It’s certainly
true that having more companies employing more people would help the
economy. And it’s also true that having
more companies starting would be a step along the way. There is a downside though. It’s generally accepted that around four out
of every five new start-ups fail. From a
macroeconomic perspective, such a high failure rate isn’t necessarily a bad thing;
it’s part of the cost of sorting the wheat from the chaff and identifying which
business ideas are good and which are less so.
From a microeconomic perspective, however, I’m not convinced that encouraging ever greater
numbers of our school and university leavers to do something at which we can
reasonably predict, from experience, that 80% of them will fail is an entirely
brilliant idea. And I rather suspect
that if we doubled the number of start-ups, the number of failures would more
than double – we might still get a higher number of successful companies in
total, but the ratio of that successful number to the total would be less.
Partly that’s
because more business start-ups probably means that we’re moving into the more
marginally viable ideas; and partly it’s because encouraging more and more
people to start businesses means that we’re going beyond the pool of people who
have the enthusiasm and the commitment without having to be persuaded to give it a
try.
But it also
partly comes down to us not really having much clue as to what does or does not
make a successful entrepreneur. Values
such as commitment, hard work, and perseverance are all part of it, but there’s
also an immeasurable something called flair – and I personally suspect that
another little attribute called ‘luck’ plays a much larger role than is
generally acknowledged.
It’s easy to
ignore the question of luck. Successful
entrepreneurs always think that their success is down to their own exceptional
personal qualities; and the unsuccessful ones usually have plenty of other things
to blame – taxes, red tape, unreasonable expectations that employees should be
paid a living wage, the banks, the markets; the list is probably endless.
We know that
banks and financiers aren’t particularly good at identifying which businesses
will succeed, although there’s an element of self-fulfilling prophecy in that
those to which they lend are more likely to succeed than those to which they
refuse to lend. We also know that all
the government agencies and services promoting entrepreneurialism aren’t
terribly good at predicting success either – although the fact than many of
those employed in such areas seem to have little experience of actually running
businesses themselves and are experts, mostly, in filling in forms to draw down grants and loans,
may be a contributory factor. And we
know that the entrepreneurs themselves are not very good at knowing what will
succeed – if they were, we wouldn’t have an 80% failure rate.
People like
Michael Moritz who invested in Google at the right time are feted as though
they were financial and entrepreneurial geniuses, but is that true, or were
they, in reality, just lucky to be in the right place at the right time? Is entrepreneurial success more like kissing
frogs than shrewd investment? I suspect
that it is.
Again, from a
macroeconomic viewpoint, kissing a whole lot of frogs before one turns into a
prince may well be a sensible strategy to pursue. But shouldn’t we make the fact that that is
what we are doing just a tiny bit clearer to those young people who are being
encouraged and persuaded to go frog-kissing?
2 comments:
How many Welsh AM's and MP's who are no longer in those jobs have ventured into their own entreprise business? It appears they prefer to join quangos, public sector or the third sector. There's the problem!!!
But surely it's central to their way of working that so many of them believe that they should be telling the rest of us what we should do rather then doing it themselves? One could see joining quangos, the public sector or the third sector as being the result of a realistic assessment of their chances of success as entrepreneurs, and thus confirming the point I was making.
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