Get All Access for $5/mo

Are You a Small Business Owner or an Entrepreneur? The fact is, all business owners are entrepreneurs.

By Maryam Mirnateghi Edited by Dan Bova

Opinions expressed by Entrepreneur contributors are their own.

Maskot | Getty Images

Welcome to National Small Business Week, an entire week dedicated to celebrating the typically uncelebrated version of the American entrepreneur.

Drive through the heart of any downtown in this country and you will pass small business after small business -- laundromats, restaurants, gas stations, clothing stores and more. Small businesses are the glue that holds American communities together, but we seldom label those business owners "entrepreneurs."

For example, when a plumber comes to fix your toilet, do you think of him or her as a small business owner or as an entrepreneur? We have been conditioned to believe that the entrepreneur title should only apply to people like Steve Jobs, Jeff Bezos or on a small business scale, the founder of a cool startup that just sold for millions of dollars.

Related: How Culture Saved Our Company After Nearly Killing It

The fact is, all business owners are entrepreneurs. The size and the nature of the business is irrelevant. We have enough division in this country right now. Why not strive for inclusion? The main goal of the article I linked to above was to highlight the differences between small business owners and entrepreneurs. For example, the author makes this distinction:

Small business owners have a great idea -- Entrepreneurs have big ideas

Those are both big, and somewhat elitist, generalizations. As entrepreneurs and small business owners, we can change this way of thinking by investing time in better understanding one another's businesses. Did Ross Black, founder and CEO of Simple Box Storage and the 2019 Small Business Person of the Year for Washington state, only have a great idea when he came up with Simple Box Storage? Or, did he implement big ideas into the creation of Smart Storage? I'm guessing it is the later, based on the fact he just won a fairly large award and his company is growing like a weed (no pun intended).

A recent article argued "entrepreneurs and business owners have a different relationship with their companies. Entrepreneurs view their companies as assets. Something to be developed, shaped and readied for market. And then sold for a profit so that they can move on to the next "Big One."

So Patagonia founder Yvon Chouinard doesn't qualify as an entrepreneur because he never sold out? Why not ask him? Chouinard answers that very question in his book, Let My People Go Surfing, which should be required reading for all entrepreneurs.

Related: Patagonia Founder Yvon Chouinard on His Latest Social Venture

I am a small business owner of a retail cannabis operation and growing lifestyle brand, and I definitely consider myself an entrepreneur. I do focus on the big picture and plan at least six months out. I do think risk is essential for success, and I am constantly figuring out better ways to scale. I am not sentimental about my retail store, a small business owner trait pointed out by both articles linked to above. Rather, I'm passionate about my brand, which exists beyond the brick and mortar.

All entrepreneurs have one really important thing in common: we don't like working for the man (or woman)! We want to be the man! Our desire to run the show means we each believe we have the vision and ability to take an idea from a concept to a reality, then nurture it over a sustained period of time. It doesn't matter if you are selling books online or selling them from a brick-and-mortar store, or both.

Related: This Entrepreneur Bet His Existing Business to Launch a Coffee-Shot Brand

Every entrepreneur I know needs to wear 15 hats, from brand visionary to accountant to marketer and customer service. The cannabis business is no different. I feel like I'm stuck in meetings all day! What is different from your typical small business or startup environment is that the cannabis industry is highly regulated but not yet federally legal, so I have to take extra steps to accomplish tasks that my neighbor at the coffee shop, for example, doesn't.

Simply because of the slow pace of the legislative cycle I might plan even further out than the founder of a startup tech company. Not only do I have to plan ahead, I have to plan for sudden and often highly impactful changes. I have a plan A, Plan B and a Plan C just to cover my bases.

Every entrepreneur struggles uphill. Most of us started our businesses because we were tired of following someone else's dream. We set our own course and that is what really matters. The tactics we use and whether or not we have an exit strategy are just variations of the entrepreneurial journey. Dividing small business owners and entrepreneurs into two distinct categories is silly and smacks of old-school elitism.

Let's label every business owner as an entrepreneur and keep it at that. Simply fold the SBA's Small Business Week and its resources into Congress' National Entrepreneurship Week initiative and boom, everyone wins. Best of all, this would allow all of us to get to know one another's business' better and an opportunity to practice inclusion instead of exclusion, which can only be a good thing.

Maryam Mirnateghi

CEO of Canna West

Maryam Mirnateghi has been in the cannabis business for nearly a decade, first as a dispensary owner with Fusion Collective and now, as a recreational shop owner at Canna West. She is also a founding member of the state of Washington's Cannabis Ethics and Standards Board.

Want to be an Entrepreneur Leadership Network contributor? Apply now to join.

Editor's Pick

Branding

ChatGPT is Becoming More Human-Like. Here's How The Tool is Getting Smarter at Replicating Your Voice, Brand and Personality.

AI can be instrumental in building your brand and boosting awareness, but the right approach is critical. A custom GPT delivers tailored collateral based on your ethos, personality and unique positioning factors.

Business Ideas

63 Small Business Ideas to Start in 2024

We put together a list of the best, most profitable small business ideas for entrepreneurs to pursue in 2024.

Business News

Is the AI Industry Consolidating? Hugging Face CEO Says More AI Entrepreneurs Are Looking to Be Acquired

Clément Delangue, the CEO of Hugging Face, a $4.5 billion startup, says he gets at least 10 acquisition requests a week and it's "increased quite a lot."

Business News

Apple Reportedly Isn't Paying OpenAI to Use ChatGPT in iPhones

The next big iPhone update brings ChatGPT directly to Apple devices.

Growing a Business

He Immigrated to the U.S. and Got a Job at McDonald's — Then His Aversion to Being 'Too Comfortable' Led to a Fast-Growing Company That's Hard to Miss

Voyo Popovic launched his moving and storage company in 2018 — and he's been innovating in the industry ever since.

Business News

Sony Pictures Entertainment Purchases Struggling, Cult-Favorite Movie Theater Chain

Alamo Drafthouse originally emerged from bankruptcy in June 2021.