Why This Book?

Becoming—and being!—an entrepreneur is difficult. Raising capital to fund one's entrepreneurial journey is even more difficult. Each year—in the good years—only about 1,500 U.S. startups get funded by venture capitalists, alongside another 50,000 or so by angel investors, a paltry number against the 5 million ventures that seek startup funding.1 According to research from Statista, the numbers these days are worse: only 843 seed-stage deals were done by U.S. venture capital firms in 2013, though that figure is the best in years, more than double the number in 2010.2 Difficult, indeed!

The numbers elsewhere, including in the UK, where I spend most of my time, are even more daunting. In Europe and Asia, they're tougher still. I know firsthand how difficult it is, because I've been in startup and capital-raising mode multiple times during the first half of my career. In the second half, as a professor at one of the world's leading business schools, and as a board member and investor, I've helped hundreds of individuals surmount—or circumvent!—the fundraising and other challenges to become thriving entrepreneurs. Some, you may be surprised to hear, did it inside large companies. Others, the more typical, got their start in their kitchens or garages, or over a couple of beers at the local pub.

The vast majority of them, however, didn't follow the prototypical path that the conventional wisdom holds as gospel today:

  • Step 1: Come up with an idea for a new venture.

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