40 comments so far
Hi ,
This is one of the best posts I have read so far…Makes me believe more in myself..!! And I must say I am reading this at the right stage of my entrepreneurial journey!!
Thanx again for sucha a beautiful post!
Truely..True…!!!
Thanks Sameer….just shared this with my wife.
–
Nilesh
Xlnt post, Sameer — and very relevant to the Indian context where entrepreneurship is more of a social risk than anything more.
As an entrepreneur, you get the same coin what Jai had in Sholay — You decide on the outcome and then flick the coin & not the other way round.
Cheers!
Indus
Nicely drafted and well spoken
Its is very much right too.
Keeping money part aside, the kind of skill set generation you get while exploring possibilities in entrepreneurship/projects, is awesome.
I can share one more story. one of my friend was looking to join me in new venture. He was not able to understand financial sheets although he was an MBA. Once he left job and joined me, with in few days he became so good in money and all these parts that he took care of all this things.
Entrepreneurship sparks something. its like self propagating self motivating engine. If your ever feel your life turns dull and you have the back up to support yourself, just think of any business you wanted to to in past and never did. just start it. you will see a tremendous skill set growth in you.
I can Guarantee it.
Regards
Suneev
Nice inspiring story!!
I think, story is a wrong word to use; I must say that it a “Fact wrapped in beautiful words”.
Gaurav
Nice post Sam, very crisp and spot on. Sent right away to my folks.
Simply awesome!
Spreading the entrepreneurial spirit, kudos!
Nice post Sameer. I am sharing this with every budding entrepreneur.
Keep up the good work !!
Best Wishes !
Economic cost – what you could be doing with the alternative. When you are just out of school then there is very little risk. When you have something to lose – e.g. an already highly-paid engineer position with growth opportunities – then doing your own thing can hurt.
Just for the record – I’ve been running my own show for a few years and have at times missed the money-for-showing-up that might come with e.g. finance work. I would not choose any other path, but it’s not risk-free.
Great post, enjoyed re reading your journey and thoughts Sam!
Discussion thread on HN about this article:
http://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=1041793
Really a very interesting post, enjoyed n learn a lot.
Started my business about a month ago so this is great inspiration! Thanks for a fantastic post, keep it up.
Hey man..!!! You just wrapped it all in a nutshell. A real n excellent post (even this skill to write such sensible text, is a gift of entrepreneurship)..
But the only thing I cann’t take as it is “WHY SHOULD WE EVER THINK OF DOING ALL THESE EFFORTS, SO THAT WE CAN JOIN SOME OTHER COMPANY AT A BIGGER SALARY PACKAGE THAN WE WOULD HAVE BEEN GETTING IF WE WERE NOT ENTREPRENEURS..”
So folks don’t choose this career if you are just looking for a good n bright future with some other company…
hats off to you Sameer, once again.. really nice post..!!
I second your every single point
, thanks for such a lovely post ..
Sameer,
You captured the risk vs. reward ratio very well.
But, I think like most people in India, it’s about a title. When in reality it’s what you have done.
Sameer,
You’ve hit the proverbial nail on the head with this post.
Thanks for sharing your invaluable thoughts.
Excellent article Sameer
After reading your article I think that I should my own venture.
Hey Sameer,
Seriously nice article.
Certainly the argument should work for the parents and relatives and professors, who still thing entrepreneurship is something that can only be done my Ambanis, Tatas,…
Really Nice post Sameer.
And agree with @Gaurav Dubey, that you should not look at entrepreneurship as a good career opportunity. It should be taken as a great source of learning, knowledge and experience.
‘Simply amazing’ would be cliche…all i can say thanks for words, these words are life changing for some of species on planet earth.
Very, very useful post. We’re 21 and starting up at Bangalore, and I’m all set to meet my team leader’s father coming Sunday and convince him to let his 21 year old son join my start up and refrain from joining IBM. Thanks so much. I also just realized we do business with one of the companies from a graduated batch at Morpheus. It takes a start-up to know a start up.
WOW! AWESOME POST! I am starting my company in a months time and I couldn’t have read this article at a better time.
I feel that this only talks about the case where the person has left jobs and started his/her business in regular corporate domains only and hence remains in touch with the corporate CXOs or Department Heads, and hence will able to get a job in coporates in similar domains if the venture fails. But what if someone quits their job to start a venture which is totally tangent to their background… say, starting a Music & Dance School?









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