Interesting article I got through the Warrilow Weekly. I thought it
may give some of you ideas on how to make your business look bigger,
or just make your work easier.
From Warrilow Weekly
Wednesday, October 31, 2007
How small business fake being bigger than they are
There are a number of emerging tools and tricks entrepreneurs are
using to look big while running their businesses from small,
temporary or non-existent offices.
Meet Tama Kieves, author of This Time I dance, Creating the Work You Love.
How One Harvard Lawyer Left It All to Have It All!
1. What do you love? Excites you? Passionate about? Look forward to?
Visit site here
San Francisco Chronicle
A profitable feast: Food-related entrepreneurs are turning the Bay Area into a free range of innovation, and their customers are eating it up
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So, you're ready to seize that business opportunity? First, answer these five questions.
Wall Street Journal
By DONALD N. SULL
June 16, 2007; Page R8
Much of the literature on entrepreneurship focuses on how to find and evaluate opportunities. But for many entrepreneurs and managers, seeing the opportunity is the easy part. The real challenge lies in seizing it.
When stay-at-home-mom Tracy Brennan couldn't find a good store for skin products she started her own; now her business is growing blemish-free.
By Jessica Dickler, CNNMoney.com staff writer June 6 2007: 10:22 AM
Wall Street Journal
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By DANA MATTIOLI
A mentor's advice can be an asset to those starting their own business. V. Cheryl Womack, chairperson of the nonprofit organization Leading Women Entrepreneurs of the World, encourages women business owners to provide guidance to others aspiring to entrepreneurial goals. Ms. Womack, who founded and sold five businesses in the trucking industry, joined the Kansas City, Mo., organization in 2002.
By JESS MCCUAN
From SmartMoney
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Running a home-based business can be tough. But it's even tougher when you throw children into the mix.
Imagine trying to impress your clients with reports covered with crayon scribbles. Think it's hard to concentrate while your chatty co-worker spills the details of the previous night's date? Wait until you're trying to devise a clever marketing scheme with a three-year-old wailing in the background.
Instead of retiring, boomers are starting second-act businesses; some are motivated by an independent lifestyle, others by economic necessity
by Jeffrey Gangemi
SPECIAL REPORT