Life is better as an entrepreneur and survey respondents agree, according to GoDaddy research
Data Forward
Life is better as an entrepreneur and survey respondents agree, according to GoDaddy research
The big fact
Over half of microbusiness owners from the U.S. and U.K. agree that life is better as an entrepreneur, according to GoDaddy Venture Forward research. Research from academic institutions, including Baylor University and Louisiana State University highlight similar trends.
Tanika “Nika” Nelson, Owner and Head Designer of Nika’s Cupcake Bar is the perfect example of someone whose microbusiness helped improve her life. She started baking during a difficult time and viewed it as an opportunity to focus on something that creates beauty and happiness. She came to Empower by GoDaddy, GoDaddy’s global social impact program to learn new digital skills, network and gain other tools to accelerate her business marketing efforts. For Nika, it is especially rewarding as an entrepreneur to take an idea, put it on paper, and do the work to make that idea come to life.
“Everyone tells you as a child that you can be whatever it is that you want to be, and you can do whatever you want to do,” said Nika. “It’s true and I am proof.”
Tanika “Nika” Nelson, Nika’s Cupcake Bar, NIKASCUPCAKEBAR.COM
Generational and geographical differences
Though both U.S. and U.K. respondents agree that life is better as an entrepreneur, that sentiment differs by location and by age, skewing older and more positive in the U.S.
- 68% of Generation Z respondents in the U.S. agree that life is better as an entrepreneur, compared to 50% of their counterparts in the U.K.
- Baby boomers in the U.S. (75%) are even more satisfied with their entrepreneurial life than Gen Z, compared to 69% of baby boomers in the U.K.
- Baby boomers in the U.S. tend to earn more than Gen Z, while in the U.K., Gen Z and baby boomers report making the same annual revenue.
Learn more about these trends, here.
Business size doesn’t matter
Women are narrowing the gender gap with smaller businesses and less funds.
- In the U.S., the most popular aspiration for women (40%) is to be a solopreneur and stay small.
- For both the U.S. and U.K., women needed less capital to get started than men. In the U.S., 74% of women needed $5K or less, compared to 60% of men. In the U.K., 80% of women needed £5K or less, compared to 69% of men.
What brings joy
One thing U.S. and U.K. microbusiness owners agree on is what aspects of their businesses bring them joy, with the top three including:
- Creating their own source of income/supporting family.
- Connecting to customers.
- Making an impact in their community.
In addition to improving the quality of her own life, Nika is proud that her microbusiness is helping others. For those reasons, Nika is very encouraging to entrepreneurs eager to start a microbusiness.
“Do it, try it, even if you fail, live your life,” Nika said.
The research
GoDaddy’s Venture Forward research initiative analyzes more than 20 million online businesses with a digital presence (measured by a unique domain and an active website). Most of these businesses employ fewer than ten people, categorizing each as a microbusiness. While these microbusinesses may be small, their impact on economies is outsized even though they are often too informal or too new to show up in traditional government statistics.
Since 2018, Venture Forward surveyed more than 30,000 small business owners with a digital presence, making it the source for microbusiness data and insights.
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