CHAPTER 1What Is a Startup?
The word startup has become an increasing part of the popular lexicon in the past few years. While it has been around for a while, it has recently become ubiquitous for those discussing entrepreneurship and new company creation. But not all new companies are startups.
There is a big difference between two types of entrepreneurial endeavors: (1) local businesses, also called SMEs (small- and medium-sized enterprises) or lifestyle businesses; and (2) high-growth companies, often referred to as startups or gazelles,1 a term first used by David Birch in 1979 and refined in 1994 to refer to companies with a minimum of $1 million of revenue that were at least doubling in size every four years.
Local businesses are what they sound like. These are the businesses that you find in your city whose customers are close to the business, such as the corner grocery, local bookstore, nonchain restaurant, or locally owned gas station. Occasionally these local businesses start to expand and turn into multigeography businesses, resulting in a large enterprise, but many are local businesses for the duration of their existence.
In contrast, high-growth companies rarely have a local focus. While they are often started in one location, and, at inception, usually only have a few people involved, the founders of these companies aspire to grow quickly, independent of geographic boundaries. Their customers are all over the world, and regardless of whether the company ever expands ...
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