantage." If you possess these traits to some degree
or other it doesn't mean you will be successful, only that you will
very likely start your own business. Some of these characteristics in
excess may actually hamper you if you are not careful.
The characteristics that appear most
frequently among "successful" small business managers include drive,
thinking ability, competence in human relations, communications skills
and technical knowledge.
Drive, as defined in the study, is
composed of responsibility, vigor, initiative, persistence and health.
Thinking ability consists of
original, creative, critical, and analytical thinking.
Competency in human relations means
emotional stability, sociability, good personal relations,
consideration, cheerfulness, cooperation. and tactfulness.
Communications skills include
verbal comprehension, and oral and written communications.
Technical knowledge is the
manager's comprehension of the physical process of producing goods or
services, and the ability to use the information purposefully.
Motivation or drive has long been
considered as having an important effect on performance. Psychologists
now claim you can increase the motivation and the personal capacities
that will improve your effectiveness and increase your chances for
success. Much of the development of such achievement motivation
depends on setting the right kind of goals for yourself.
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