Entrepreneur or Intrapreneur? Take the test here Judging by the daily pronouncements of international economic foundations, governments and think tanks everywhere, the world is looking to entrepreneurs to cure all our ills – and especially to get us out of the rut of a recession. Implicit to this rallying cry is the assumption that we know what an entrepreneur is, and that we understand the essence of what makes a good one. If you take to the internet in search of enlightenment on this point, you will be inundated with millions of confusingly contradictory references. Here are three randomly selected examples: A: Entrepreneurs are ambitious, confident, passionate, see the bigger picture, people persons, risk-takers, unafraid of failure, opportunity-spotters, financial thinkers, actionoriented. B: Entrepreneurs defy characterisation; money means little to them, they’re fanatic about their mission, they have modest beginnings. Not iconic leaders, they are impatient and unconventional but don’t take risks for the sake of taking risks. C: The sole differentiator between those who run their own businesses and those who do not is access to start up capital. Interesting maybe, but far from consensual. ‘Entrepreneur’ is clearly a portmanteau word; broad and suggestive rather than in any way definitive. Its implied dynamism and energy, combined with a chameleon-like capacity to accommodate any viewpoint, make it ideal as a rallying cry and it seems to have been widely hijacked for such purposes. What the rallying cry is really saying is “we need more business success urgently – lots more”, and you can’t really argue with that. The one thing that everyone agrees on is that entrepreneurialism is all about ‘enterprise’ and that, of course, may take a myriad of forms. Anyone inspired to get actively involved at the sharp end of this crusade is going to need more than vague generalisations. In order to operationalise, to actually do something, you need certainty rather than theories, and captivating slogans.