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Epistemology of business management. fundamental definitions

Anonim

The Dictionary of the Royal Academy of the Spanish Language, of which Peru is a part, regulates the Spanish language throughout the world and provides us with the exact definitions of the various terms that we use to communicate. It is the most authoritative text to which any Spanish speaker can resort, from which we extract the following definitions:

PR IMERAS CONCLUSIONS

  • Every businessman has to be a businessman. Every businessman is not necessarily a businessman. If to be an entrepreneur requires difficulties and chance, that means undertaking actions without prior knowledge of what it means to perform them correctly. Therefore, the entrepreneur should NOT be an entrepreneur. The entrepreneur works with people, and if he is an entrepreneur, he not only takes the risk and danger for himself, but for all those who are part of the company with him; that is to say, it would endanger the well-being of all those who are part of your company. The entrepreneur must be aware of the business he is going to undertake (you could no longer say "start").

S EGUNDAS CONCLUSIONS

  • Every company is a business, but not every business is a company. Entrepreneurship should NOT be a characteristic of the entrepreneur, since it presupposes risk and danger when considering dangerous and random actions. The entrepreneurial entrepreneur runs the risk of always failing; Instead, the savvy entrepreneur is headed for success. The entrepreneur must be a savvy entrepreneur.

T ERCERAS CONCLUSIONS

  • The term manage is generic and includes that of administering. The term administering has various meanings, but all encompass the idea of ​​“doing, doing.” The term administering is specific; its various meanings demonstrate this.
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Epistemology of business management. fundamental definitions