
Entrepreneur.com:
1. It’s stressful. If you think meeting a boss’s deadlines or demands is tough, try meeting your own, especially when your personal savings are on the line. Maybe you’ve already taken out a second mortgage and your credit cards are maxxed out. Or maybe you’ve borrowed money from family and friends and you’re on the hook to pay them back, ASAP. This type of pressure lights a fire under even the most laid-back personalities. Not only will you feel the pressure to get your business off the ground, but you’ll also feel the added pressure to do so quickly to regain some semblance of financial security.
2. It’s never-ending. Yes, it can be thankless to work for someone else, knowing your skills and talents are ultimately making someone else a bundle. But in most jobs, you can leave the work behind when you go home to enjoy your family, friends or hobbies. As an entrepreneur, the workload can be intense, especially during the early stages when you are the CEO, CFO, HR person, sales staff, marketing guru, tech guy, office manager, and janitor. With all these roles, there’s rarely a moment that you feel your work is ‘done’ for the day. There’s always something more you could be doing, like researching new markets, writing press releases, contacting new media, cold calling new sales outlets, developing new products and the list goes on. And that can eat away at time formerly devoted to family, leisure activities, workouts or relaxation. It’s a difficult balance to strike.
3. It’s frustrating. Maybe you’ve partnered with someone who doesn’t have your best interests at heart. Or you’ve received a shipment of damaged products that you need for a trade show the next day. Or the media appearance you spent days preparing for is suddenly cancelled due to a natural disaster. As an entrepreneur, these types of situations happen on a regular basis. (I speak from experience; all of the above happened to me.) The truth is that you never know what’s around the corner and it can be extremely frustrating when you’ve planned to spend a day on product development, only to find out that you have to repair the cases of product packaging that came apart during shipping.
So with this kind of stress, pressure and workload, why, then, would anyone subject themselves to being an entrepreneur? The answer is simple: the positives outweigh the negatives. Read on…
Subscribe 


