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Data on Entrepreneurial Venture Survival Rates

Ask an average group of people what the survival rate is for entrepreneurial ventures and the figures you usually get are 10-20%. The truth is much rosier than common wisdom assumes.

As reported by the National Dialogue on Entrepreneurship, a new study from the Bureau of Labor Statistics "examines the survival rates of new businesses started between 1998 and 2002. It finds that 66% of new establishments started in 1998 were still operating two years after they started; forty-four percent were still operating in 2002." The only sector that showed significantly lower rates was the dot.com group, which crashed during this time. Factoring that group out and we are getting closer to the 50% figure that most experts believe to be an accurate estimate.

Studies examining entrepreneurs who have had training and/or education in entrepreneurial skills consistently show a much higher success rate (as high as 80-90%).


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» Entrepreneurial Survival Rates from Business Opportunities Weblog
The Entrepreneurial Mind: Ask an average group of people what the survival rate is for entrepreneurial ventures and the figures you usually get are 10-20%. The truth is much rosier than common wisdom assumes. As reported by the National Dialogue... [Read More]

» The Entrepreneurial Mind: Data on Entrepreneurial Venture Survival Rates from Daily Links
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Comments

There seem to be 2 different 'success' criteria being applied; if the business is merely 'operating' 2 years later, then from a silicon valley perspective it is on it's way to being a zombie -- a firm that never has a successful liquidity event. A zombie is not a success from the VCs perspective, because the VC model is to close the current fund and return the proceeds to the limited partners ... if there is no liquidity event, then no proceeds, then no returns to the limited partners (like your pension fund and college endowment).

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