Employee vs. Entrepreneur - What's the Difference?
An article written by Robert Kiyosaki for Amazon.com as one of
its 1st ever Hall of Fame inductees
In 1983, the Harvard Business School published a paper entitled ‘A Perspective
on Entrepreneurship’ written by Professor
Howard H. Stevenson, that defined the differences between entrepreneurs and
employees. It is one of the most articulate articles on this particular subject
that I have read. While many differences were examined, I found two in
particular to be especially insightful.
The first difference between entrepreneurs and employees is:
Employees are resource-oriented.
Entrepreneurs are opportunity-oriented.
A person with an employee mindset might say, “I would start my own business but
I don’t have the money.” Or “I’d love to invest in that piece of real estate,
but I don’t have the down payment.” In both of these examples the person focuses
on their resources, in this case their lack of money, rather than the
opportunity.
In a similar situation, a person with an entrepreneur’s mindset might say,
“Let’s start the business and we can finance the business from the cash flow.”
Or “Tie up the property and we’ll find the money later.”
My poor dad was a man who saw many opportunities, but failed to act on them
simply because he was resource-oriented. Instead of taking action, he often
said, “I wish I could do it, but I can’t afford it.” Or “I would go into
business for myself, but I need a steady job. I have a mortgage and you kids to
feed.”
My rich dad, an entrepreneur and my best friend’s father who taught me a lot
about how the rich think about money, was a man who started with nothing, but
eventually became one of the richest men in Hawaii. Today, when you look at
Waikiki Beach, you see some of the biggest hotels along the ocean on land his
family owns. He said, “If you do not have resources, you need to become
resourceful.” That is why he forbade his son and me from saying the words “I
can’t afford it.” He said, “Poor people say ‘I can’t afford it.’ That’s why
they’re poor.” Instead he insisted we learn to say, “How can I afford it?” He
believed that when we said, “I can’t afford it” our minds were turned off and
went to sleep. When we asked ourselves, “How can I afford it?” our minds, our
greatest resource of all, were turned on and put to work.
The second difference between entrepreneurs and employees is:
Employees prefer to manage via hierarchical structures.
Entrepreneurs manage via networks, utilizing the resources of other people and
organizations.
This means that employee-type leaders would rather hire people and bring their
talent “in-house.” Rather than have an outside firm do their creative work, an
employee-type leader would prefer to hire the talent and have them under their
control. While there are economic reasons for doing this, the report stated that
the primary reason is control. This is because employees gravitate to a
leadership style that is more suited to a military command-and-control type of
organization.
My poor dad was successful in the hierarchical structure of the government,
eventually rising to the top of the educational system as Superintendent of
Education and running for Lieutenant Governor for the State of Hawaii. After
losing that race – and his position as Superintendent of Education – he tried
his hand at entrepreneurship. He purchased a national ice cream franchise that
failed in less than a year. Why? While the reasons were many, one reason was his
leadership and management style. When he said, “ Jump” … no one jumped.
Instead of the military’s command-and-control leadership style, my rich dad
used a more cooperative and collaborative style of leadership. He encouraged his
son and me to learn to lead and manage people who are not required to follow our
orders – people who did not need to jump when they heard the word “Jump.” Rather
than hire people and bring them in-house, rich dad networked with other people
and organizations, which tended to reduce his costs and at the same time
increase his resources and influence in the marketplace.
Today, The Rich Dad Company follows my rich dad’s advice. Instead of becoming a
stand-alone publishing house, we choose to cooperate via a joint venture
agreement with The Time Warner Book Group, as well as licensed publishers around
the world who offer our books in 43 languages. In this way, we keep our core
staff small, yet we utilize the thousands of employees of publishers around the
world.
But leveraging the assets and resources of partners is not enough. It’s
important to choose the right partners – ones who are aligned with your goals
and values.
Choosing the right partners can make the difference between success and failure
– as I’ve learned the hard way.
As The Rich Dad Company has grown, we have worked with partners who have opened
doors to opportunities that were much greater than what we could have been able
to pursue on our own. In an entrepreneurial spirit, we formed alliances with
major media organizations and international promotion firms that leveraged the
Rich Dad brand with their worldwide networks.
In doing so, we – as entrepreneurs – stay small, yet increase market share by
cooperating rather than competing… by networking rather than hiring employees
and bringing work “in-house.”
In 1989 the world changed. That’s when the Berlin Wall came down and the World
Wide Web went up. Instead of a world of walls, we became a world of webs…
networks of people working cooperatively rather than competitively. It is a
special honor for me to be recognized by Amazon.com, a pioneer in the brave new
world of the web, founded by a great entrepreneur, Jeff Bezos. We at The Rich
Dad Company join in celebrating Amazon’s successes and salute your leadership in
this world of webs rather than walls.
There are key, fundamental differences between the mindset of an employee and
the mindset of an entrepreneur. One of the great things about this world of webs
is that the world is now open for business to billions of people who choose to
think as entrepreneurs – rather than employees.
Source:richdad.com

Daadionline
19 Sep 2005
The Keys to True
Learning
By Blair Singer
How To Turn An Idea Into a
Business
| © Copyright 2003-2005 Daadionline. All Rights Reserved. | Design by Amishtech |