Article

Risk/Reward - Armageddon or No Contest?

Topic: EntrepreneursBy Evan Mitchell, GhostRock DigitalPublished Recently added

Legacy signals

Legacy popularity: 1,176 legacy views

Legacy rating: 5/5 from 1 archived votes

Risk/Reward – Armageddon or No Contest?

Armageddon. The final battle between good and evil. An apocalyptic scenario. Literally. For many entrepreneurs the risk/reward relationship is seen in these terms. Kill or be killed…

Entrepreneurs are people who inhabit the risk/reward battleground permanently. The Oxford English Dictionary defines an entrepreneur as:

“a person who sets up a business, taking on financial risks in the hope of profit”

That’s a bit uncomfortable, when you look at it closely. It suggests an equation which has on one side the certainty of risk against, on the other, only the hope of profit. And while the truth of that relationship can’t be denied it is this very perception, this negative interpretation of the relationship, that accounts for the failure of most would-be entrepreneurs to follow their dreams. This isn’t fear of failure, it’s fear of loss.

That’s a perfectly rational fear. Indeed, not to fear loss would be irrational and a recipe for, well, quite a lot of loss. Which isn’t the point of entrepreneurship.
In the pre-digital economy risk and reward were so fundamentally intertwined as to be seen as the two sides of the same coin. The essence of the problem has always been that if you can win, you can also lose. Lose everything you’ve built, everything you’ve invested and, at the extreme, everything you own. I understand that better than most. When I lost in a previous life I, true to form, went the whole hog. It sucks…

But what If we could remove that fear – that entirely rational fear – by resetting the relationship? Reducing the risk so that the options were simply win or… don’t win? The life of the entrepreneur would be much easier because the real obstacle to success – the fear of loss – would have been removed. Think how much more creative, imaginative and effective we could be.

Well, it’s happening now. The digital revolution is sweeping all before it and it’s changing the rules. The immutable truths of the bygone age are crumbling all around us, and the unbreakable link between reward and risk has been broken at last. At least for the self-sufficient stand-alone entrepreneur. How so? In the digital economy it’s possible to create a successful, productive business with no capital. No stock, no premises, no staff. You can sell goods or services supplied by others, or a service of your own, earn a margin or a commission and incur virtually no costs in the process. This is because the digital economy is an economy of information and the whole world is online and listening. Consider this: Twenty years ago the biggest cost on my profit & loss account was my telephone bill. Just to communicate with my market was costing me tens of thousands. Behind that lay additional costs for the equipment (phones, faxes, even telex) and staff to make it all happen. In those days it was simply unthinkable that it would one day be possible to service a market, and customers, without any of these things. And yet, here we are.

Nowadays the loss you have to fear is the loss of opportunity and reward. Not the loss of what you have, but the loss of what you could have. For me (and remember, I’m speaking with the benefit of personal experience here) that’s an altogether scarier prospect. That definition of “entrepreneur”, when you take away the words “taking on financial risks”, looks a much more attractive thing to be. In fact, it looks like a very attractive thing to be. Starting from scratch it is now possible to build not just a business but a lifestyle. A lifestyle of personal freedom, financial security and emotional wellbeing – all the rewards of the old-world entrepreneur – without the old-world risk, and fear, of losing your shirt. What you do, how you do it and what scale you achieve are matters of choice. Your choice.

Could that be you? If you understand that we now have choices, that the new economy is a place of vast opportunity and that there are no bars to entry – whether education, experience or capital - then you’re already half way home. If you get the “why” then the “how” isn’t complicated, it’s just a matter of learning.

My phone bill last month? I use VOIP and Skype. All in, £20.

Article author

About the Author

Evan is a coach and mentor to new-start and early development entrepreneurs in the digital economy. A highly rated sales and negotiation trainer – with cross sector experience from major corporates to SME clients – he writes on the opportunities for career and personal development offered by the digital marketplace.

Further reading

Further Reading

4 total

Article

The holidays are a busy time for everyone, but especially for small business owners/entrepreneurs. In addition to everything else you’ve got going on: this is a great time of year to be connecting with your current clients and potential clients. Yup, that’s right. This time of year is perfect for generating new business, connecting with those you serve in a way that feels good to you, expanding and moving your business powerfully forward into the New Year.

Related piece

Article

I’ll share with you that when I first started in business the image of a leader that I brought with me was an authority figure who has the power to hurt those that are following them. This was because I was so used to being around authority figures who were coming from a place of leading through fear (I came out of the very toxic public school system). I knew I didn’t want that in my business.

Related piece

Article

We all know that smiles are contagious. So are bad moods. Experts in the field of psychic energy say it's that energy – not the actual smile -- that connects you to the good mood of the other person. Now there are a lot of people that DON’T believe, but there is a growing percentage that believe ...

Related piece

Article

Many of my clients share that one of their biggest marketing challenges is actually connecting with enough prospects. They are doing all of this great work in their businesses, but not very many people know about their work; or at least not enough for the flow of business to be moving smoothly and easily. Stop. Start. Stop. Start. Sound familiar? There isn't one perfect way to consistently connect with prospects, but there are many ways that, when used collaboratively, will build you a nice stream of people who are interested in what you do.

Related piece