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Is Doing Business Really the Best Way to Escape Employment? Analyzing Your True Thoughts Across Three Dimensions
Many people complain daily about the tediousness of their jobs and dream of starting their own business to change their situation. But behind this desire often lies a misjudgment of reality and a lack of understanding of oneself. To view entrepreneurship rationally, it’s helpful to consider the following perspectives.
Starting a Business Seems Free, But Requires Deep Skills and Preparation
Many idealize entrepreneurship as “being your own boss, having flexible hours, and unlimited income,” but the reality is much more complex. Successful entrepreneurs typically need to master knowledge in marketing, finance, risk management, product development, and operations—each area often requiring decades of experience to truly integrate.
Ordinary people, due to limited abilities, backgrounds, and industry connections, face a very high failure rate when attempting to start a business. This is not alarmism but a realistic observation. Many underestimate their own capabilities, confusing what an average person can achieve with what only talented individuals can succeed in. The result is often failure.
Instead of rushing into entrepreneurship, it’s better to treat your current job as a platform for skill development. Quickly accumulate professional knowledge, build industry connections, and save startup capital during stable employment—preparing yourself for future entrepreneurial opportunities. When your abilities are no longer ordinary and your background more solid, your chances of success will significantly increase.
Job Burnout Is a Misinterpretation of Work, Not a Trigger for Entrepreneurship
Many say they don’t want to work and want to start a business. The root cause isn’t necessarily the appeal of entrepreneurship but rather boredom and dissatisfaction with their current job. Work takes up a large part of life, and repetitive daily routines can feel dull and hollow. Under such psychological states, people naturally fantasize about a different life—where entrepreneurship seems like the only escape.
However, this mindset is a trap: you mistakenly believe that starting a business will bring freshness and fulfillment. In reality, entrepreneurship often involves greater challenges and pressures than regular employment. The real issue is how to create a sense of novelty and achievement within your current job.
Changing your work approach, expanding your responsibilities, or adjusting your work rhythm can break the monotony. For example, trying different ways to communicate with clients within a week or taking on new roles within your current framework. These strategies can alleviate burnout and bring a sense of innovation and joy to your work, reducing your obsession with starting a business.
Avoidance Is the Most Dangerous Mindset
The pressures and difficulties at work come from managers’ demands, colleagues’ competition, and performance targets. If someone is accustomed to retreating in the face of challenges and frequently changing jobs, starting a business will only push them into deeper trouble.
Many naively believe that entrepreneurship can help avoid interference from superiors and colleagues, allowing them to retreat to a safer space. But the truth is quite the opposite—entrepreneurship involves facing market ruthlessness, demanding customers, financial pressures, and unknown risks. If you can’t confront difficulties at work, you’ll be even less equipped to handle real challenges in business.
True growth comes from facing difficulties head-on. Whether in employment or entrepreneurship, you must learn to confront, analyze, and solve problems. Avoidance only causes problems to accumulate, ultimately leading to failure.
Starting a Business Is Not the Opposite of Work, But an Extension of It
If you want to change your life through entrepreneurship, first ask yourself three questions: Am I truly prepared in terms of skills? Is my desire to start a business driven by genuine needs or just escapism? Do I have enough mental resilience to face real difficulties?
If the answers to these questions are uncertain, the wisest choice is to focus on doing your current job well. In a stable work environment, improve your abilities while contemplating when the right time for entrepreneurship might come. When you are strong enough and fully prepared, opportunities for business will naturally appear, and your chances of success will be much higher than rushing in prematurely.
Starting a business can indeed change your life, but only if you are well-prepared. For most ordinary people, working steadily and diligently remains the most reliable path to success.