Even though middle class of business that endure for 16 years or more have slower growth than younger firms, they actually employ the most people, studies show
Entrepreneurship itself is a method to build not just companies but also a better world.
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Silicon Valley exhorts entrepreneurs to supersize their dreams: Have a crackerjack idea with disruptive potential, raise lots of funding from investors, scale up rapidly and hit a billion-dollar valuation.
Awash in stories of “unicorns†and “gazelles†— the rare high-tech high-growth firms that capture the headlines — many founders chase the dream of launching the next Stripe or Instacart.
“But is that the only dream worth having?†asks Darden Professor Saras Sarasvathy, a leading expert on the cognitive basis for high-performance entrepreneurship and the 2022 winner of the Global Award for Entrepreneurship Research from the Swedish Entrepreneurship Forum.
“In a business school,†says Sarasvathy, “we shouldn’t just be teaching high-growth, high-technology entrepreneurship. We should be teaching students how to build a middle class of business — companies that last long enough to give an entrepreneur a good life but also create jobs, foster robust communities and create value for multiple stakeholders.â€
[This article has been reproduced with permission from University Of Virginia's Darden School Of Business. This piece originally appeared on Darden Ideas to Action.]