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For Many Older Americans, an Entrepreneurial Path (nytimes.com)
64 points by DanielBMarkham on Feb 10, 2014 | hide | past | favorite | 10 comments



Here's what is worrying: But it is not an easy road. Money is the biggest stumbling block. Most start-ups like Ms. Arnold’s are underwritten with personal savings.

Also: Many entrepreneurs do not pay themselves for a year or so to allow their businesses to gain traction.

Considering that most businesses fail within 5 years, I'm not enthusiastic about the older-than-55 crowd starting their own business. If you are fresh out of college you may be able to set up a company - you have time you put your finances back together, should the effort fail, but as a retiree you are looking at old-age poverty.


> should the effort fail, but as a retiree you are looking at old-age poverty

As mooreds mentioned in his comment[1], they might already be looking at old-age poverty. People are living longer, healthcare costs are rising, retirement funds are not keeping up, pensions and retirement benefits are being gutted by corporations and governments alike. So, speaking as someone who has a retired relative trying this idea, the downside might be minimal.

[1] https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=7208690


> Considering that most businesses fail within 5 years

Business closure rates (at least here in the UK) are around 10% a year. So although your statement is technically true (it would reach 50% after 5 years) these are not necessarily "failures", just closures, and many businesses last 20 years or more. I started 1 business in 1992; have had 3 others that I closed after 6 months, 2 years, and 6 years respectively. 2 were unprofitable, 2 were highly profitable. How does that skew the figures?

Entrepreneurship has never been a young person's game until recently. Older people have more cash and fewer liabilities - children have left home and mortgages are paid off - so have more financial flexibility.

Investing 12K from savings is no big deal when you are older and actually have saving to invest. And as for paying yourself - you have a retirement income.


Fewer commitments, large savings, large support network, and lots of learned wisdom.

I don't see any disadvantage at starting a business at 20 nor at 50. 30, seems to be the biggest problem since you have all the commitments and few resources.


I don't think any would walk into a high risk venture at that age. Its more like doing something that can bring in money without putting much at risk.


I think this points to how much easier it has become to start a business nowadays (a normal business, not a tech business). I'm sure some of this is due to the marketing revolution that is the web, but I think it's also due to the move to services that has happened in the USA over the past 4 decades. (It's a lot easier to run a one person services business than a one person manufacturing business.)

Pair that with a) boomers needing more money because they have fewer pensions and are living longer, b) older folks have some accumulated capital (either financial, human or relationship) and c) the flexibility of a lifestyle business (even if you work longer hours, you can timeshift), and it doesn't surprise me that older folks are starting more businesses.


Refreshing to read a NYT article that doesn't go out of its way to find the cloud in the silver lining.


I highly respect this is because of ageism in the jobs market, not because they want to.


Medicare probably helps a bit too


Read New York Times, I will not.




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