Parenting Mantra of Successful Entrepreneurs

 If you top the exam then you will get reward... If you don't do school work, you will not be able to go to play... There is no shortage of money, buy whatever you want... I don't trust you. No. If so, change it immediately. For her book, Raising an Entrepreneur author Margot McCall Beshnov spoke to 70 parents whose children became big entrepreneurs and were successful in their lives.

She says that the biggest role in the upbringing of children is that of conversation. A lot of things go into how your child will grow up. The most important things in this. Your way of explaining something affects the mind of the child.

John Arrow's parents' trust taught him to trust himself
Margot cites the example of John Arrow, who couldn't even finish college before setting up a Rs 1,500 crore mutual mobile tech company. Together with his friends, he brought out a newspaper at the school level, which was sold out, but the facts were not taken into account in it.

The principal was against him because of all the wrong things in it. Even his parents were in the dock. In such a situation, John's parents showed confidence in him and only said that correct your mistakes and prove yourself better. His trust inspired me to work hard.

The value of money taught by Nayla's mother, the founder of Mama Hope,
Margot tells the story of Nayla Rogers, a successful entrepreneur. When she was in high school, she had to go on a trip with her French class friends. His mother gave him half the money and asked him to earn the rest himself. For this, Nayla did babysitting, cleaned lawns, taught swimming, did data entry and raised the remaining half of the money.

Nayla says, 'I used to work 15-15 hours. By the end of summer, I had a lot of money. This was the beginning of my becoming an entrepreneur. She later started the Mama Hope Foundation, which funds community organizations around the world.

The mother recognized director John's interest in childhood,
director of superhit films like Disha The Crazy Rich Asians, John did not feel like reading. One day his mother saw that he was watching a video leaving his school homework, so his mother cried a lot and the next day brought him a book of film making. He said, do better what you do. John's family ran the restaurant.

As Margot says, the goal of entrepreneurs has never been to get rich. They wanted to do something better, to create something new. The parents of such children used to understand that the work which children do not like, they will not be able to do it for a long time.

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