Want to Discover Your Entrepreneurial Passion? Try this.
There is a folk tale about
a prospector in gold country. Every day, he bought supplies and headed off to
pan for gold in the local river, returning each night empty-handed.
One morning, at
the town's mercantile store, a woman asked the man how much gold he’d found,
and he replied as he always did that he hadn’t found any but would be back at
that task again the next day. When the woman asked how long he’d been panning
for gold overall, the prospector told her: 20 years.
The woman
couldn’t believe it. If he hadn’t found any gold in all those years, why would
he continue? And to this, the man simply replied, "How else can I justify
what I've been doing for 20 years?"
From an
entrepreneurial point of view, that response is sad, because the message of the
story, especially for an entrepreneur, is that you must be willing to let
go of whom you’ve
learned to be and instead become who you are.
To find out
what that is, look back at your childhood. As a child, everything you
encountered was new -- sights, sounds, faces, nature, food. So, you began to
discover how the world worked by separating things into categories. Some
of those things completely excited you; others were decidedly
unappealing; and the rest left you feeling ambivalent.
The empirical
definition and nature of entrepreneurial "passion" is
evolving, and so is the debate over its role in the success of entrepreneurial
endeavors. However, one thing is
clear: When you're determining the key
ingredient necessary for your individual success, the things
you loved as a child are going to be powerful clues because chances are, you
probably still love those things.
Chances are, too, that
you encountered obstacles to those things along the way: As you grew up,
designing roads for your matchbox cars or building shortwave radios, for
instance, may have become more difficult because a bully showed up.
Someone
mocked, ridiculed or judged what you loved in a way that made this activity
feel wrong:
- Maybe your brother told you that collecting stamps was for nerds, or a classmate told you playing the flute was uncool.
- Maybe your mom steered you away from sports because she didn't want you to get hurt, or your dad said science was just for boys and why couldn't you be more like your sisters?
- Perhaps your interest in bugs, geology, giraffes, cars, ice skating, cooking, reading, climbing trees, building model airplanes, sewing, or writing poetry was criticized as frivolous, silly or a waste of time.
The desire
to fit in and be accepted is a natural part of the human
condition, even for those with an entrepreneurial spirit.
And here, the pressure
can be staggering, especially when you're a young person. So, you may have let
the things you loved slip away and learned to be content with other, more
acceptable things. But you are unique for a reason. What you love doing, what
piques your interest, what gets you excited to learn more: Those are clues
to your entrepreneurial passion, direction and big ideas.
These four steps will
help you find those clues.
1. Begin by making a list.
List 10 things you
enjoyed doing as a child or young adult that you don’t do anymore and would
enjoy doing again. (Note: if it helps, pretend that no one could see you or
find out about it.)
2. List 5 natural talents unique to you.
These should be things
that are easy for you but hard for other people. It doesn’t matter how silly
they may seem; just list them.
3. List 3 books you read as a teenager that had the biggest
impact.
These should be books
that reflected how you saw yourself then. What did you like about those
books and how did they make you feel?
4. Create a time line of your life.
On a piece of paper,
draw a horizontal line, with the left side being the day you were born and the
right side being today. Draw vertical lines above or below the line
representing the highs and lows of your life.
These lines can be
different heights depending on the significance of the event. Fill in as many
specific moments or events as you can remember; then look for patterns among
both the high and low points. Often, the thing that knits together a series of
moments is a clue to what you want or don’t want going forward.
Discovering your
entrepreneurial passion may be as simple as rediscovering who you used to be
and the things you enjoyed before someone expected you to conform.
The people who judged,
ridiculed or mocked what excited you may not have meant any harm. In fact,
they may have thought they were helping you be more accepted by your peers.
But, as an entrepreneur, those interests are some of the very things you may want to bring back to your life.
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