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Are You an Entrepreneur or a CEO?
Many people really confuse being an entrepreneur
and being a CEO. They think they are the same thing,
but over the years I've learned that they are actually
two VERY different things.
An entrepreneur has a mind that is creative. Entrepreneurs
are full of ideas, they're eager beavers - and they
are often hard to "control." There are exceptions,
of course. But all entrepreneurs tend to have that "pioneering"
streak in them - and they never really lose it.
When an entrepreneur starts a business, he/she is
the CEO by default. But many entrepreneurs are not well
suited to remain the CEO over an extended period of
time. (I'll explain why in a minute.)
So after their company gets some success, many entrepreneurs
hire a "professional CEO." Then the entrepreneur
assumes a different and more targeted role, doing what
he or she does best. The role might be in marketing,
inventing, creating, innovating...or it could be technical
in nature.
Of course, there are also many entrepreneurs out there
that have proven to be great CEOs. Every day, I work
hard to be that entrepreneur-turned-great CEO
(and I must say that I've done a pretty good job at
it so far). But it does require a lot of concentration!
That's because a CEO is basically a manager.
A CEO should have a talent for building organizations,
structuring, overseeing the details, watching the financials,
and in general keeping the company in the black.
Also, a CEO's job is to keep the company moving
forward. The single biggest responsibility of a CEO
is to build "shareholder value."
And the fact is, most entrepreneurs don't want to
think about shareholder value. Often an entrepreneur
just wants to paint on the canvas - not worry about
selling the painting, advertising, and fulfillment.
Often the last thing an entrepreneur wants to do is
figure out how much to charge for his or her masterpiece
so the company makes a profit and doesn't go broke!
One of the biggest differences I have personally
witnessed between an entrepreneur and a CEO is this:
the entrepreneur is FULL of new ideas and is eager to
implement them, while new ideas are the stuff of nightmares
for a CEO. New ideas challenge structure and organization,
and they can mean a whole lot of extra and tedious work
for a CEO.
Of course there are many entrepreneurs-turned-CEOs
who can do both. Sometimes a "start-up" kind
of CEO can be creative and full of ideas, but still
have the very structured mindset of a good business
person.
So an entrepreneur-turned-successful CEO is still
an artist - but business is his art. Real artists never
paint with the selling price of the painting in mind.
Real artists paint to fulfill an inner need.
Business is the art that fills that inner need of
a CEO.
Author: Nick Siegel
The Mystery CEO is a young entrepreneur who started
a company now doing close to $2 Million a year right
in his DORM room! Now he lets you watch over his shoulders
as he learns more about entrepreneurship. You can even
listen-in when he interviews CEOs who manage $100 Million+
companies!
Read his entrepreneurship blog right away for all the
entrepreneurship training you'll ever need!
http://www.MysteryCEO.com
Keywords : entrepreneur, ceo, entrepreneur and ceo,
mysteryceo
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