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Entrepreneurial Work Ethic

Mar 16, 2026
Erik Baker, a historian of science and author of Make Your Own Job, traces how the entrepreneurial work ethic replaced industriousness. He explores its origins in success literature and business schools. He discusses how it crosses class lines, reassures precarious workers, vilifies bureaucracy, and stabilizes inequality by individualizing responsibility.
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INSIGHT

Entrepreneurial Ethic Requires Constant Job Creation

  • The entrepreneurial work ethic demands not just labor but constant creation of new work.
  • Erik Baker contrasts it with the industrious ethic that valued persistence in allotted tasks and celebrated 'Blessed Be Drudgery'.
INSIGHT

Entrepreneurship Crosses Class Boundaries

  • The entrepreneurial ideal cut across class lines, embraced in both mass-market success literature and business-school management texts.
  • Baker notes entrepreneurs can be imagined as Elon Musk or an Uber driver, showing the concept's paradoxical reach.
ADVICE

Managers Should Model Entrepreneurial Virtues

  • Managers are encouraged to model entrepreneurial virtues to make companies feel transformative.
  • Baker explains this advice aims to boost loyalty and self-driven problem-solving among workers.
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