Obama's Inauguration Message: Risk-Takers Will Get Us Out of Recession

January 20, 2009 RSS Feed Print

Here's a selection of Obama's inaugural speech that I hope doesn't get lost in all the commotion:

In reaffirming the greatness of our nation, we understand that greatness is never a given. It must be earned. Our journey has never been one of shortcuts or settling for less. It has not been the path for the fainthearted -- for those who prefer leisure over work, or seek only the pleasures of riches and fame. Rather, it has been the risk-takers, the doers, the makers of things -- some celebrated, but more often men and women obscure in their labor -- who have carried us up the long, rugged path toward prosperity and freedom.

Obama himself is about to join that tradition of American risk-takers. Almost immediately he's going to be faced with decisions in which he might think, "Will I regret taking this risk later?"

With good timing, business website Alibaba.com just published an intriguing article on the subject of how successful people take risks. Writer Brett Nelson asked a number of famous entrepreneurs and other successful people about the greatest risks of their lives. One example:

Michael Chasen, co-founder of Blackboard (nasdaq: BBBB - news - people ), an education technology company, went so far as to jeopardize his new marriage. Despite making nice coin at KPMG, Chasen and college buddy Matthew Pittinsky decided to start their own company making software to facilitate instruction at schools that were outfitting fully Internet-wired classrooms and dormitories.

"The biggest risk was telling my fiancé one month before our wedding that I was going to quit my high-paying job to gamble on a 'big idea' with my old college roommate," says Chasen. "Not exactly what she had signed up for." (Happy ending: They still tied the knot. "Risk averted," he adds.)

Something to watch in the early days of Obama's presidency is how he will change the calculus of risk-taking for entrepreneurs. Will his attempts to repair the economy make it less worth it to take risks? Will he strike the right balance? For more on how Obama could increase healthy risk-taking by entrepreneurs, read on here.

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Aaron of AL 11:54AM January 11, 2010

Matt -

I just wanted to reach out and say kudos for pointing out the Obama quote. It's unfortunate, but in all of the hoopla I think most of the media lost that line while they were covering the important stuff like "what are people wearing"??

If innovation is indeed going to dig us out of our financial mess, the time is now to accelerate the rate at which that innovation gets created; and it starts with helping entrepreneurs.

Anyway, I wanted to introduce myself and pass on our new guidebook called Breaking Through The Broken: The Transparent Guide To Overcoming The Inefficiencies In Early Stage Venture Capital. It has over 30+ pages of insight, inspiration, and rarefied honesty on what’s wrong with the early stage venture capital market and of course some suggestions on how we can all work together to fix it.

You can read or download a copy of the paper for later at www.dontgosouth.com.

Cheers,

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David Brody of CA 1:26PM January 23, 2009

Risky Business

Risky Business

Matt Bandyk, a reporter for U.S. News, explores capitalism from where it all begins, with the entrepreneur, whose risk taking and experimentation provide the roots from which the rest of the economy grows. As much courage as it takes to create one's own business, even the entrepreneur needs some help, and this blog will look at news, trends, and practical advice for starting and running a small business.

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