Entrepreneurs raised at home
RISK TAKERS: TEACH YOUR CHILDREN TO BE INNOVATIVE AND RESILIENT FROM AN EARLY AGE Praising your child for simply taking part won’t work in this global economy.
In a rapidly evolving world, fostering entrepreneurial skills in our children is critical. Cultivating innovation, resilience and a proactive mindset from an early age can lay the foundation for future success – and parents have a pivotal role to play in nurturing these qualities.
In this article, we explore how parents can empower children to navigate an ever-changing landscape with an entrepreneurial spirit.
Model entrepreneurship at the family home
Being an attitude and not an occupation, entrepreneurship can easily be modelled at home.
Fostering entrepreneurial skills at home means encouraging curiosity, independence and a willingness to figure things out on one’s own.
In Prosek and Rende’s book, Raising Can-do Kids: Giving Children the Tools to Thrive in a Fast-changing World, the authors determined that the seven key entrepreneurial traits parents should focus on are exploration, innovation, optimism, risk-taking, industriousness, likeability and serving others.
The family home is the perfect place to teach and encourage universal soft skills such as collaboration, critical thinking, social skills, public speaking and lateral thinking.
Expose your children to risk
Children who are praised for simply participating are being set up for disappointment by a global economy where merely pitching up is not enough.
Exposing children to risks allows them to experience the natural human emotions – fear, excitement, anticipation – that come with risk-taking, with the underlying lesson being that there are no guarantees one’s idea will work.
To help children distinguish between entrepreneurial risk and generally risky behaviour, words such as “initiative”, “resourcefulness” and “inventiveness” can be used to encourage children to think creatively.
Encourage creative thinking
Focusing on finding creative solutions rather than fixating on failure can help children remain positive and motivated in the face of disappointment. Approaching failure as an opportunity to learn and brainstorm creative – even outlandish – solutions is likely to make a child feel comfortable with risk-taking and accepting of the reality that sometimes ideas fail and that sometimes failure is a precursor to something incredible.
“How” and “why” questions are helpful in getting the child to deconstruct the problem and search inwardly for solutions.
Let your children make decisions
Entrepreneurial confidence is rooted in early independence. Whether it’s choosing an outfit, spending pocket money or selecting off a menu, the most important outcome of allowing children to make decisions is that they are exposed to what it feels like to be a decision-maker. There are critical thought processes that take place during any decision-making process – including the assessment of possible risks and rewards – and stifling this skill stunts entrepreneurial development. Well-considered decision-making can further only be developed if the child is permitted to experience the consequences of their decision.
Challenge the status quo
Generally not encouraged by mainstream education, a key characteristic of the entrepreneurial mind is the ability to challenge the status quo.
Whereas, in general, school-going children are rewarded for following the rules blindly – which inhibits entrepreneurship – constructing ways to challenge norms is something that we, as parents, can teach our children.
Old autocratic parenting traditions aimed at ensuring blind obedience will not prepare the youth for this new economy.
Instil fiscal responsibility
An interesting alternative to paying children pocket money is to allow them the opportunity to earn their own money by identifying chores that need to be done around the house and then negotiating payment for their hard work upfront.
In doing so, children are taught to identify opportunities for generating income, make decisions that involve cost-benefit analyses, and learn to negotiate a good deal.
In the process, children are bound to contemplate the shortcomings of selling one’s time in exchange for money and explore creative ways of creating a passive income.
Embrace disruptive careers
Some estimates are that twothirds of today’s students will work in occupations that don’t yet exist. Social media influencers, blockchain developers and augmented reality developers are just a few examples of jobs that did not exist 10 years ago.
In this economy, it is highly unlikely that our children’s future economic success will depend on what school they attended, who they know or their credentials.
More compelling indicators for success can be found in the answers to the questions: Are you willing to roll up your sleeves and get dirty? Can you brush yourself off and start again if you fail?
Can you overcome seemingly impossible obstacles? Are you brave to challenge the status quo? Are you willing to reinvent yourself in an ever-changing world?