Vietnamese popular career-guidance content for 14-19 year-olds frames entrepreneurship in aspirational terms ("become a CEO", "start your own company", "be your own boss"), routinely conflating entrepreneurship with success and ignoring the empirical-research base on who actually succeeds, what skills and traits matter, and how the trajectory differs from employee careers. This paper synthesises the entrepreneurshipeconomics literature (Lazear 2004/2005 balanced-skills theory, Schoar 2010 transformational-vs-subsistence distinction, KerrKerr-Xu 2017 trait research, Levesque-Minniti 2006 age-andexperience patterns, Astebro et al. 2014 GEM-data review, Hsu 2007 academic entrepreneurship, Stam 2015 ecosystem theory), the Vietnamese context (small-business-dense informal economy, post-2015 startup wave, family-business succession, GEM Vietnam 2018-2024, World Bank Vietnam SME reports, founder-trajectory case archives for FPT, VNG, Topica, Tiki, Sendo, MoMo), and the AI-era opportunity surface (Acemoglu 2024, Brynjolfsson et al. 2023, Eloundou et al. 2023 from the I4.3 corpus). The synthesis produces a five-class typology — transformational, subsistence, family-business-succession, freelanceself-employment, AI-augmented-solo — with structural drivers, success-failure rates, skill-profile, age-and-experience pattern, capital requirements, and AI-era interaction documented per class. Three findings displace the dominant Vietnamese popular framing: (a) Lazear's balanced-skills evidence indicates that successful entrepreneurs typically have multi-domain breadth rather than extreme specialism, contradicting the "be the best at one thing then become CEO" myth; (b) failure rates dominate at all classes — approximately 80% small-business 5-year failure on Bureau-of-Labor-Statistics-comparable data, higher for tech-startup, higher still for first-time founders without prior employee experience — making the entrepreneurship-aspiration vs entrepreneurship-survival gap structurally large; (c) entrepreneurship is empirically biased toward those with familyfinancial-buffer (downside protection enabling the multi-year low-income or negative-income founding phase), which makes the access pattern structurally unequal in ways that aspirational discourse obscures. The Vietnamese-context application identifies that a substantial share of "entrepreneurs" in Vietnamese economic statistics are continuing existing family businesses (subsistence or modest-growth retail, food service, textile manufacture, agricultural processing) rather than founding greenfield
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