(ARA) - Who says there’s an age limit on the question "What do I want to
be?" According to a recent study, a large number of small business owners
weren’t bit by the entrepreneurship bug until they graduated from college or
started down a completely different career path.
Nearly one-third of respondents to Ace Hardware’s Entrepreneurship Study
made the decision to become self-employed during their post-college career
lives -- a time when many of their peers were immersing themselves in their
chosen professions.
"I don’t think it comes as much of a surprise that small business owners
decide to become their own boss later in life when you consider the benefits
of financial accumulation coupled with the managerial and business insight
they develop," says John Venhuizen, vice president of business development
for Ace Hardware Corporation. "In general, these older entrepreneurs have a
greater knowledge of the inner-workings of the business world -- in addition
to strong leadership and managerial skills."
Those who wait to pursue small business ownership also may benefit from more
robust financial assets. An overwhelming 75 percent of study respondents
said that they used personal savings to finance start-up costs for their
businesses, a move that’s not always possible for young people just gaining
independence from their families, or striving to pay off student loans.
Gina Schaefer, an owner of six Ace stores in the Baltimore and Washington,
D.C., areas and board member for the Ace network of 4,600 independently
owned stores, launched her own business after working in information
technology. "By that point in my career, I was more financially stable and
able to take advantage of personal savings to become my own boss," says
Schaefer.
Of course, some individuals don’t discover their entrepreneurial ambitions
until after retirement age -- a situation that’s becoming more and more
common as baby boomers decide they want to remain in the workforce, although
not necessarily in the same job or industry. In fact, a 2008 survey by
MetLife Foundation and Civic Ventures found that half of Americans ages 44
to 70 -- if not already pursuing a second career -- aspire to have one.
"Retirees with entrepreneurial ambitions usually aren’t driven by financial
rewards or any of the power or prestige that some might associate with
owning a business," says Venhuizen. "For them, it’s all about creating a
purpose for the second part of their lives, and having the chance to live
out passions and interests."'
Courtesy of ARAcontent
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EDITOR'S NOTE:
The Ace Hardware Entrepreneurship Study surveyed 538 U.S. small business
owners to gain their perceptions on the motivations, challenges and benefits
or entrepreneurship. The national Web-based poll was conducted in the
spring.
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