Trends
Trends

BA 50+ Entrepreneurship Trends

Trends
Trends
Trends

Entrepreneurship at 50+: Trending Data
“Senior Entrepreneurs” are not an oxymoron. They are
the 21 st century’s new economic engine.

  • Entrepreneurs aged 50+ are launching new businesses faster
    than any other demographic worldwide, and an
    overwhelming number are creating green businesses.1
  • Since the mid-1990s, entrepreneurship has shifted markedly
    toward older new entrepreneurs. In 1996, 14.8% of
    entrepreneurs were 55-64 years old compared to 22.8% in
    2021. 2
  • Today, more than 1 in 5 new entrepreneurs are between
    55-64 years old. (Kauffman Foundation)
  • A 50-year-old startup founder is 2.8 times more likely to
    found a successful startup as a 25-year-old founder.3
  • The mean founder age for the fastest growing new ventures
    is 45. (Azoulay et al)
  • 10% of entrepreneurs in the U.S. start a business because
    they’re not yet ready to retire.4
  • Small business owners by generation include pre-baby
    boomers (0.5%), baby boomers (45.5%), Generation X
    (46.5%), Millennials (7%), and Generation Z (.5%). (Guidant
    Financial)
  • Baby boomers (57 to 75 years old) account for nearly half of
    small business owners, compared with 7% for Millennials
    (ages 26 to 41). (Guidant Financial)
  • “Senior Entrepreneurs” are 2-3 times more likely to form a
    new business than they are to be involved in the gig
    economy. (University of Michigan, 2019)
  • Five years after startup, 70 percent of ventures established
    by older entrepreneurs are still in operation compared to just
    28 percent of enterprises launched by younger
    entrepreneurs 20-something. That points to one crucial
    factor: experience.5
  • The Federal Reserve Bank’s “Growing Grassroots
    Entrepreneurial Ecosystems” is focusing on senior entrepreneurs to boost rural economic development in the U.S.6
  • Research demonstrates that older workers can actually be
    more innovative than their younger counterparts.7
  • As in The Secret Life of the Grown-Up Brain, for example,
    Barbara Straunch reminds us that the aging brain can grow
    and learn: “The brain, as it traverses middle age, gets better
    at recognizing the central idea, the big picture. If kept in
    good shape, the brain can continue to build pathways that
    help its owner recognize patterns and, as a consequence, see
    significance and even solutions much faster than a young
    person can.” 8
  • Seniors business people often make intuitive leaps grounded
    in experience rather than risky random guesswork.
    “Seasoned employees have a lot more to teach junior
    employees about business intuition,” says Aaron
    Harvey, executive creative director at Ready Set
    Rocket. “Business is much more than trends and
    technology. It’s applied intuition that takes years of
    experience to develop.”

1 Thomas Schøtt, Edward Rogoff, Mike Herrington, and Penny Kew. “GEM Special Report on Senior Entrepreneurship 2017.” Global Entrepreneurship Research Association (2017).  www.gemconsortium.org

2 Who is the Entrepreneur? New Entrepreneurs in the United States, 1996-2021. Kauffman Foundation.

https://www.kauffman.org/entrepreneurship/reports/who-is-the-entrepreneur-united-states-1996-2021/

3 Azoulay, Pierre, Benjamin F. Jones, J. Daniel Kim, and Javier Miranda. 2020. “Age and High-Growth Entrepreneurship.” American Economic Review: Insights, 2 (1): 65-82.

4 2023 Small Business Trends. Guidant Financial.

https://www.guidantfinancial.com/small-business-trends/

5 Source: Halima Khan, “Five Hours a Day: Systemic Innovation for an Ageing Population.” Nesta.org, (February 2013)

https://media.nesta.org.uk/documents/five_hours_a_day_jan13.pdf

6 Source: Dell Gines and Elizabeth Isele, “Six Steps to Aid Older Rural Entrepreneurs.” The Federal Reserve Bank of Kansas City. Community Connections (August 2019).

https://www.kansascityfed.org/publications/community/connections/articles/2019/q12019/senior%20rural%20entrepreneurs

7 Source: Pierre Azoulay, Benjamin F. Jones, J. Daniel Kim, and Javier Miranda, “Age and High-Growth Entrepreneurship.” National Bureau of Economic Research, Working Paper No. 24489 (April 2018).

https://ssrn.com/abstract=3158929

8 (Source: Barbara Straunch. The Secret Life of the Grown-Up Brain: The Surprising Talents of the Middle-aged Mind. New York: Viking (2010).

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