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Our society faces multiple challenges as we head into the post-COVID era. As vaccines begin to dull the effects of the virus, we want to take stock of the issues that may have been pushed to the side as the pandemic has raged out of control. We do this from two perspectives: an almost retired boomer coming to the end of a career, and a side-hustling millennial trying to scratch a living out of a creative life as a writer and musician. We want to argue from both perspectives that we need to become a nation of entrepreneurs, and that the time is fairly short for such a transition.
American society, as well as others around the globe, faces several serious societal issues that require our best creative thinkers to begin to solve. We can no longer ignore, for example:
We don’t believe that there is a “one size fits all” approach to tackling these issues, and we are distrustful of the unanticipated consequences of massive government programs that have good intentions. We have a more simple and straightforward idea that will move us toward multiple solutions to these seemingly intractable problems.
We need to become a nation of entrepreneurs. We need thousands of people starting new businesses based on their ideas for how to deal with these societal issues, as well as others that exist. We need new products, new services, new jobs and new forms of business to tackle these difficult challenges. Business needs to be a part of the solution.
One of the most hopeful signs is that the underlying narrative of business is fast changing its tune. No longer do we see the view that business is only about profits for shareholders. JUST Capital has documented that a vast majority of Americans, 89 percent, want companies to focus on doing right by employees, customers, communities and the environment.1
Of course companies have to make money in order to do this. But so-called “shareholder primacy” has run its course and “stakeholder capitalism” has begun to take hold. From the Business Roundtable statement to the Blackrock CEO’s annual letter to CEOs, endorsing the idea of purpose and creating value for stakeholders, we are entering a new era. We must build our business system based on what has always made capitalism work: the incredible energy of our entrepreneurs.
Boomers have long been involved in struggles for civil rights, environmental sustainability and other social issues. Meanwhile, younger generations, millennials and zoomers, see the future and realize that business must play a role. Post-pandemic, more millennials approve of both capitalism and socialism.
Millennials are the side-hustle generation. In 2019, among young adults ages 18–29, 19 percent were self-employed as their primary employment, and another 19 percent had a side hustle of some sort while punching the clock at a “day job.”2
For their part, many retiring boomers are finding a new chapter by starting something they have dreamed about, starting side hustles of their own. Almost one-third of boomers are also engaged in side hustles.3 And we know that there are more self-employed people among older folks like boomers. This may be due to the fact that more small businesses are run by boomers, and they may work longer than the typical retirement age.
For the past decade, new business applications have been on the rise from 2.5 million in 2010 to 4.35 million in 2020. The birth to death ratio of new business startups to failures tells another story.
Small Business Survival Rates (1994–2018):4
To become a nation of entrepreneurs, we need to do several things simultaneously:
The best companies are builders of society. And plenty of them exist. We need to focus on these companies because they bring people together; they don’t drive them apart. They don’t take shortcuts. They don’t engage in financial manipulations. They create jobs and stand by their products and treat employees fairly. They are good citizens and build communities. They stand for American freedom, dignity and equality of opportunity for everyone. In short, they adhere to the idea of stakeholder capitalism, which is what Americans expect of their companies — just see the JUST Capital survey.
We need many more of these companies.
Freeman is best known for his work on stakeholder theory and business ethics, in which he suggests that businesses build their strategy around their relationships with key stakeholders. His expertise also extends to areas such as leadership, corporate responsibility and business strategy. Since writing the award-winning book Strategic Management: A Stakeholder Approach in 1984, countless scholars, business leaders and students worldwide have cited Freeman’s work.
Freeman also wrote Managing for Stakeholders: Survival, Reputation and Success and Stakeholder Theory: The State of the Art.
B.A., Duke University; Ph.D., Washington University
Becoming a Nation of Entrepreneurs: The View From 2 Generations