|
|
|
|
|
by fnordfnordfnord
3891 days ago
|
|
>Half of all small business fail in the first 3 to 5 years. I'm curious about that statistic. A lot of these business could be hobby or other casual enterprises, tax avoidance schemes, and doomed businesses started by naive people. It doesn't mean a whole lot without some more context. >Imagine taking a job where you had to pay for your office, office supplies, computer, and every thing else out of pocket. Become a teacher! >...that is a social discussion. Social factors aren't irrelevant. People behave differently based upon socio-economic incentives. Not just entrepreneurs, either; take two engineers, one comes from a family with "fuck you" money, the other is a first generation college graduate. They both have started their own families and have young children at home. Now, imagine how their reactions might differ when placed in various ethical dilemmas. |
|
All models are wrong, but some are useful. That particular stat covers a pretty good cross section of legitimate small businesses. Some small businesses may be a cover for an underground marinara sauce operation used by the mafia to funnel dollars to a dog fighting operation..... Sure we could muddy it up more, but I don't think that stat is all that malicious or disingenuous.
> Become a teacher!
This claim does seem to be a bit disingenuous and exaggerated. Sure teachers cover an unfair amount of supplies and get paid very little. Do they really rent their classrooms, buy their own computers, and pay for 100% of everything out of pocket?
> Social factors aren't irrelevant.
My post was refuting the claim that entrepreneurs aren't taking real risk. Granted if you come from a wealthy family you aren't taking as much risk starting a business as someone taking a small business loan. I still contend that the risk to an individual (relative to them-self, not others) is greater when starting a business than taking a job.