I had a conversation with an entrepreneur who’s an avid reader and history buff. He pointed out something that stuck with me: biographies and autobiographies about business founders are the most challenging historical books to write. He based that on a few insights:
- Authors who write about entrepreneurs aren’t entrepreneurs and don’t usually understand business. They focus on telling a compelling story and don’t deep dive into an entrepreneur’s actions or why they took them. This leaves entrepreneurs who read their book craving more details about some parts of the journey.
- Entrepreneurs who write autobiographies usually aren’t gifted writers. They know all the details about their journey, but putting it down on paper is challenging for many of them, and they need help. If they move forward with the book, many will get a coauthor to fill the gap.
- The more time that passes, the harder it is to piece together exactly what an entrepreneur did and why they did it. This isn’t as true of other historical events, such as wars.
The details of what an entrepreneur did and why they did it are what make a journey resonate with me and help me figure out how to apply it to my situation. When that’s missing from a biography, I tend not to enjoy it as much. My favorite books are autobiographies. Reading them is the closest you can come to getting inside an entrepreneur’s mind without talking to them. They usually include the nitty-gritty, reasoning, and emotions.
This entrepreneur made a great point today. I’m going to think about this more.