Just a few days ago, the European Commission announced a new proposal for an EU-wide company framework designed to make it easier to start and scale startups across Europe. The idea is simple: less bureaucracy, faster company registration, and a more startup-friendly environment across all EU countries. The policy aims to encourage innovation, entrepreneurship, and economic growth — and on paper, it sounds like a great step forward.
But the announcement also raises a bigger question: what happens if everyone is encouraged to start a company? If entrepreneurship becomes the goal for everyone, who keeps society running?
You scroll on your phone and it seems like overnight everyone has become an entrepreneur — selling courses, dropshipping, freelancing, becoming a founder. And they all seem to do it from a beach, a huge house in LA, a mansion, next to a Ferrari, while I’m here, an aerospace engineering student, trying to solve calculus exercises and call it a productive day, waiting for a company to tell me that maybe one day I will make good money.
Somewhere along the way, social media created the feeling within our generation that working for someone else is a failure, while working for yourself is ambition. But can anyone actually be a founder?
Startup culture used to be the tool that drove society forward, propelling innovation, risk-taking, and solving real problems. Companies such as Airbnb, Spotify, Apple, Microsoft, SpaceX, and Google all started as startups, and today they shape how we communicate, work, travel, shop, and access information. Without startups, many of the technologies and services we take for granted would not exist. Entrepreneurship, at its core, was never just about making money — it was about building something useful that didn’t exist before and moving society forward.
I hope that one day I could build a business that solves a real problem in my own field. But I also understand that I first have to research the problem I want to fix before creating the solution.
However, social media has slowly changed the meaning of the word entrepreneurship — from building products and solving problems to building personal brands and chasing views. And this is where the logic of “being independent” starts to fall apart.

