How is the life of an entrepreneur?

Not all entrepreneur days are the same, everybody’s perspective of how they utilize their day is different. Not everyone gets up at 6.00 am, goes for a jog before meditating and then record a vlog while drinking a wheatgrass smoothie, all by 8:00 am when it is time to head to the office. Some entrepreneurs have children and spend the morning getting them ready for school and others wake with their laptop on their lap responding to emails with one hand and holding a large cup of coffee in the other. Either way, their day is started with a ritual for getting motivated for what the day may bring.

Each day in the life of an entrepreneur is structured to maximize all of the 24 hours of a day. Uttering the words “It has been a long day” is a common occurrence, more toward the amount done and not the hours worked. A day comprises of an early start and a late finish, with a planned routine in the middle for a jam-packed day. When running a company not one day is the same and not always as glamorous as some may think. An entrepreneur is required to wear many different hats, from human resources to sales and from marketing to spokesperson. One day might be spent meeting with clients from one end of the country to the other and the next could be stuck in the office interviewing for new staff, conducting meetings, on calls and responding to emails.

Jeff Bezos starts his day with the most critical meetings so when his energy is depleting by the end of the day, he can try to avoid making decisions. Mark Twain said, “Eat a live frog first thing in the morning and nothing worse will happen to you the rest of the day.” If the day is started with the worst or most taxing task, when the motivation from the morning activities is fresh, then the rest will seem easy in comparison. It is said that intellectual work is better done in the morning and more creative work when tiredness starts setting in.

The day is not just about the company but also finding time to spend with family and friends, as well as on themselves. Most early starters spend the early hours on themselves or business before the rest of the house awakes so they can devote breakfast with their family. Most successful entrepreneurs set aside time for reading, “knowledge is power” as it expands the mind, this could be reading the daily papers and business pages, scrolling through social media or reading an Isaac Asimov novel. Evenings are sometimes reserved for family and friends, though a hand may continuously be on the smartphone ready to pounce on any message that comes through. Mark Zuckerberg goes straight to his phone to scroll through social media and his morning updates before getting up to start his day and ends it with tucking his children into bed. Richard Branson wakes at 5 am every day to get on top of things before eating breakfast with his family.

Working 50 to 90-hour weeks, entrepreneurs need to be incredibly motivated. Elan Musk ends his day checking emails at 1.00 am after a day of meetings, phone calls and daily walks of the factory floor at Tesla or SpaceX. When life is spent thinking and doing business from sun up to lights out its no wonder Steve Jobs said, “I’m convinced that the only thing that kept me going was that I loved what I did” there has to be some reason why entrepreneurs are so motivated to keep going through so many long days.

Opinions expressed by Entrepreneur contributors are their own.

"You work for yourself? Must be nice…"

How is the life of an entrepreneur?
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A combination of these words have been uttered to me by friends, relatives, new acquaintances and even strangers via email, more times than I can count.

So many people seem to have this romanticized version of what being an entrepreneur consists of. They're bombarded with social media humble-brags of people working from the beach -- they read articles about newly minted billionaires -- and don't even get me started on TV.

Related: 5 Things Productive Entrepreneurs Do Each Day

It all looks so easy, doesn't it? Well, let me let you in on a secret. It can actually be really hard, stressful and exhausting.

But, being an entrepreneur can also be incredibly liberating, exhilarating and unbelievably rewarding. Now here's the thing. Most of the time, it's all of these things (and so many more) at the same time and often all on the same day.

How is the life of an entrepreneur?

This simple image was created by Derek Halpern (who runs Social Triggers and Zippy Courses) and it's been shared thousands and thousands of times because…well…it rings true with entrepreneurs who know that, while there are definitely ups when running your own business, there's also a lot of downs.

Especially on a daily basis.

From failure to million-dollar business.

Derek understands how difficult it can be as an entrepreneur because he didn't just rise to success on a linear path. In fact, it was quite the opposite, as he points to the critical role that failure played in building a million-dollar business.

Halpern started his first blog after accidentally clicking on someone else's site and realizing he could get paid by advertisers. He figured this would be an easy way to make money. He was wrong. It bombed.

Then he accidentally clicked on another blog and decided he'd try again…this time "making fun of celebrities" instead of sharing the dumb things he did in college.

He was right. It worked. He was starting to climb the ladder of success that everyone dreams of.

And while he was suddenly doing better than he'd ever had, he still struggled from time to time, like when he decided to run his blog and hold a corporate job, which went great until he got a mediocre review, starting a downward spiral of hating himself and "drinking too much." Or when he decided to launch a website for conferences and speakers, working on it for months before realizing that others were doing the same -- and failing..

The point is this: Being an entrepreneur is all about experiencing these ups and downs -- both daily and over time -- but it also involves learning how to navigate them so you still attain success in the end.

Related: 5 Ways Entrepreneurs See Life Differently

The problem with this harmful myth.

I've been fortunate enough to meet a handful of actors, entrepreneurs, and artists who were "overnight successes". Each of these people only had one thing in common -- none of them were actually overnight successes.

As, Carolyn Gregoire points out, the road to success is usually a marathon and not a sprint…but it doesn't always seem that way.

"In our age of instant gratification, Internet fame and "accidental" billion-dollar start-ups, it's easy to think of success as more of a product of luck than hard work and determination."

Most people don't magically float their way to the top.

To make matters worse, some of the "instant-success" stories we use as our sources of hope and inspiration are false…as in the case of "Angry Birds," an app that was allegedly an "overnight success" but actually took 51 attempts before the developer, Rovio, could make it work.

So while it's nice to think of yourself taking an easy escalator to the pinnacle of achievement, losing this expectation right up front can actually save you a lot of frustration when you encounter obstacles in your way that threaten to halt your ascent.

Sure…some people have been lucky and went from having nothing to having everything in the blink of an eye. But those times are so few and far between that, if you're hoping that's what happens to you, then you'd sooner win the lottery while getting struck by lightning.

Instead, prepare for the downs and, when you have them…

Related: Can You Really Handle the Entrepreneurial Life? Check These 5 Signs

Remember, nothing's permanent

In a 2015 interview with Halpern, Tim Ferriss, author of "The 4-Hour Workweek" shared how, at one point, he was so down that he actually considered suicide.

Fortunately he didn't, and he learned something very important from that time in his life: neither ups nor downs are permanent.

In other words, when you're up, enjoy it because it's not going to last forever. Soak it in, revel in it, bask in its glory.

And if you're down, remember that relief is ahead because you can't stay down forever either.

Or, as Tim says, it's about "…realizing that there is no darkness without the light, that the light can come afterwards. And it does always come afterwards."

This is critical because entrepreneurship and depression oftentimes go hand in hand.

Brush up on your stoicism.

Another way to survive your downs is to brush up on your stoicism. What does that mean?

Ryan Holiday, author of "The Obstacle is the Way" best describes stoicism as a philosophical way of thinking (and acting on those thoughts) in a way that allows you to "…take obstacles in your life and turn them into your advantage, control what you can and accept what you can't."

This involves realizing that, while you can't always dictate what happens in your world, it is up to you how you respond.

You have the power to let your circumstances sink you or you can choose to use them in a way that helps you rise instead.

Has someone slammed a door in your face? Look around for a window. In a tough spot with your business and not sure how to progress? Ask another successful entrepreneur for advice.

You may feel like you've been dealt a rotten hand, but you can still outscore your opponent if you play cards better.

Or, as Yogi Berra once said, "It ain't over till it's over."

Surviving amid the ups and downs.

Yes…living the life of an entrepreneur has many, many ups and downs.

The key to effectively surviving them is:

  1. Realizing that it's normal to experience highs and lows, both long and short-term;
  2. Not giving into the myth of "overnight success";
  3. Remembering that neither ups nor downs are permanent; and
  4. Sharing your ups with others can help take you even higher.

Do these four things and you'll be on a steady climb upward, even though you'll still have to deal with a few "bumps" along the way.

What is an entrepreneur's everyday life like?

A day in the life of an entrepreneur might include sales calls, marketing meetings, client lunches, press interviews and dozens of other things that advance the progress of the business. But being an entrepreneur isn't all about big, forward-thinking strategic moves.

Do entrepreneurs have a personal life?

Entrepreneurs can have a social and personal life. It's all about balancing their time management skills. There is risk associated with a startup company. However, these risks don't translate to the notion that all entrepreneurs are gamblers or high risk-takers.

Is entrepreneur a good career?

Entrepreneurship creates an opportunity to make a definite contribution to society by lifting people in and around the venture. A continuous zeal to innovate helps in touching the heads and hearts of people at large.

What does an entrepreneur do all day?

But all entrepreneurs must work their business every day. This may mean making calls to find investors or clients, creating online marketing campaigns through social media to generate buzz for your product, or negotiating with manufacturers to determine production costs.