logoalt Hacker News

manceraydertoday at 5:51 PM2 repliesview on HN

That's a lot of SV-speak. How exactly do people step into an entrepreneurial phase? They're at work in corporate settings with fixed defined roles. Most workplaces are not many-hatted-donning startup environments, but restricted roles where there are deliverables, deadlines, meetings, etc. Which leaves out of hours for "entrepreneurship" whatever that is.

Github project work on the weekends? That's not possible for most people in their mature/family years (or shouldn't be necessary - what about living life??)


Replies

Terr_today at 9:44 PM

> That's a lot of SV-speak. How exactly do people step into an entrepreneurial phase?

Oh, you simply decide to use grit and willpower to pull yourself up by your bootstraps, placing some calls to people you met at certain parties aided by a small 6 digit loan from your family. /s

I see "employees should be more entrepreneurial" as a kind of victim blaming, and I'm especially cynical if the concept arrives via groups that spent the last several decades putting up barriers to entry, drafting non-compete contracts, capturing regulators, and basically shutting out entrepreneurship.

ProfessorLaytontoday at 7:37 PM

>That's a lot of SV-speak. How exactly do people step into an entrepreneurial phase?

Almost half of U.S. employment is from small businesses (250 or less employees). That's means there's a lot of entrepreneurship happening already. I have lots of family running their own small businesses (trades), and it's a lot of work, and doesn't necessarily pay as well as a cushy corporate job, but what I'm trying to say is lots of people can and do start their own enterprise.

Yes, lots of them will fail at running their own business, but it's not like corporate jobs are getting any safer either.