An entrepreneur grabs an opportunity without having control over all of the resources. An entrepreneur first has to recognize an opportunity. An entrepreneur develops his ability to recognize an opportunity when accelerating failure.
An entrepreneur does not view the reality that challenges are in store as a problem. An entrepreneur knows problems will come up but is confident solving problems when the challenge arises. The entrepreneur constantly learns how to learn and a challenge positively accelerates learning how to learn.
Learning how to learn increases emotional intelligence and has little to do with a measured intelligence quotient. Failing at a high velocity most quickly nourishes emotional intelligence. Upon failing an entrepreneur naturally learns how to learn and will most efficiently and effectively meet the challenge.
Learning how to learn while meeting challenges sharpens an entrepreneur’s ability to make correct snap decisions. The higher the emotional intelligence the higher the confidence and the less second guessing occurs. The absence of second guessing eliminates analysis paralysis.
When analysis paralysis is absent the entrepreneur recognizes opportunities more rapidly. The entrepreneur makes snap decisions about lucrative opportunities and eradicates less valuable opportunities. Even if the entrepreneur incorrectly chooses one opportunity over another the entrepreneur is grateful for the opportunity to sort through opportunities because the sorting process causes the entrepreneur to learn how to learn better.
This process best defines the term opportunist. A faithful entrepreneur who is a humble opportunist knows to serve or to meet a need. When an entrepreneur serves others’ best interests or meets the need of others, the resource of money will follow collaterally.
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