How Hard Is Entrepreneurship Really?
Sramana Mitra
Founder and CEO of One Million by the One Million (1Mby1M) Global Virtual Accelerator
There’s a really good story on Inc. on the dark realities of entrepreneurship. Not the rah rah, everything is so wonderful kind, but the brutal emotional truth: The Psychological Price of Entrepreneurship. Read it.
Successful entrepreneurs achieve hero status in our culture. We idolize the Mark Zuckerbergs and the Elon Musks. And we celebrate the blazingly fast growth of the Inc. 500 companies. But many of those entrepreneurs, like Smith, harbor secret demons: Before they made it big, they struggled through moments of near-debilitating anxiety and despair–times when it seemed everything might crumble.
Until recently, admitting such sentiments was taboo. Rather than showing vulnerability, business leaders have practiced what social psychiatrists call impression management–also known as “fake it till you make it.” Toby Thomas, CEO of EnSite Solutions (No. 188 on the Inc. 500), explains the phenomenon with his favorite analogy: a man riding a lion. “People look at him and think, This guy’s really got it together! He’s brave!” says Thomas. “And the man riding the lion is thinking, How the hell did I get on a lion, and how do I keep from getting eaten?”
Not everyone who walks through darkness makes it out. In January, well-known founder Jody Sherman, 47, of the e-commerce site Ecomom took his own life. His death shook the start-up community. It also reignited a discussion about entrepreneurship and mental health that began two years earlier after the suicide of Ilya Zhitomirskiy, the 22-year-old co-founder of Diaspora, a social networking site.
Lately, more entrepreneurs have begun speaking out about their internal struggles in an attempt to combat the stigma on depression and anxiety that makes it hard for sufferers to seek help. In a deeply personal post called “When Death Feels Like a Good Option,” Ben Huh, the CEO of the Cheezburger Network humor websites, wrote about his suicidal thoughts following a failed start-up in 2001.
It’s a long piece, and worth reading.
My thought on the subject is this:
Good entrepreneurs need to focus as sharply as possible. Such focus puts your mind in a loop around the same goals 24 hours a day. And that kind of single-minded focus with the mind getting no break is not only the beginning of great success, it could also be the beginning of a depression, leading to suicidal thoughts and other such anxiety disorders that the article discusses, when things don’t go so well.
In my experience, diversions are essential to survival on this journey. Whether it is family, friends, art, culture, film, literature, sports, cuisine, travel – to travel this long, dangerous and winding path, especially when the weather can be really turbulent – you need external elements that can put the focused inner journey in perspective.
At the end of the day, it’s a nerve game. To win, you need staying power.
Looking For Some Hands-On Advice?
I receive many emails from entrepreneurs who want to discuss their specific businesses. I’m very happy to discuss your situation during my free online 1M/1M Roundtables, held almost every Thursday. During each roundtable, up to five entrepreneurs can pitch their businesses and receive my immediate and straightforward feedback.
To give entrepreneurs all over the world access to Silicon Valley’s knowledge, methodology, and network, I founded the One Million by One Million (1M/1M) global virtual incubator. 1M/1M aims to nurture a million entrepreneurs to reach a million dollars each in annual revenue and beyond, thereby creating a trillion dollars in global GDP and ten million jobs.
For those still testing the waters of entrepreneurship, I’ve written my Entrepreneur Journeys book series to inform and inspire. My newest book, Billion Dollar Unicorns, is now available from Amazon.
If you are interested in entrepreneurship topics and my writings, you can follow me here. I hope to publish articles on LinkedIn every week.
Photo credit: R Singh/Flickr.com.
Filmmaker, Producer, Polymath, Chief Samurai @Metaphysical Lab, Podcaster@The Artists (arts, cinema),The SOS Show (mental health), Mental Health Advocate
9 年“fake it till you make it.” Toby Thomas, CEO of EnSite Solutions (No. 188 on the Inc. 500), explains the phenomenon with his favorite analogy: a man riding a lion. “People look at him and think, This guy’s really got it together! He’s brave!” says Thomas. “And the man riding the lion is thinking, How the hell did I get on a lion, and how do I keep from getting eaten?”
Product Manager - SaaS / Mobile platforms
9 年Getting talented devs to work on a visionary idea for sweat equity and deferred compensation is hard. Getting a friends and family round together to build an MVP? Also hard. Doing it as a single parent with kids and a mortgage? Crazy. These early failures gave me redoubled admiration for those I know who are bull-headed enough, tough and re-inventive enough to succeed as entrepreneurs. You inspire me more than ever.
Co-Founder @ Extrimian | MBA, Digital Identity
9 年Sramana great post. I am a +10 years in Microsoft, I started a tech Company 6 years ago in Argentina with 30% inflation, US Dollar undervalued, almost 20% unemployment and 55% of tax oppression over incomes with 3 child’s and a dog! We grow till 42 resources in two offices, then we lost a Big project and couldn’t recover quickly, and then lost the half off our team that take us to build 6 years. Then, we are trying to redefine our company, some new customers are coming from other Latam countries and one from the States! The journey is not easy, but still here and dreaming and executing. My family is a key element to try to maintain my body and mind in a good shape. Take some breaks during the day when it is possible. Go around and walk, and talk to a friend or an advisor. It is a very hard journey, especially when you were educated for being in a corporation. Thanks for your post