Tuesday, April 30, 2013
Monday, April 29, 2013
Friday, April 26, 2013
Wednesday, April 24, 2013
WHY
ENTREPRENEURSHIP CANNOT BE TAUGHT BY FRANCES CARRERA.
Entrepreneurship, while it can be
enhanced and encouraged through education, cannot be taught
completely. The basic framework
and strategies can be presented in a classroom setting, but it is up to the
individual to effectively implement these strategies. Entrepreneurship, in the
end, is about three key virtues that are almost impossible to teach: passion,
courage, and work ethic.
Passion is something that people
develop, not something that can be instilled through a series of lectures. It
is possible to inspire through lecturing, but if someone isn’t passionate about
a topic or issue, no amount of convincing or hard facts is going to change
that. Passion is what drives an entrepreneur it’s what makes someone work 20
hour days to ensure a community in Africa gets clean water, it’s what inspires
an innovator to spend countless of hours developing a new invention, and it’s
what drives scientist to find a cure for cancer. Without passion, there is only
‘work’ to be done. Without passion, no one asks themselves, “How can I make
this better or make a difference”, which is a key question most entrepreneurs
start out with.
If passion is what drives an
entrepreneur, courage keeps them going. Having the courage to
risk everything- whether it be
time, money, or precious resources, is key to entrepreneurship.
Entrepreneurship is about having
guts, and no matter how hard they try, professors cannot teach that.
You also can’t teach someone how
to know which risks to take, how to take them, or what will work and what
won’t- if you could, everyone would be rich! Of course, entrepreneurship is not
always about risking it all- in fact, being an entrepreneur is very different
from gambling. Business gamblers take risks in search of big payouts, while
entrepreneurs take risks to do new things, solve problems, and are motivated by
much more than the reward of quick, easy money. Professors can teach the skills
necessary to make large scale decisions- especially financial ones- but
passion, courage, and work ethic are what separate the gamblers from true
entrepreneurs.
Entrepreneurial success depends
as much on temperament as on teaching. Entrepreneurship education can help
guide those with the right spirit, those with passion and courage, but it also
takes a strong work ethic and commitment to succeed. You can’t teach someone to
work hard unless they want to.
It takes a distinct combination
of ambition and drive to be an entrepreneur, and without the proper work ethic,
even the most passionate of entrepreneurs can fail. Most entrepreneurs fail
anyway! However, they gather the courage to rebuild and move on- and that type
of commitment can’t be taught. This, however, is not to say entrepreneurship
should not be part of a school’s curriculum. In fact, it’s imperative that
entrepreneurial thought be encouraged and students be inspired. Passion,
courage, and strong work ethic can take someone only so far if they don’t have
the right tools, knowledge, and connections to push ahead, especially in the
business world. Yet, a person is far more handicapped if they have the
knowledge without passion or courage- virtues that cannot be developed by
force.
While there are several elements
that can be taught to enhance the knowledge and success of entrepreneurs, in
the end, entrepreneurship is something one can learn only by doing. Students
need to be armed with inspiration and can be taught how to take an idea in the
right direction, but ultimately, it’s up to them to decide how far they want to
take it. True entrepreneurs are defined by their passion and their experiences,
not the degrees they hold, and that is why entrepreneurship, while it can be developed
and inspired, can’t truly be taught.
ACCELERATE CAPE TOWN CEO SHARES VISION FOR CAPE TOWN
"For Cape Town to
realise its vision of become Africa’s global city, the role of business needs
to extend beyond the boardroom by ensuring a sustainable business environment
that is resilient to the challenges of the day," says Chris Whelan, the new CEO
of Accelerate Cape Town, the business think-tank and catalyst that brings
together key stakeholders in the Cape Town city region to develop and implement
a long-term vision for sustainable, inclusive economic growth.
Whelan was speaking at the organisation's annual general
meeting yesterday where Accelerate Cape Town's 49 members, consisting of the
largest corporates headquartered in the Western Province, gathered to hear
about the successes of the past year and what is planned for the organisation
for the next 12 months.
FOUR KEY FOCUS AREAS
Whelan, who took over from former CEO Guy Lundy at the
beginning of July this year, has hinged the organisation's vision for Cape Town
on four key focus areas: connectedness, both physical and virtual; enterprise
development, aimed at growing the number of economically active South Africans;
talent, particularly attracting and retaining black talent in the city; and
telling the African story, especially as it relates to attracting business to
the continent.
‘The four key focus areas for Accelerate Cape Town are not a
deviation from what the organisation has been doing to date, but are rather
aimed at building on the success achieved under the stewardship of my
predecessor, Guy Lundy. We are confident that we will continue to play a key
role as facilitator between big business and government in the city, and make a
vital contribution to establishing Cape Town as Africa's global city, a city of
inspiration and innovation,’ explains Whelan.
THE NDP AND WHAT IT MEANS TO CAPE TOWN AND SOUTH AFRICA
Joining Whelan at the AGM was guest speaker Bobby Godsell,
former CEO of Anglogold Ashanti and current member of the National Planning
Commission, who shared some insights into the National Development Plan that
was recently presented to members of Parliament. Godsell says that one of the
most important aspects to the future success of South Africa is to have an
active and engaged citizenry. “While the NDP highlights nine key areas that
need to be addressed to ensure our success as a country, it is critical that
South Africans from all walks of life become actively engaged in our democracy
and so help build a country that provides opportunities for inclusive growth to
all. People should not wait for government to implement this plan – instead,
every South African citizen should get involved and work together with business
and government to create the country we all want to live in.”
Whelan adds that the nine key challenges set out by the NDP
are not news to the business sector. 'However, the success of the NDP hinges on
its execution. It is here that I believe business has the capability to assist,
and I see Accelerate Cape Town playing a key role as a facilitator between
business and government in the Cape Town city region.'
Monday, April 22, 2013
YOUNG ROCKING MONEY MAKERS IN SOUTH AFRICA
LUDWICK MARISHANE AGED 22 - @theheadboy
According
to the Entrepreneurs’ Organization, Ludwick Marishane is the best student
entrepreneur in the world. Ludwick started businesses as a teenager in Limpopo.
Many failed, like his own brand of biodiesel, healthy cigarettes and a security
magazine. He then started HeadBoy Industries, a business that designs and
commercializes new products and services in South Africa. One of its products,
DryBath, is the world’s first bath-substituting solution. It is easy to use and
needs minimal water. It moisturises the skin, kills germs, and leaves the user
smelling fresh. If that is not enough, Ludwick was also named by Google among
the 12 most intelligent young brains in the universe.
BRENT KAIRUZ AGED 33
This man just does business
without all the fuss going around and a living example that there are still
massive opportunities outside of cyberspace. Today, Brent is the Managing
Executive of Creative Coffee Franchising. Brent started his career by founding
a company called Kairuz Corporation in 1998 (later became known as Kairuz
Holdings). In 2011, Famous Brands and Kairuz Holdings formed a new joint
venture partnership under a new company, Creative Coffee Franchising, which
controls all the Kairuz Cafés, Coffee Couture, Juicy Lucy and House of Coffees
franchised brands. Don’t know how to keep an eye on this guy, but if you can,
you’ll be amazed.
ASHLEY UYS AGED 29 -@ashleytuys
Ashley is the founder of
Medical Diagnostech, a company that develops and markets affordable and
reliable medical test kits for malaria, pregnancy, syphilis, malaria and
HIV/Aids for Africa’s rural poor. The company’s Malaria test kit can reportedly
detect all strains of malaria and indicate within 30 minutes whether the
malaria treatment provided is effective. Far more significant is that each test
kit costs R4, effectively bringing reliable malaria diagnosis into the hands of
millions of people for whom living with the threat of the illness is an
everyday reality. There is no doubt that this company is set for huge success.
JONATHAN LIEBMANN AGED 28 -@propertuity
His name might not ring a
bell, but if you are from Johannesburg, then you will definitely know of the
Maboneng Precinct, a thriving cultural district in the east side of
Johannesburg’s CBD. Jonathan is the man behind this project. He is a South
African real estate developer and CEO of Propertuity. Propertuity is a South
African Real Estate development company and the brains behind the construction
of the Maboneng Precinct. Once a neglected and deteriorating neighborhood
housing abandoned industrial complexes, Jonathan transformed Maboneng into a
vibrant urban mixed-use community complete with art galleries, retail spaces,
offices and artist studios. An entrepreneur who has changed the biggest city in
Africa, forever!
YOSSI HASSON AGED 30 -@yossihasson
Yossi is the co-founder and
Managing Director of SYNAQ, a company he started in 2004 with an old school
friend. When I was doing research on Yossi for this article, I found many
interviews and stories. All telling how successful he is at a young age, but
when he told his own story, it wasn’t always an easy ride. They struggled as a
service business, had to make difficult decisions and transformed the business
into one selling products. Since then it has become a prominent company and
attracted the attention of big players in the ISP market with Internet
Solutions acquiring 50% of the business in 2011. SYNAQ was also ranked as the
6th fastest growing company in South Africa by AllWordNetwork in 2011.
VUSI
THEBEKWAYO AGED 27 -@vusispeaker
Not only is he among the
most outstanding keynote and motivational speakers in the world but he is also
a formidable businessman. At the age of 17, Vusi was ranked 1st in Africa for
public speaking. At 21 he ran his own successful consulting firm (then South
Africa’s only black-owned Forensic Marketing agency). By 23, Vusi was an
executive at one of the largest consumer goods businesses in Africa. At 25
years-old he was the youngest director of a multi-national turning over R17bn a
year, where he served on the operations board. And today at 27, he is the
Managing Director of MOTIV8 Advisory – a specialist consulting and services
agency & serves on the board of international consulting firm Black Sheep
Advisory as well as the founding Partner of Speakers BootCamp (S.A).
VINNY LINGHAM AGED 34 -@vinnylingham
Vinny Lingham is a South
African Internet entrepreneur and the founder and CEO of Yola Inc., a San
Francisco-based Web 2.0 start-up that provides free website building,
publishing and hosting services to more than three million active consumers all
over the world. The company has engrossed over $30 million in venture capital
financing from institutional investors such as Columbus Venture Capital owned by
SA’s Johann Rupert’s Richemont Group. He also developed CIick2Customers, a
massively flourishing search engine marketing company housed in Cape Town,
London and Los Angeles.
ADII PIENAAR AGED 28 -@adii
In my opinion, Adii is one
of the most successful young tech entrepreneurs in South Africa. He is a
co-founder of WooThemes, a business which has had great success – in an
international sense – with millions of dollars in revenue annually. On his
website, he describes himself as an entrepreneur, husband and very new father.
Following him on Twitter, it is evident that this youngster is well respected
in tech circles all over the world. Today, WooThemes is four years old, with 25
employees. The company had no funding and was 100% bootstrapped.
JUSTIN STANFORD AGED 28 -@justinstanford
This South African-born
entrepreneur is a software industrialist and venture capitalist. It all started
for Justin at the age of 13 when he bought raw apple juice and sold it to his
classmates for a profit. A few years later he dropped out of school to pursue his
entrepreneurial career. But success didn’t come easy and he had two failed
businesses under his belt by the time he was 21. Justin fought on and his
perseverance paid off when he came across Slovakian anti-virus software package
called ESET; he negotiated with its manufacturers and begun its distribution in
South Africa. Today, ESET in South Africa sells ESET’s assortment of internet
protection products in about 20 sub-Saharan countries, making it an enormously
flourishing internet business and Justin heads up the 4D Innovations Group,
which includes the venture capital firm, 4Di Capital.
RUPERT BRYANT AGED 25 -@waroop
Rupert Bryant is the chief
operating officer (COO) and a director at Web Africa, one of South Africa’s
most successful Internet Service Providers (ISPs). His involvement in the
company started at the age of 16 when Matthew Tagg needed a partner for his new
venture, and Rupert was a perfect choice. Rupert was running his own web
development company from the age of 14, and when Web Africa started as a
hosting provider it was a logical choice for Matthew to join forces with Rupert
to build his new web hosting company. They started Web Africa with virtually no
capital, and over the last decade have grown it into a company which generates
well in excess of R130 million annually and employs 130 people.
WHERE DESIGN IS GOING AND HOW TO BE THERE:
ABSTRACT FROM AN ARTICLE BY CHERYL HELLER
JANUARY 3 2013
She is a pioneering communication designer and business
strategist, and has twice been nominated for the Cooper Hewitt National Design
Award for Communication Design.
Design requires approaching a situation with an open mind,
free of preconceived answers, which sounds simple but is not. It includes
mapping and modeling—illustrating relationships, making hidden connections
explicit. Making things visual enables people with a different ethos to see the
same thing; unseen truths and insights are revealed.
Design creates the tools required to understand information,
to compare and experiment, providing access to learning.
Design involves play, putting restrictions aside, imagining,
waking up hopeful every day because it is always possible to create something
new. Being unreasonable when being reasonable will not suffice; loving the pain
and accepting the insecurity of not knowing the answer.
Design is prototyping—making things without being attached
to them, hearing what’s wrong, building again on what’s right.
Design is craft—creating beauty, elegance, refinement that
touches and satisfies, and that becomes embedded in people’s daily lives.
Design is continually learning and fixing. It’s working
iteratively and remaining awake to the evolution that needs to take place.
Design is social. It’s public, engaging people in ideas. It
works at scales, and with ideas that affect multitudes of people through theater,
exhibits, public platforms and programs.
Design inspires people, wakes them up, helps them know
things about themselves and the world that they had not noticed before.
Be the translator. Because generalists see issues from
multiple perspectives, it’s easy to assume that what’s obvious to them is
obvious to everyone. Don’t assume that.
Help business to change. A recent study by LRN revealed
stunning gulfs between the way C-suite executives perceive the culture within
their organizations and the way the rest of the company perceives it. It
severely limits the organization’s ability to evolve. That gap in understanding
uncovers a need and an opportunity for design. Business is where we work,
business executives are who we know. It’s where to begin.
Put all these skills to use in shaping the future. Turn the
circle around. Facilitate change in unexpected places. Everything that can be
improved upon is an opportunity for design, beginning with conversations.
Maggie Breslin, a designer who worked at the Mayo Clinic for years, is a great
believer in the design of conversations: “I see enormous opportunity for design
in health care to create the spaces for doctors/providers and patients to have
difficult conversations. I think those difficult conversations are the key to
developing a health care system that is less expensive, of higher quality and
more efficient; in short, everything we say we want the health care system to
be.”
Create meaning. It’s not the economy, stupid. It’s the
stupid economy. Ours is alarmingly one dimensional, which is why it’s so
fragile and unrewarding. The value that can be measured by more than money is
the purview of design. In fact, MFA Design for Social Innovation faculty member
Lee-Sean Huang says that “one definition of a designer is someone who creates
meaning.”
Sunday, April 21, 2013
ENTREPRENEURIAL HAPPENINGS AROUND CAPETOWN
PETCHA
KUTCHA EVENING:
PechaKucha
is a more personalised Q&A – The casual atmosphere of the room makes it
easy to drop all formal barriers and socialize naturally. You can speak to any
presenter during the Beer Breaks and say: “That was fantastic, I love what you
do!” – and start a conversation from there.
The
presentation format that is based on a simple idea: 20 images displayed for 20
seconds each, whilst the presenter talks you through it. It’s a format that
makes presentations concise, and keeps things interesting. It forces people to
reduce, to clear their minds and think about what is relevant.
PechaKucha
drags you out from behind your computer into a live situation with atmosphere,
energy and real human interaction.
Anyone
can speak – this is the beauty of PechaKucha. The key to a great presentation
is to talk about something you love. Most people use PechaKucha to showcase
their latest creative projects. All the presenters share their passion and
either show their prized collections, share photos, unravel their dream
manuscript, or simply show us what gets them out of bed in the morning. So
speak, or forever hold your peace.
Tuesday
7 May 2013, @ 7pm, The Assembly 61 Harrington St. Cape Town - Free Entrance.
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