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Remember When You Were An Entrepreneur

by Rich Lazzara

You don’t? You say you’ve never been an entrepreneur.

Let me bring you back to your first job.  For most of us it was either mowing lawns, baby sitting, trading playing cards, selling girl scout cookies, a lemonade stand, washing cars or something along those lines.  A true entrepreneur.

Whats Happened?

For most of us our exposure to working for compensation starts out as an entrepreneurial endeavor of one kind or another.  Then we move through “The System” and before you know it every entrepreneurial thought is sucked from us.  ”The System” I’m speaking of can take on many different forms but so many are exposed to it.  It can take the path of graduate high school, go to college ,work for a company and lock in a career.  Perhaps it was graduate high school and go directly to work for a company, bouncing around from job to job until you settled in on a career.  Whatever your path was it makes no difference,  the common denominator is that you have that entrepreneur still inside of you and I bet you’ve thought about letting it out.

Whats Stopping You?

Fear, doubt, apprehension, each of them the enemies of success but certainly not insurmountable. The fact is you’ve already done it once, it’s time to start again. Starting a business has never been easier.  By easy I don’t mean that its not hard work, instead I’m talking about the tools that are available today for next to nothing.  Just remember when you were an entrepreneur and get back to what you know.

Leave a comment below and tell us what was your first job.  Do you have plans to be an entrepreneur? Are you one now?

A special thanks to Oleg Mokhov who inspired this post in a comment the other day .

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  • I think the biggest thing I've learned lately is just to have fun. Honestly, the rest are just details. Yes, it's a lot of work, but if I'm not having fun then I won't have the motivation to do all this.

    That same lack of 'fun' is what drains the life out of a ninetwofiver.

    All hail Entrepreneurship!
  • Hey Rich,
    I remember when I was between 8-10 I had a rock shop. We actually had branding too, which we painted nicely on a big plywood piece to stick out on the street. Our name; The Cottage of Rocks.

    We had a little playhouse out back that all the girls had lost interest in. It was probably 5 feet by 10 feet, a single room, and 4 windows. When it wasn't being used as a platform to jump on to the trampoline, it was our humble shop.

    We rarely, if ever, got customers. I remember one time I was up playing a ways away on a part of our property. I caught wind that someone was here to look at my rocks. I had never run a quarter mile so fast in my life!

    Luckily, although the Cottage of Rocks didn't go IPO, I was raised in a home with an entrepreneurial spirit. I never stopped thinking of business ideas or ways to improve the world through my passions.

    At one point, I got sucked into 'the system' just a little bit. With that said, I flunked college because I was spending all my time flying. I just happened to be the first pilot out of the program at my college that year.

    Recently I've been thinking a lot about this. I've been thinking about how people go through the motions, retire, and then waste away into history. I'm not saying my loved ones that have careers are a waste, it's just difficult to see people live under the fear of nothing and the fear of failure.

    I'd rather do what I love and fail than do menial work for someone else and be successful.

    Luckily, I know that I can do what I love and be successful.

    Another challenge is making sure that the businesses and entities I own don't end up owning me. I've been learning to innovate, inspire a culture, outsource and more to make sure this doesn't take place.

    With that said, it's all taking a lot of hard work that is fun and rewarding.

    Work, whether humans like to admit it or not, is a large part of our daily lives and important for our existence and happiness. Obviously not the same as something like a marriage.

    But it's important to take into account the fact that it is important, it matters, and there is nothing wrong with doing what we love and love what we're doing.

    As always, thanks for the great post.
  • Chris, thats one awesome story! My first job at 12 was mowing lawns. I can remember borrowing $400 from my parents to buy the equipment, making flyers to put on peoples doors, going and giving estimates...it was great. Job lasted me 4 years until we moved to another neighborhood and I gave it up to go to do other things.

    Two things you said really stuck out to me "I'd rather do what I love and fail than do menial work for someone else and be successful"....this is so true.

    Also when you said "Another challenge is making sure that the businesses and entities I own don't end up owning me"...this is something that can be a real problem for entrepreneurs. You have to be able to set priorities with your time and making sure the business doesnt become all consuming. Ive seen it happen in our family business and it is a sacrifice that in the end I dont believe is worth it.

    Thanks for the great comments.
  • My first job was helping my father at estate auctions.

    Started a company a few months after finishing grad school, and I am also in the process of setting up (and fundraising for) a non profit.
  • Lewis, very cool. So I would say you probably learned a lot working with your father early on. Really cool to hear you using your talents for fundraising. Feel free to post the link to it here if you want to. thanks for the comments.
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