I was reading Should We Worry About Older Entrepreneurs? from Small Business Trends the other day when I stumbled upon this intriguing quote:
Field also worries that entrepreneurship might not be right for older Americans because these folks have spent too much time in the corporate world.
Hmmm … a bit of a generalization, no?
In honor of that thought, with a tip of the hat to comedian Jeff Foxworthy’s “you might be a redneck” routine, here’s my list of ways (none of them age related) you can tell that you just might be too corporate:
- If, when you see $850 or $1,450 in the budget, you assume that means $850,000 and $1.45 million (you ask: the numbers are in thousands, right?), then you might be too corporate for entrepreneurship.
- If every time you encounter something that has to be done, you look immediately for staff people to assign it to, then you might be too corporate for entrepreneurship.
- If you measure yourself and everybody else by office or cubicle size and layout, then you might be too corporate for entrepreneurship.
- If problems are to be ducked, and monkeys to be passed on to somebody else, then you might be too corporate for entrepreneurship.
- If having a reason why not is the same as getting something done, then you might be too corporate for entrepreneurship.
But just age? Age might make a person too old, but not too corporate.
(Image: Fisherss/Shutterstock)
You must be logged in to post a comment.