---
product_id: 4134509
title: "The Entrepreneur Mind: 100 Essential Beliefs, Characteristics, and Habits of Elite Entrepreneurs"
price: "€ 25.27"
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reviews_count: 13
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---

# The Entrepreneur Mind: 100 Essential Beliefs, Characteristics, and Habits of Elite Entrepreneurs

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- **What is this?** The Entrepreneur Mind: 100 Essential Beliefs, Characteristics, and Habits of Elite Entrepreneurs
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## Description

To achieve unimaginable business success and financial wealth—to reach the upper echelons of entrepreneurs, where you’ll find Mark Zuckerberg of Facebook, Sara Blakely of Spanx, Mark Pincus of Zynga, Kevin Plank of Under Armour, and many others—you have to change the way you think. In other words, you must develop the Entrepreneur Mind, a way of thinking that comes from learning the vital lessons of the best entrepreneurs. In a praiseworthy effort to distill some of the most important lessons of entrepreneurship, Kevin D. Johnson, president of multimillion-dollar company Johnson Media Inc. and a serial entrepreneur for several years, shares the essential beliefs, characteristics, and habits of elite entrepreneurs. Through the conviction of his own personal experiences, which include a life-changing visit to Harvard Business School, and the compelling stories of modern-day business tycoons, Johnson transforms an oftentimes complex topic into a lucid and accessible one. In this riveting book written for new and veteran entrepreneurs, Johnson identifies one hundred key lessons that every entrepreneur must learn in seven areas: Strategy, Education, People, Finance, Marketing and Sales, Leadership, and Motivation. Lessons include how to think big, who makes the best business partners, what captivates investors, when to abandon a business idea, where to avoid opening a business bank account, and why too much formal education can hinder your entrepreneurial growth. Smart and insightful, The Entrepreneur Mind: 100 Essential Beliefs, Characteristics, and Habits of Elite Entrepreneurs is the ultimate primer on how to think like an entrepreneur.

Review: IN BUSINESS FOR MONEY IS LIKE MARRYING FOR SEX - Born in 1979, currently the CEO of Atlanta's Johnson Media Inc., which he founded, Kevin D. Johnson had already established several successful enterprises while still in his twenties. In his excellent book, Johnson offers the would-be entrepreneur 100 guidelines, complete with apt quotations, and enriched by his personal experience, expressed candidly. I liked his comment that going into business to make money is like getting married to get sex. To succeed, one needs more admirable motives. He's not big on "follow your passion" nor "become your own boss," either. Rather, become an entrepreneur if you want to provide goods and services that others value and if you get real pleasure out of doing so. The money will likely follow. He writes well-clearly, interestingly, with many supporting quotes and examples. Neither overly modest nor unwilling to share his failures, Johnson presents some hard truths, including that the entrepreneur has got to be willing to put his business ahead of his family. Talk about not being politically correct! Fortunately, he married a woman in synch with his goals and lifestyle. Surprisingly to me, they have a mortgage. Though it is a form of financial diversification, when you owe money, you are less secure than when you do not. You have to be willing to take risks, Johnson notes, and he has been rich and nearly broke within the last decade or so. It will be interesting to see whether he continues his well-earned winning streak or runs into circumstances that even diligence and talent cannot overcome. Johnson's success is at a scale that puts him within reach of many potential readers. He has multi-million-dollar success rather than mega-million-dollar triumphs, much less the billion-dollar riches of Facebook's Mark Zuckerberg or of the founders of Microsoft, Apple, Netflix, desertcart, etc. If his level is hard for us to reach, it is not out of sight. His advice is relevant to the would-be captain of industry during those early years when such captaincy is just a distant goal. Sub-titled "100 Essential Beliefs, Characteristics, and Habits of Elite Entrepreneurs," his book delivers as promised. The 100 topics are categorized within seven chapters: Strategy, Education, People, Finance, Marketing & Sales, Leadership, and Motivation. Some of my favorites from the 100 are: Think Big; Create New Markets; Build a Company That Is Systems-Dependent, Not People-Dependent; Ask for Help; Business Comes First, Family Second; Hire a Good Lawyer; The Business Plan is Overrated; Fire Your Worst Customers; Technology is an Opportunity, Not a Threat; Always Follow Up; Failure Doesn't Kill You; An Idea's Execution, Not Its Uniqueness, Yields Success; Don't Underestimate Your Competition; School Is Not Necessarily Education; Spend the Majority of Your Time with People Smarter than You; People Don't Only Work for Money; Get the Right Mentor; A Check in Hand Means Nothing; The Biggest Investment in Your Company Is Yours; Your Customer Is Your Boss; Networking Isn't All About You; Act in Spite of How You Feel; Make Difficult Sacrifices; You Are Excited When Monday Morning Arrives; You Are Disappointed When Friday Arrives; You Feel Unequaled Joy When Your Idea Becomes Reality. The book ends with some valuable contact information for Kevin D. Johnson: at Twitter, he is @BizWizKevin; his email is kevin@johnsonmedia.com; not surprisingly, his web site is TheEntrepreneurMind.com. Mr. Johnson knew he wanted to be a businessman from early on, once he found he was too vertically challenged to make it into the National Basketball Association, even as a point guard. He now has the NBA as one of his premier accounts. He convinced me, however, that his is a route I was glad I had not taken: too much work, too many trivial issues, more stress than I would want. Still, he has hobnobbed with interesting people and seems to have enjoyed his choices. The audience for this book should be those who want to understand successful businessmen and those who are entrepreneurs or are thinking of running their own businesses.
Review: Informative, concise, structured retraining of the entrepreneurial mind - I've been working towards starting a business for some time and I read books that range from sociology to economics to business strategy every day. The Entrepreneur Mind moves quickly from point to point as you move through the material, which allows the ideas to sync together because of the rapid rate at which the information flows. I read this book in one sitting over the course of about four to five hours and found that rapid pace to really allow me to see how each piece fit together. The section on strategy was by far the largest and, in my opinion, the most valuable as Kevin shares experiences from his own first businesses of where he was successful and some of the golden nuggets he has picked up through his own mentors, such as being creative with your marketing and understanding the value of non-conventional business arrangements while trying to build the infrastructure and reputation of your business. Some of the points and experiences in this book will not relate to every business in the world, but there is definitely plenty of information that can apply to anyone who is trying to improve their mindset on how to succeed in a business atmosphere where the rules are not as set in stone as one would think. Upon finishing this book, I gave it to my sister who has been struggling to build a jewelry business for over ten years. I hope that layout and ideas serve her as well as I feel they have served me. I understand what other posts on this book are saying about the writer speaking about himself so favorably. Personally, I didn't even notice really, because I was so focused on trying to get value out of the book that the tone of whether it was egotistical or not never crossed my mind. I just wanted more knowledge and wisdom and I feel that this book delivered that to me.

## Features

- Used Book in Good Condition

## Technical Specifications

| Specification | Value |
|---------------|-------|
| Best Sellers Rank | #833,510 in Books ( See Top 100 in Books ) #2,762 in Entrepreneurship (Books) |
| Customer Reviews | 4.6 out of 5 stars 963 Reviews |

## Images

![The Entrepreneur Mind: 100 Essential Beliefs, Characteristics, and Habits of Elite Entrepreneurs - Image 1](https://m.media-amazon.com/images/I/61Vo8vnXcZL.jpg)

## Customer Reviews

### ⭐⭐⭐⭐⭐ IN BUSINESS FOR MONEY IS LIKE MARRYING FOR SEX
*by D***R on August 3, 2014*

Born in 1979, currently the CEO of Atlanta's Johnson Media Inc., which he founded, Kevin D. Johnson had already established several successful enterprises while still in his twenties. In his excellent book, Johnson offers the would-be entrepreneur 100 guidelines, complete with apt quotations, and enriched by his personal experience, expressed candidly. I liked his comment that going into business to make money is like getting married to get sex. To succeed, one needs more admirable motives. He's not big on "follow your passion" nor "become your own boss," either. Rather, become an entrepreneur if you want to provide goods and services that others value and if you get real pleasure out of doing so. The money will likely follow. He writes well-clearly, interestingly, with many supporting quotes and examples. Neither overly modest nor unwilling to share his failures, Johnson presents some hard truths, including that the entrepreneur has got to be willing to put his business ahead of his family. Talk about not being politically correct! Fortunately, he married a woman in synch with his goals and lifestyle. Surprisingly to me, they have a mortgage. Though it is a form of financial diversification, when you owe money, you are less secure than when you do not. You have to be willing to take risks, Johnson notes, and he has been rich and nearly broke within the last decade or so. It will be interesting to see whether he continues his well-earned winning streak or runs into circumstances that even diligence and talent cannot overcome. Johnson's success is at a scale that puts him within reach of many potential readers. He has multi-million-dollar success rather than mega-million-dollar triumphs, much less the billion-dollar riches of Facebook's Mark Zuckerberg or of the founders of Microsoft, Apple, Netflix, Amazon, etc. If his level is hard for us to reach, it is not out of sight. His advice is relevant to the would-be captain of industry during those early years when such captaincy is just a distant goal. Sub-titled "100 Essential Beliefs, Characteristics, and Habits of Elite Entrepreneurs," his book delivers as promised. The 100 topics are categorized within seven chapters: Strategy, Education, People, Finance, Marketing & Sales, Leadership, and Motivation. Some of my favorites from the 100 are: Think Big; Create New Markets; Build a Company That Is Systems-Dependent, Not People-Dependent; Ask for Help; Business Comes First, Family Second; Hire a Good Lawyer; The Business Plan is Overrated; Fire Your Worst Customers; Technology is an Opportunity, Not a Threat; Always Follow Up; Failure Doesn't Kill You; An Idea's Execution, Not Its Uniqueness, Yields Success; Don't Underestimate Your Competition; School Is Not Necessarily Education; Spend the Majority of Your Time with People Smarter than You; People Don't Only Work for Money; Get the Right Mentor; A Check in Hand Means Nothing; The Biggest Investment in Your Company Is Yours; Your Customer Is Your Boss; Networking Isn't All About You; Act in Spite of How You Feel; Make Difficult Sacrifices; You Are Excited When Monday Morning Arrives; You Are Disappointed When Friday Arrives; You Feel Unequaled Joy When Your Idea Becomes Reality. The book ends with some valuable contact information for Kevin D. Johnson: at Twitter, he is @BizWizKevin; his email is kevin@johnsonmedia.com; not surprisingly, his web site is TheEntrepreneurMind.com. Mr. Johnson knew he wanted to be a businessman from early on, once he found he was too vertically challenged to make it into the National Basketball Association, even as a point guard. He now has the NBA as one of his premier accounts. He convinced me, however, that his is a route I was glad I had not taken: too much work, too many trivial issues, more stress than I would want. Still, he has hobnobbed with interesting people and seems to have enjoyed his choices. The audience for this book should be those who want to understand successful businessmen and those who are entrepreneurs or are thinking of running their own businesses.

### ⭐⭐⭐⭐⭐ Informative, concise, structured retraining of the entrepreneurial mind
*by T***. on February 7, 2015*

I've been working towards starting a business for some time and I read books that range from sociology to economics to business strategy every day. The Entrepreneur Mind moves quickly from point to point as you move through the material, which allows the ideas to sync together because of the rapid rate at which the information flows. I read this book in one sitting over the course of about four to five hours and found that rapid pace to really allow me to see how each piece fit together. The section on strategy was by far the largest and, in my opinion, the most valuable as Kevin shares experiences from his own first businesses of where he was successful and some of the golden nuggets he has picked up through his own mentors, such as being creative with your marketing and understanding the value of non-conventional business arrangements while trying to build the infrastructure and reputation of your business. Some of the points and experiences in this book will not relate to every business in the world, but there is definitely plenty of information that can apply to anyone who is trying to improve their mindset on how to succeed in a business atmosphere where the rules are not as set in stone as one would think. Upon finishing this book, I gave it to my sister who has been struggling to build a jewelry business for over ten years. I hope that layout and ideas serve her as well as I feel they have served me. I understand what other posts on this book are saying about the writer speaking about himself so favorably. Personally, I didn't even notice really, because I was so focused on trying to get value out of the book that the tone of whether it was egotistical or not never crossed my mind. I just wanted more knowledge and wisdom and I feel that this book delivered that to me.

### ⭐⭐⭐⭐ Useful Information in Easy to Understand Steps
*by A***Z on November 14, 2017*

As someone who has owned a small business for almost 29 years, I found this book to be a refreshing overview of the different aspects of running a business broken down into 100 individual pieces. The chapters cover basic business strategies, how to work with others, finance and marketing as well as some useful tips for staying motivated to pull it all off. Especially useful for younger entrepreneurs who are working on a game plan for a potential or newly started venture. The topics are presented very clearly and are easy to understand. An enjoyable read.

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*Last updated: 2026-05-22*