How to Teach Your Kids to be an Entrepreneur

Becoming a successful entrepreneur is not easy.

I spent five years studying 177 self-made millionaires and I have to say, the entrepreneurs in my study were among the most courageous, fearless individuals I have ever met.

They put everything on the line.

They took enormous risks in the pursuit of their dreams.

If you want your children to grow up to be entrepreneurs, then there are certain things you can do as a parent to help tee them up to be an entrepreneur.

Raise your kids to be optimistic

Optimism is the greatest asset of every successful entrepreneur.

Sixty-seven per cent of the self-made millionaires in my five-year study on the daily habits of the rich were fanatical optimists.

While they expected the entrepreneurial journey would be long, hard, and filled with setbacks, they also believed they would survive that journey and, in the end, succeed.

Raising kids to be optimistic gives them an enormous advantage over everyone else they will be competing against as adults because that optimism enables them to power through intractable hurdles, pitfalls, mistakes, and failures.

Those who have the most optimism also have the greatest persistence.

And persistence is a prerequisite for success.

Fund a “Kid Start-up”

Successful entrepreneurs start businesses and then grow those businesses.

Along the way, they make mistakes, have to overcome obstacles, and sometimes fail.

The best time to make mistakes or fail is when you’re young and you have very few responsibilities such as a home mortgage, children to raise, and bills to pay.

Here are some “Kid Start-up” ideas:

  • Open a neighbourhood lemonade stand.
  • Sell hand-made friendship bracelets.
  • Start a rock band.
  • Have a garage sale and put your child in charge of selling and collecting money (give them a commission on each sale – 20%, for example).
  • Open a homemade ice cream stand.
  • Sell floral arrangements.
  • Sell personalized headbands, scrunchies, hats, or shirts.
  • Sell knitted scarves, gloves, socks, etc.

Parents can help fund the “kid start-up” and watch their children gain valuable entrepreneurial experience.

Teach your kids the difference between good goals and bad goals

Successful entrepreneurs set goals that help them realize their dreams.

They also know the difference between a good goal and a bad goal.

You hardly ever hear anyone talk about goals in a negative context.

Goals are almost always perceived to be good.

However I found from my research that there are goals that add no real value to your life when achieved.

So how do you know what type of goals to teach your future entrepreneur?

Good goals create long-term benefits and long-term happiness when achieved.

They allow you to grow as an individual and alter your behavior in a positive way.

Good goals get you from point A to point B.

Point B is a better place, such as more wealth, a better job, higher income, etc.

An example of a good goal would be to lose 20 pounds.

Setting a weight loss goal often involves a daily regimen of exercise, and healthy eating and encourages a healthy lifestyle.

Good health results from exercising and eating right.

It may also motivate you to moderate your consumption of alcohol or to quit smoking.

When the weight eventually comes off you enjoy the compliments, feel healthier and all of this creates lasting happiness.

Bad goals create short-term happiness and no long-term benefits when achieved.

An example of a bad goal would be to own a Ferrari.

In order to own a Ferrari, you must make more money.

Making more money will likely involve either more work or taking excessive financial risk (i.e. gambling).

There’s a cost-benefit to working more – you invest time that you will never recoup.

Don’t misunderstand me here.

Working more to make more money can be a good thing.

Parents Raise Children

But where the goal goes south is when you then use that money to buy stuff, like a Ferrari.

The happiness you derive from owning more or better stuff will fade over time since happiness derived from buying stuff is always short-term.

You will eventually revert back to your genetic happiness baseline and, after a few weeks, the Ferrari will no longer create lasting happiness.

The lost time, however, can never be recouped.

If the goal, instead, was to judiciously invest that extra money you earned into a calculated risk, such as a side business, an investment, or a vacation home that would enable you to spend more time with your family, then it transforms the “work more/earn more” goal into a good goal.

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