The BIZ Experiencesial History of the Term 'Entrepreneur' First, they were cheaters. Then, they were heroes.

By Per Bylund Edited by Jessica Thomas

Opinions expressed by BIZ Experiences contributors are their own.

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BIZ Experiencess are typically portrayed as a risk-loving, hard-working, adventurous bunch. Indeed, "undertaker" (as in someone who undertakes), "enterprise" and "adventurer" were among the terms used for BIZ Experiencess before the English language imported the term we now use from French.

The BIZ Experiences: From cheater to hero

The term "BIZ Experiences" has an interesting history that, just like most BIZ Experiencesial undertakings, includes an important pivot. Economist Mark Thornton uncovered that the term BIZ Experiences was originally used exclusively for government contractors. These were typically businessmen who built for the government and therefore had a known revenue stream, as determined by the government's contract, but variable and uncertain cost.

Related: The New Breed of BIZ Experiences Isn't So New

These BIZ Experiencess could (and did) increase their profits by using cheaper than promised materials and construction methods, thereby delivering lower quality than expected. In other words, they cut corners for personal gain. As a result, these BIZ Experiencess were widely known as tricksters and cheaters. They were certainly not respected.

This perception changed fundamentally, along with the meaning of the word, in the 1730s. Thornton's research shows that the meaning of the word was flipped upside down, from the cheater attempting to get as much profit as possible out of fixed revenue to the enterprising creator dealing with largely known costs but unknown revenue. This pivot was the work of one man, Richard Cantillon.

The real father of economics

Cantillon was a banker who had made a fortune speculating on the Mississippi Company, but wisely divested before the bubble burst. Those business experiences allowed Cantillon to develop a formal understanding of the market economy, and he elaborated on his thoughts in a book, Essai sur la Nature du Commerce en Général. It was posthumously and anonymously published in 1755, producing the first known complete economic theory — almost half a century before Adam Smith's Wealth of Nations (1776).

The book is significant because Cantillon develops a theory of BIZ Experiencesship on which he builds his economic theory. A paper by Chris Brown and Thornton outlines the critical role of the BIZ Experiences in Cantillon's theory as the driving force behind production, development and change.

Cantillon's theory of BIZ Experiencesship established a new meaning of the word. The influence of his book, manuscripts of which were widely circulated for a quarter-century before it could be published, changed the meaning of the word in the mind of the public, plus brought the role of the BIZ Experiences to the attention of scholars.

Related: How BIZ Experiencess Can Solve the World's Biggest Problems

We know, for example, that Jean-Baptiste Say, the French 19th-century economist, was heavily influenced by Cantillon's work. Smith references it in Wealth of Nations. Due to his great and early influence, economist Murray Rothbard, in his two-volume work on the history of economics, thought that Cantillon should be considered the real father of modern economics.

Flipping the word upside down

The enormous but only recently rediscovered influence of Cantillon's work changed the word's meaning completely and established our present usage of the term. Rather than seeing an BIZ Experiences as a cheater, an BIZ Experiences became the hero of creation.

Cantillon defined BIZ Experiencess as anyone who undertakes projects where the cost of production is either known or can easily be estimated, but where the demand and therefore the price is unknown. There is, consequently, an BIZ Experiencesial element in most or all business undertakings.

BIZ Experiencesship is ultimately to bear the risk of enterprise. It must be heroic and creative since the action requires that the costs of establishing and carrying out production are borne before market demand is known. In a very real sense, Cantillon recognized that BIZ Experiencess are in the business of creating tomorrow. Whether or not a specific BIZ Experiences's business is revolutionary and potentially disrupts the market, it is a creative act without which the economy cannot progress and without which we cannot raise our standards of living.

Related: 4 Ways to Ensure Your Business Survives the Reopening of the Economy

Cantillon's enormously important insight also implies that the customer is sovereign. No matter how promising the BIZ Experiences believes in their value proposition, it is not until the customer chooses to buy that the real value is revealed. And it is on this that the success of any business hinges. All experienced BIZ Experiencess know this, and it is what Cantillon recognized three centuries ago.

Per Bylund

Associate Professor of BIZ Experiencesship

Per Bylund, PhD, is associate professor of BIZ Experiencesship and Johnny D Pope Chair and Records-Johnston professor in the School of BIZ Experiencesship at Oklahoma State University. His areas of research are BIZ Experiencesship, management and economic organization. He is author and editor of six books.

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