55+ Year-Olds Starting More Businesses than Us?
Have you read the July 2006 edition on Business 2.0? If you haven’t, you should because it’s an amazing business magazine – perfectly suited for young entrepreneurs such as ourselves. Ok, let’s get to the meat and potatoes of this post, or should I say the tofu and carrots for all you vegetarians (like me)?
After reading the article titled The Gray Entrepreneur on page 34, I was left feeling a bit confused as to the purportedly “correct” statement in the article that stated: “ The 55- to 64-year-old demographic is most likely to start a company.”
Hmm… if that’s the case, then I must really be lost. From the life that I am living in, the majority of people that I see starting businesses are not
55+ years-old, but more like 18 – 34 year-olds.
In my mind 55+ year-olds are less likely to start a business than, say, a 24 year-old who has much, much less to lose. Heck, at the age of 24 you barely graduated from college and you still have your whole life ahead of you. At 55, you’re half-dead ( I kid… I kid…) and have much more to lose if your business fails… which it’s very likely to do.
I guess the question is….
What Does it Mean to Start a Business?
- If you form an llc or inc. tomorrow by filing a few papers, then does that mean you have started a business?
- If you get a few of your friends together and start selling T-Shirts around the neighborhood, have you then started a business?
- Or what about simply having a plan on paper and a million ideas that you plan on implementing?
Well if it’s just a matter of filing some papers in order to become a business owner, then yeah… I wouldn’t doubt that the 55+ year-olds are trumping the young entrepreneurs in starting businesses.
But what about all the young entrepreneurs who haven’t filed their papers and who are out there everyday making money, building a list of clients, and networking up a storm? Those people are just as much business owners as anyone else out there albeit they haven’t “officially” started a business (and possibly not paying their taxes). Nonetheless, they are entrepreneurs in my mind….but maybe not business owners in your mind. Can that be the fundamental difference?
From what I see happening, there are a lot more young entrepreneurs starting businesses than older people. So what if they haven’t declared a corporation yet or don’t have a business bank account.
Sure, those are necessary components of building a business, but they are not pre-requisites to “starting” a business. Furthermore, a piece of paper can never decide whether you are an entrepreneur or not. Entrepreneurship is a state of mind, not a list of credentials and documents.
What do you see happening?

Well, it depends on how they are running those numbers. Remember, the baby boomers are in that age range, so there are alot more of them then us. Plus, many of them have experience, and they also have alot of free time. If they have structured their retirement well, they also have alot of money. So you put those things together, and I can definitly see why they would say that. Think of all the kids you know that are just coming out of college. What do they do? Start a business? Yea right. More like get a job.