National Entrepreneurship Month: Toward the New American Dream

National Entrepreneurship Month: Toward the New American Dream By Brian K. Wyatt, Jr., B-EZ Graphix Three years ago, President Barack Obama proclaimed November as National Entrepreneurship Month. In his proclamation, he recognized that entrepreneurs are the backbone of the American economy. Entrepreneurs represent the New American Dream that has become…

National Entrepreneurship Month: Toward the New American Dream

By Brian K. Wyatt, Jr., B-EZ Graphix

Three years ago, President Barack Obama proclaimed November as National Entrepreneurship Month. In his proclamation, he recognized that entrepreneurs are the backbone of the American economy. Entrepreneurs represent the New American Dream that has become more than materially having plenty. Americans now dream of the freedom to start and grow their own enterprise. According to the Small Business Administration, entrepreneurs foster growth in job creation, workforce development, and business tax revenue for local, state and federal government as well as economic development in communities. However, the New American Dream is often crushed by the complex barriers business development. This is especially evident in disadvantaged populations. As other self-made entrepreneurs around the nation celebrate their achievements this month, I choose to celebrate by helping others to navigate around the Top 3 Barriers of Entrepreneurship toward the new American Dream.

Money

Miriam-Webster defines an entrepreneur is defined as “a person who starts a business and is willing to risk loss in order to make money.” I would go further to suggest that you should be the first person willing to take the risk to invest in yourself. If you can’t convince yourself to invest in your business, how can you expect to convince anyone else? Once you have the ambition to invest in yourself, you need to prepare to pitch your idea to your friends and family for feedback and financial support. Then, seek crowdfunding, angel investors, venture capital funds, venture philanthropists, commercial bankers and lenders. There are plenty of resources to get access to the money you need to start and grow your business. You just need to risk investing the time, money and effort to fervently pursue those resources. As Steve Harvey says in his video on entrepreneurship, you must take the risk and just leap.

Security

I once believed that I didn’t have time to start a business because I trusted in the security of having a job with a steady paycheck. The paradox of entrepreneurship is that there is more security in making a living by your own bootstraps than working for a company that sees you as an expendable line item in their labor budget. They can cut you out as quickly and insensitively as they cut premium toilet paper in the restrooms out the budget. Besides, you cannot build a legacy of generational wealth by working for hourly wages because few jobs offer living wages. In fact, some jobs today resemble yesterday’s forms of slavery. The master is no longer a man with a whip. Rather, the master is now green paper, and the whip is a biweekly paycheck. You get your lashings during the weeks in between that you suffer from wondering how your family is going to make it until the next paycheck. I challenge you to embrace the entrepreneurial spirit this month by taking a few dollars out of each paycheck to save for your business. Save for your freedom from the lies of “job security.”

Knowledge & Skills

Lastly, there is an assumption that you must be highly educated, experienced or skilled to be a successful entrepreneur. While it is important to pursue personal and professional development opportunities, there are no job requirements to be an entrepreneur. You don’t have to interview for this position in life. Contrarily, you must be willing to learn and passionate about the vision for your business idea. There are business experts all over the nation who want to help you achieve your business goals, to include SCORE mentors and Small Business Development Centers across the nation. These experts already have the skills and expertise and are focused on helping to connect entrepreneurs to the training and resources they need to grow. Also, you can hire people, who may be smarter and more skilled than you are, to follow your vision and run the business. You don’t need an ivy-league education to be a successful entrepreneur. All it takes is having the right attitude and determination to rise up beyond your circumstances and do whatever it takes to live the New American Dream.

To schedule an appointment for free business advice on his website at www.brianwyattjr.com.

Brian Wyatt
Brian Wyatt

About Brian Wyatt:  Brian is a veteran, social innovator and multi-disciplined marketing expert from the South Side of Chicago, IL. He has over 12 years of experience in marketing, business development and communications. He earned his Bachelor of Arts from the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign and is an MBA Candidate at Keiser University. Brian is also a certified business mentor that enjoys coaching entrepreneurs to reach their fullest potential.

Brian founded B-EZ Graphix, a multimedia marketing agency, while attending college in Champaign, IL in 2004. His vision is for B-EZ Graphix to support economic development by making branding and marketing easy and affordable.

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