Women Entrepreneurs This study is about women who have chosen to work as entrepreneurs. The data is based on twelve autobiographical stories. The focus is on four questions: Firstly, why did those women choose to be entrepreneurs? Secondly, what were their expectations for entrepreneurship? Thirdly, did they reach their expectations? And fourthly, what emphasis did they put on entrepreneurship? The theoretical background is based on lifepolitics and second chances by Anthony Giddens. The thesis is that individual will aspire after good life and happiness that is a combination of her values and self-fulfilment. The entrepreneurship is one way, second chance, to reach the good life. But the freedom of choices and self-fulfilment has their reverse sides: responsibility of consequences. The stories have been divided into three categories. The first category is stories where the biographers have frustrated on wage earner career. Their dream was to be an entrepreneur but they were also those who were most disappointed to entrepreneurship. In this category women put the work in first position in their life and the family was somewhere behind the work. In the second category there were stories where biographers began to run their own business because of the unemployment. The firm was established on the branch where the biographer had made her former career. These women valued their family first and the firm and work came behind the family. In the third category were stories whose biographers continued their family tradition. Those women thought that they fulfilled their duty by running a business and they had no personal dreams of entrepreneurship. The study showed that even thought the every day work and life was hard for women entrepreneurs the entrepreneurship is a strong lifestyle and in spite of all the troubles and hardships the biographers were satisfied with their choice and life.