mycroft, on 2013-April-11, 18:49, said:
Absolutely! No one in business that I know romanticizes risk the way Mike seems to do.
When contemplating the start of a new business, you look for opportunity. If you see one, you then assess the risks. Your focus is on developing a plan that takes advantage of the opportunity while minimizing the risks. If you can't devise a way to manage those risks, you don't start the business.
Of course there is always the chance that one can be wrong, so you take that into account when deciding how much of one's savings to invest. I'm not a billionaire (by a long shot) and any 6-figure loss disturbs me considerably. So far I've never taken such a hit in a business that I've controlled (although I can't say the same for a certain real estate venture in which I was not a managing partner nor for a certain mutual fund that I bought into).
The point of minimizing risk is that the consequences of not doing so hurts the lives of your family, of your employees, and of the customers who've come to rely upon you.
My considered opinion is that we would be a lot better off in the US if folks knew that they'd have adequate food, housing, and medical care for themselves and their family if they took time off for more education or to start a new venture. Businesses would be more efficient if managers knew that letting someone go would not lead to the ruin of the person's family. And I personally resent all of the time I've had to spend on health care insurance instead of business matters when health insurance should properly be handled by the government -- as it is in more advanced countries.
I've been lucky, and it could have been much different for me. Suppose my girl friend in high school had become pregnant, as happened to some of my friends? I might have had to support a family instead of going to college and later starting businesses. If my friends who found themselves in that predicament had been able to complete their educations, they'd surely have been able to accomplish a lot more with their lives.