Acharya Prashant addresses the question of how to be a good entrepreneur by first reframing the inquiry. He suggests that before asking how to be a good entrepreneur, one must ask what is worth doing. He defines entrepreneurship as the act of initiating or beginning something, but critiques the common perception of it as merely a way to collect profits instead of a salary. He illustrates this with examples, such as an employee who becomes an entrepreneur to earn more, or one who, having been humiliated by a boss, starts a business to humiliate their own employees. He also describes how someone from a fraudulent industry might start their own venture to continue the same unethical practices on a larger scale. The speaker argues that this type of entrepreneurship is merely a continuation of one's past conditioning, driven by greed, insecurity, ambition, and fear. It represents a change in degree, not a fundamental, dimensional change in the person. He labels such entrepreneurship as destructive, a perversion, and a profanity that is a curse to both humanity and the entrepreneur. He points out that many of the world's current problems, like climate change and loss of biodiversity, are the result of super-ambitious entrepreneurs with flawed motives. He gives the example of a successful business model based on killing animals, calling it idiocy and perversion. Acharya Prashant then defines what a worthy entrepreneur is. He states that the world is suffering and needs wise and able entrepreneurs, with wisdom being the primary requirement. True entrepreneurship should be a missionary activity, a crusade, and a lifelong love affair. It should be an endeavor that one pursues to find meaning in life, something one would persist with even without making profits. A worthy entrepreneur makes money so that the firm can continue its good work and expand, not for personal aggrandizement or consumption. The focus of such entrepreneurship should be on healing and setting things right, not just on consuming more.