> And maturity counts in biz more than anything else.
>
> Also working for companies will tell you what it takes to do biz.

This is a myth.  The history of startups shows us that the best
entrepreneurs were neither mature nor experienced when they started out

If anything, the history of college-dropout entrepreneurs shows us that
understanding a specific customer need and build a kickass product to
address it is the best way to build a startup.

In fact, I'd argue that starting a company before you work for anyone else
will ensure that you have an open mind before dogma kicks in.  Now running a
startup -- once it becomes a full-fledged company -- takes experience.  That
is when maturity, experience, and understanding the caveats of doing
business in the real world becomes important.

Best,
Karthik

On Tue, Mar 1, 2011 at 6:02 AM, Baskar Selvaraj <[email protected]> wrote:

> >
> > Remember, entrepreneurs are the fuel for any nation. Any economy.
> >
> > Without them who will you work for?
> >
> > Give it your best shot.
> >
> > But the reason I feel you should not start now is that it is rare to
> > see mature people below
> >  the age of 26 or 28.
> >
> > And maturity counts in biz more than anything else.
> >
> > Also working for companies will tell you what it takes to do biz.
> >
> >
> True, the maturity/experience always counts in biz than anything else.
>
> @Girish - The best answer for those who think about making a career in FOSS
> business.
>
> Regards
>
> S. Baskar
> CEO/LinuXpert Systems
>

-- 
Karthik Narayanaswami
Email: [email protected]
Web: http://www.metlin.org
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