
I’ve always considered myself entrepreneurial at heart. Even since I’ve started my work in IB (investment banking), I have continued to work on developing a few "back pocket" ideas that I’m excited about. Indeed, ever since I can remember, I have wanted to start my own business, not because I hope to be the next Zuckerberg, but because I believe the ability to dictate your own work is more rewarding than any other employment experience out there. It remains my ultimate career goal, and with any luck, I will make it happen some day.
That said, I have to say that the rising fad of "start-ups" in what has been – arguably – a VC bubble has started to trigger my inner skeptic. Don’t get me wrong: I think it’s great that we are increasingly encouraging young people to take career risks and try to create value through entrepreneurship. But I couldn’t help but be suspicious that there were a fair number of people getting the short end of the "start-up" stick, if for no reason other than the fact that the few friends I had that went to work for early- to mid-stage start-ups left their corporate jobs filled with enthusiasm and are now silently trying to break their way back into what we all know collectively as the machine of corporate America.






