The
business world today is different. It’s full of challenges. It’s ambiguous.
It’s complex. It’s quite unpredictable. Its players are after speed, have thus
become highly vulnerable to distress, particularly financial distress. Such
were the thoughts that swarmed the mind hearing the tragic demise of the Café
Coffee Day (CCD) founder VG Siddhartha (VGS).
Siddhartha,
a bright and young entrepreneur, established a novel chain of affordable
hangouts for the Indian youths of 21st century
under the brand name CCD. Created employment for the rural youth by training
them to be fit enough to work in a service industry where greeting an irate
visitor with a smile makes all the difference. Built a Desi brand of his own,
selling a finely brewed coffee, which caught the attention of the urban
middle-class. Everything looked hunky-dory, till his work-life balance tilted
to the fatal extreme!
The
business world is shaken by the apparent suicide of VGS. A letter said to have
been written by him to the firm’s board and employees stating that he “gave
up”, blaming tax authorities for “harassment” and decisions that created a
liquidity crunch and also about the pressure exerted by a person from a private
equity firm to buy back their stake has indeed inflamed the business world’s
anger towards the government and its tax rides that are often alleged to be
tainted by a political element.
This
letter raises two vital issues. First one: the interface between the government
and the taxpayer. There is, perhaps, an urgent need for refinement in the
current approach. Our ancient thinkers strongly advocated a kind of taxation
whose implementation is not felt by the people. A King is ordained to take into
account the ‘Yoga Kshema’ of the taxpayers while levying taxes. It is
said that while collecting taxes, a king must act like a ‘gardener’, and not
like a ‘charcoal maker’. Let us hope that our tax-system will practice this
sane advice.
The
second issue that VG’s letter raises is: the dysfunctional corporate debt
market in the country. It subtly points out that VG, who had successfully built
the CCD brand, would have had no difficulty in raising money and running the
business alright in a functional debt market duly backed by an efficient legal
framework. As against this, today our banking system being overburdened by
distressed assets has become risk-averse. Even NBFCs that are passing through
liquidity crunch after the IL&FS crisis are of no avail. Thus, credit to
businesses has evaporated. On the demand side, businesses, with investments
drying up and employment becoming scarce, are facing a knock-out effect on
their revenues. Simply put, economy itself is in a serious trouble.
Cumulatively, all this made jittery investors put more pressure on businesses
that are already in trouble to pay back their investments. But the pity is, all
over the western capital markets, PE investors are known for providing
risk-capital for startups but it seems to be different in India. Now the
question is: Whom to blame? And, what to blame for?
The
only answer for this toxic conundrum is perhaps what Anand Mahindra, Mahindra
Group Chairman tweeted: “Entrepreneurs must not allow business failure to
destroy their self-esteem as it will be the end of entrepreneurship.” What a
profound statement!
That said, let us first try to understand what entrepreneurship means. Simply put, it is an activity of setting up a business taking on unusual financial risks in the hope of profit. There are three important words in this, viz., ‘risk’, ‘hope’ and ‘profit’ and they command our further indulgence. First, the all-important one: Risk. It means “to dare”. Which is why, it is more a ‘choice’ than a ‘fate’. In other words, it is a chosen one by the entrepreneur. In statistical terms, it is the degree of variability of possible outcome of a particular event. In financial parlance, risk is always associated with loss that is expected to be incurred due to the happening or non-happening of a certain event or events. It thus becomes an uncertainty with a known probability. And importantly, remember, it is chosen by the entrepreneur. But then the question is: Why? Because, he has a ‘hope’—hope of handling it. Hope of manipulating it, morphing it, managing it in his favor.
That said, let us first try to understand what entrepreneurship means. Simply put, it is an activity of setting up a business taking on unusual financial risks in the hope of profit. There are three important words in this, viz., ‘risk’, ‘hope’ and ‘profit’ and they command our further indulgence. First, the all-important one: Risk. It means “to dare”. Which is why, it is more a ‘choice’ than a ‘fate’. In other words, it is a chosen one by the entrepreneur. In statistical terms, it is the degree of variability of possible outcome of a particular event. In financial parlance, risk is always associated with loss that is expected to be incurred due to the happening or non-happening of a certain event or events. It thus becomes an uncertainty with a known probability. And importantly, remember, it is chosen by the entrepreneur. But then the question is: Why? Because, he has a ‘hope’—hope of handling it. Hope of manipulating it, morphing it, managing it in his favor.
Thus
comes the next important word for the entrepreneur: ‘Hope’. It is the vital
spark of life, the sole driving force behind mankind’s dreaming, planning,
execution and his very existence. “Everything that is done in the world is done
by hope”, said Martin Luther King. But unfortunately, hope too is exhaustible.
And that is where an entrepreneur needs to regain hope by “hoping for the
moment”. Else, there is a danger of one getting dumped in needless gloom. So,
what an entrepreneur needs to cultivate is self-esteem. And he should do it all
the time.
That’s
where the word ‘grit’ steps in. It is observed that most of the successful
entrepreneurs are found to possess enormous ‘grit’. Grit is made up of
persistence, passion, and resilience. It is the passion for the chosen
enterprise that enables an entrepreneur to stomach all the rejection and still
do something better than what has already been done for sustaining the
enterprise. The gritty lot will never give up until they achieve their
goals. Even if they are knocked down,
they bounce back and try in a different way to keep going.
After
all, an entrepreneur’s journey is always through an uncharted territory. So,
nothing is obvious for him; every move is a new step which he himself has to
draft. For, there are no ‘a prioris’. He has to strike out on his own. In
short, it is the perseverance that yields the much-desired profit. And it is
the profit that sustains the enterprise. Challenges do arise, but they should
not overwhelm the entrepreneur, instead he/she should innovate newer ways to
overcome them. As Song (2011) defined,
entrepreneurship is an enterpriser’s will to create a new business through
management innovation by showing his/her challenging spirit. And in all this, as
Dubet (1994) said, a logic of personal ethics flow as an undercurrent.
That is entrepreneurship!
And as Anand Mahindra’s tweet says, no entrepreneur should allow his/her
business’s systemic risk kill
their entrepreneurial spirit.
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