Issue Season
Fall
Document Type
From the Practitioner's Corner
Abstract
Some of the best entrepreneurs fail early and often. Less talented or less committed entrepreneurs do not even get a second chance. Failure and setbacks, however, can be instructive. What lessons can be learned from these experiences? How can the entrepreneur (and investors) navigate around the potholes on the New Venture Highway? Read on.
Recommended Citation
Levangie, Joseph E.
(2004)
"No Mulligans: When Good Entrepreneurs Make Bad Decisions,"
New England Journal of Entrepreneurship: Vol. 7:
No.
2, Article 8.
Available at:
https://digitalcommons.sacredheart.edu/neje/vol7/iss2/8
Included in
Business Administration, Management, and Operations Commons, Entrepreneurial and Small Business Operations Commons