How the Best Investors Think Like Entrepreneurs

Featuring EY 2026 Entrepreneur of the Year Southwest Winner, Dr. Bharat Sangani

July 2026
Construction workers looking at a construction site

When Ernst and Young named Dr. Bharat Sangani its 2026 Entrepreneur of the Year for the Southwest, it wasn’t just recognizing a track record of deals. It was recognizing his way of thinking. As a trained cardiologist and founder of Encore Enterprises, Dr. Sangani has spent decades building one of the most respected real estate development and investment platforms in the country.

At Ignite, we believe that the line between a great entrepreneur and a great investor is thinner than most assume. The frameworks that build companies, conviction, rigor, urgency, and proximity to the work, are the same ones that build portfolios worth owning. We sat down with him to explore what separates investors who generate real wealth from those who simply participate in it?



Ignite:
Before we get into how the two worlds connect, in your own words, how would you define your entrepreneurial mindset?

Dr. Sangani: It really comes down to three things. The first is a value creation orientation. Entrepreneurs aren’t trying to capture a piece of something that already exists. They’re asking how to build something worth more tomorrow than it is today. That means developing the discipline to see what others don’t yet see.

The second is first-principles thinking. Rather than following consensus, entrepreneurs ask why something works the way it does and whether there’s a better way. That habit of questioning assumptions is just as valuable when you’re evaluating where to deploy capital as it is when you’re building a business.

The third is what I’d call calibrated patience. It’s two things working together: knowing which risks are worth taking and which to avoid entirely, and being willing to hold a position on a time horizon most people won’t sit with.



Ignite:
You’ve operated on both sides of the table, as an operator building assets and as someone who attracts serious capital. Where do those two mindsets overlap?

Dr. Sangani: More than most people realize. The best investors I’ve worked with don’t just ask “what’s the return?” They ask “what has to go right for this to work, and what happens if it doesn’t?” That’s exactly how a good entrepreneur evaluates a business decision. They’re stress-testing the thesis, not just underwriting the upside. When capital and conviction align, that’s when you see exceptional outcomes.



Ignite:
HNW investors often hear that they should “think like an owner.” What does that actually mean in practice?

Dr. Sangani: It means you don’t stop at the investment idea. Ownership means you understand the asset, the market, the team, and the exit before you wire a dollar. Entrepreneurs live with those details every day. Passive investors who adopt that same curiosity and discipline consistently make better allocation decisions. They ask better questions, they hold managers accountable, and they’re less likely to be surprised.

In cardiology we have a principle: measure three times, cut once. You cannot uncut. It also means front-loading your judgment. In private markets especially, you rarely get a chance to course-correct once you’ve committed. Entrepreneurs, and physicians like myself, understand this intuitively because they live it in their businesses: the work you do before a decision has to be good enough to carry the decision forward on its own. That’s a different standard than most investors hold themselves to.



Ignite:
What’s the biggest mindset gap you see between entrepreneurs and traditional investors?

Dr. Sangani: I have two answers here. The first is urgency. Entrepreneurs understand that the window on a great opportunity is rarely wide open for long. Capital that moves with conviction captures deals that hesitant capital misses entirely. I’ve watched investors over-deliberate themselves out of transactions that went on to perform exceptionally well.

My second answer is maybe a bit too honest. Entrepreneurship is mostly ordinary days, punctuated by moments of sheer terror. It is not for weak stomachs. And the only thing that carries you through those moments is a deep belief in your thesis and the willingness to double down on a vetted business plan precisely when the macro signals to retreat are everywhere.

Most investors have never had to develop that muscle. When a position gets uncomfortable, their instinct is to look for the exit. An entrepreneur’s instinct is to get closer to the problem. That difference, between doubling down with conviction and retreating with doubt, is where returns are made or lost.



Ignite:
What’s your advice for an investor who wants to develop a more entrepreneurial approach to their portfolio?

Dr. Sangani: Get closer to the operators you back. Not just quarterly reports, but real dialogue. Understand what keeps them up at night. Understand the decisions they’re navigating. That proximity gives you better judgment over time, and better judgment compounds just like capital does.

And, also, have a point of view. The most successful investors I know don’t just react to what’s in front of them. They’ve developed a thesis about where value is being created, and they allocate toward it with intention.

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The information contained herein is for informational and educational purposes only and is not an offer to sell or a solicitation of any offer to buy any securities. The information contained herein is not intended to and does not constitute investment, legal, or tax advice, or recommendation of any services or products for sale and is not intended to provide a sufficient basis on which to make an investment decision. Any investment in securities involves a high degree of risk and may not be suitable for all investors and you should consult with an expert before making investment decisions. The views or opinions expressed herein represent those of Ignite Investments, LLC (“Ignite”) or its affiliated sponsors at the time of publication. No assurance can be provided that any of the future events referenced herein (including but not limited to projected or estimated returns or performance results) will occur on the terms contemplated herein or at all. While the data contained herein has been prepared from information that Ignite believes to be reliable, Ignite does not warrant the accuracy or completeness of such information. Examples provided are for illustrative purposes only and not intended to be reflective of results you can expect to achieve. Please see Terms & Conditions for full disclosures.​

Investments in commercial real estate (CRE) involve significant risks, including market risks, interest rate risks, and liquidity risks, and may not be suitable for all investors.

Securities transactions conducted through Umergence, LLC. Member: FINRA/SIPC. Umergence is not affiliated with any entities identified in this communication.

© 2026 Ignite Investments, LLC

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Brenda Grogan

Executive Director

Brenda Grogan is responsible for developing and maintaining investor relationships for Ignite Investments. Brenda has more than 25 years of commercial real estate development, investments, and brokerage experience and has raised more than $195 million dollars in equity through Encore-sponsored products. Previously, Brenda was director of commercial real estate for Hudson & Marshall, exceeding $2 billion in transactions through sales and auctions.

Prior to that, she was vice president of investments at Henry S. Miller. Brenda earned a Bachelor of Arts in Marketing from Louisiana State University. She holds a Real Estate Commissioners Broker’s License as well as the Series 22 and Series 63 registrations.

Brenda is a registered representative of Umergence, LLC.

Daisy Chen, CFA

Executive Director

Daisy Chen, CFA, is Executive Director, responsible for developing and maintaining relationships with Ignite Investments’ high net worth and international clients. Daisy has more than 15 years of experience in the securities, financial advising, and private equity industry. Since joining the firm in 2012, she has managed relationships with high-net-worth individuals representing more than $155 million in equity on behalf of Ignite and its sponsors.

Prior to joining Ignite, Daisy was a financial analyst at Trinity Private Equity Group. Before that, she worked at NY Life Securities as a financial advisor managing portfolios of retail investors. Daisy earned a Master of Science in management information systems from the University of Texas at Arlington and a Bachelor of Science from East China Normal University in Shanghai, China. Daisy holds her Series 22 and Series 63 securities licenses and has earned a Chartered Financial Analyst (CFA) designation. In her spare time, she is an instructor of a Level 3 CFA review course.

Daisy is a registered representative of Umergence, LLC.

Nami Nafissi

Senior Associate, Investor Relations

Nami is responsible for maintaining investor relationships and providing client support for Ignite Investments. He has more than six years of experience in real estate law. Previously, Nami was a case clerk at Clark Hill Strasburger (formerly Strasburger & Price LLP), working within the industry litigation practice group. Prior to that, Nami served in the AmeriCorps*VISTA (Volunteers in Service to America) program through the Corporation for National and Community Service (CNCS) working in business development for Habitat for Humanity. Nami earned a Bachelor of Science in Business Administration from Louisiana State University’s E.J. Ourso College of Business.
 
Nami Nafissi is a registered representative of Umergence, LLC.

Nili Sangani

Managing Principal

Nili Sangani serves as a Senior Vice President at Encore Enterprises where she plays an integral role in the management of several investment partnerships, the management of select shared service functions within the firm, and strategic oversight of the firm’s high net worth capital raising activities via Encore’s capital raising subsidiary, Ignite. Nili is also an active member of the Board of Directors of Encore Enterprises and Encore Properties, Ltd. Over the course of her career, she has overseen and managed relationships with investors representing nearly $1.5 billion in equity. Prior to joining Encore in 2014, Nili worked as an investment banker in the Real Estate Group of Raymond James & Associates in New York and Florida, where she was responsible for executing a variety of public and private M&A and capital market transactions for clients across the hospitality, multifamily, student housing, industrial, single-tenant net lease, and GSA sectors, with a particular emphasis on listed REITs. Nili earned a Bachelor of Business Administration in Finance from Southern Methodist University’s Cox School of Business, where she graduated with honors. Nili holds the Securities Industry Essentials License as well as the Series 7 and Series 63 registrations. Nili is a registered representative of Umergence, LLC. testttttttttttt