This is the third post in a five-part series on missioneurs, a new community of startup and social entrepreneurs.
The premise is that startup entrepreneurs and social entrepreneurs need each other. Alone, too many of their great ideas are struggling and failing. Together, they can fill in each other’s blind spots, build stronger companies and make greater change.![Failed entrepreneur [Missioneurship image]](http://www.blakejennelle.com/wp-content/uploads/2010/02/021910-Ignite-Philly-Title-Slide-300x225.jpg)
A new post in this series will be published every day this week. Blog subscribers will receive them one day early by email or RSS.
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Yesterday, we discussed the startup entrepreneur’s obsession with execution at the expense of ideas and the crippling effect this has on their marketing, sales and HR.
Now let’s talk about social entrepreneurs, who have the opposite problem:
Social entrepreneurs are obsessed with mission at the expense of execution.
This is a blessing and a curse.
It’s a blessing because their mission can be a very faithful guide. It defines what services they provide, how they make decisions, how they communicate to donors and constituents and how they build their teams. Read more…
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