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Extensive Research On How To Build Wealth From The Comfort Of Your Own Home.
Extensive Research On How To Build Wealth From The Comfort Of Your Own Home.
Jan 6th
In 2008 I started my entrepreneurial journey with the founding of iThemes. This month, in fact, is my four year anniversary of becoming a full-time entrepreneur and living my lifelong dream.
Throughout the years as we’ve enjoyed our definition of success and others have seen it, I’ve been increasingly asked by friends and acquaintances about how they can get started in entrepreneurship.
Thus, I started StartupSofa to be an online resource for budding entrepreneurs, done talks, webinars and workshops, and now am proud to release a short book called “The Entrepreneurial Adventure: Is It For You?”
Entrepreneurship is an adventure — a long, arduous journey like climbing one of the world’s highest mountains. As such budding entrepreneurs should know the risks involved, what an entrepreneur does for the world and ask themselves some tough questions before starting on the journey.
In this book I share my experiences as a startup entrepreneur and offer advice on aligning your life’s passions and purpose, and how to prepare for the entrepreneurial climb.
It’s short enough to read in less than an hour, but I’ve packed with lessons I’ve learned and resources I’ve found extremely helpful for starting a business.
In this book, you’ll …
If you’re an aspiring or budding entrepreneur, this book is for you.
Here’s how to get the book:
Here’s to those daring and ready for the entrepreneurial journey!
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View full post on Cory Miller | Adventures in Entrepreneurship
Nov 29th
I’m pleased to announce our new web design services division named Made by Wheat and led by our newest team member Ty Carlson.
I began my entrepreneurial journey first as a freelance web designer in WordPress before I started iThemes full-time in January 2008 (and still get random requests for custom work which I don’t do anymore).
As such we’ve endeavored to build tools and offer training to help others become web designers and build high-quality sites for their clients.
I continue to be amazed at the opportunities for good, quality web designers all over the world, but none of us should be amazed at it. (Google with over 30,000 people and almost $30 billion in revenue didn’t even exist 15 years ago!)
Dependable and able designers and developers are hot commodities right now. There is more work than able and/or available people to do it!
Through Made by Wheat, we want to serve a different and unique kind of client who doesn’t fit our iThemes “ideal” customer, but wants more custom, hands-on consulting and design services.
Often I say that iThemes is like the Home Depot of web design. You come to our store, pick out the tools and templates you want to use and you do-it-yourself. We offer a great support forum backed by knowledgable and helpful moderators, but ultimately, you build your sites yourself.
Made by Wheat will serve customers who want to pay someone else to just do it for them.
So with this introduction, I wanted to offer some details about Made by Wheat and what you can expect.
WHAT IS MADE BY WHEAT EXACTLY?
It is a team (or company within a company) we started to offer custom, high-quality web design services using and showcasing all of our products — from iThemes Builder to BackupBuddy and everything in between.
It is led by Ty Carlson, a veteran web designer / developer from Oklahoma City.
This is our custom services division. We will work hard to keep the brands separate, except for showing off work done through it that illustrate what you can do with our products. Made by Wheat will market and find its own clients.
WHY ARE WE DOING IT?
We decided to push forward with this for a number of reasons, including:
1. To give our customers what they have been asking for – which is custom services for our products, primarily, iThemes Builder. We’ve long had a services page on iThemes and have gotten an increasingly large volume of requests, but to date have been referring to other outlets. We will continue to refer most of those services out to others, but this will give us an outlet for custom sites. And we’ve actually done client services before. Almost two years ago, we were doing all client work through WebDesign.com before we unveiled our training membership. We ultimately shut that down as it was bad timing on our part.
2. To be a showcase for our products – We want to show what’s possible with our products through our services division, in particular, iThemes Builder. You can see Ty’s work on my personal site here at CoryMiller.com, built with iThemes Builder.
3. To be a shining example of how a custom web design shop can be run – I anticipate us using the things we’re learning, almost every day, with this team through our WebDesign.com training division and other venues. As such, it will serve to be an actual R&D lab. My hope is we can share tips, tricks, ideas, trends and more to our community.
4. To give input to our dev teams on how to make our products better – having a custom shop in our company allows our dev teams from iThemes and PluginBuddy to hear from and see how the Made by Wheat team is using it, what needs to be improved, and what gaps we have in our product offering.
***
There’s a little bit about Made by Wheat.
You can follow progress by signing up at http://MadeByWheat.com or on Twitter @madebywheat.
Related posts:
View full post on Cory Miller | Adventures in Entrepreneurship
Nov 18th
Since I started my business full-time in 2008, achieving a lifelong dream, I’ve had numerous people, most of whom are friends and family, ask me what it takes to become an entrepreneur.
Helping others start the adventure of entrepreneurship is a passion of mine, so I’ve teamed with a couple of veteran entrepreneurs to do the Pre-Entrepreneurship Bootcamp: What You Need to Know and Do Before Starting a Business on Saturday, Dec. 17, 2011 from 8 a.m.-6 p.m. in Oklahoma City at our nonprofit foundation, The Div.
This event is designed for aspiring or budding entrepreneurs – those who have an idea, itch or passion to run your own business, but need some direction and help getting started.
We want to provide basic training where entrepreneurs find answers, tools and help to start and grow great businesses that change the world.
WHO’S PRESENTING
Here are the people who will be sharing their experience and expertise in entrepreneurship for this event:
* Michael S. Smith — ran Gemini Industries in El Reno for a number of years and took it from $8 million to $35 million in sales before eventually selling the company. He now leads Oxygen for Organizations, mentoring entrepreneurs.
* Christian Brim – is a CPA who founded and runs Core Group, an accounting and financial services firm with locations throughout Oklahoma, and a member of Entrepreneurship Organization.
* Cory Miller – that’s me. I co-founded iThemes in 2008 and since starting our business in my home we now have 23+ team members scattered throughout the world, three primary brands (and more coming), an office in Edmond, Oklahoma, and this summer started The Div, our nonprofit tech foundation where the bootcamp will be held.
* We also have a couple of local attorneys who are going to be on hand to present and be available during the event for those who need direction on how to get legal help for your business.
REGISTRATION
I believe you’ve got to have a deep level of commitment, drive and passion to be an entrepreneur, so we’re asking for a donation of $50 per registrant for this special bootcamp, with all proceeds going to support The Div and our work through this nonprofit foundation, including lunch for the day.
We are also offering an online version of the bootcamp via webinar for those not in Oklahoma. The donation for this will be $40 a person.
If you have any questions about the bootcamp, please contact The Div through our contact form.
SIGNUP FOR PRE-ENTREPRENEURSHIP BOOTCAMP DEC. 17 HERE
SCHEDULE & TOPICS
8a.m. – Registration and Coffee
8:30 — Welcome and Intros
9 a.m. – SESSION 1: IS IT FOR YOU? (Cory Miller) — We’ll weigh the costs and benefits of entrepreneurship, talk about the purpose and role of an entrepreneur and what they do for the world and ask some hard questions.
9:50 a.m. – SESSION 2: MONEY (Cory Miller) – We’ll talk about the role of your personal finances in becoming a full-time entrepreneur, along with the role of money and how to get your financial house in order.
10:30 a.m. — SESSION 3 (Michael Smith): PERSONAL & TEAM ASSET INVENTORY – Taking inventory of your skills, strengths, experiences, expertise will help you on the journey.
11:15 a.m. – SESSION 4: THE COMPELLING VISION (Michael Smith) — Knowing where you want to go will help keep you on the right path.
Noon – Working Lunch (Lunch is provided)
1:00 p.m. – SESSION 5: SUPPORT (Cory Miller) — Getting the right support system in place before you start is key to your continued success. We’ll talk about the key people you need on your team.
1:50 p.m. – SESSION 6: YOUR ONE-PAGE BIZ PLAN (Michael Smith) — you need an initial game plan for your business idea. We’ll talk about the basics of a good plan and how to start one.
2:30 p.m. – SESSION 7: ACCOUNTING (Christian Brim) — Without money, and good accounting practices, your business is dead. Get nuts and bolts tips for vital aspect of running a business.
3:15 p.m. – SESSION 8: LEGAL (TBA) — Things you need to know about getting your business legal and how to find the right help.
4 p.m. — SESSION 9: RECRUITING & RESOURCES (Cory Miller) — How to gather the right resources and recruit the right people to your team.
4:45 p.m. — SESSION 10: WORK-LIFE INTEGRATION (Cory Miller) — The work of an entrepreneur almost never stops. Here are some do’s and don’ts, including personal stories, pitfalls and experiences.
5:30 p.m. – FINAL WORD & CHALLENGE & Q&A
* Please note times will vary. We want to provide practical help for those eager to start their entrepreneurial adventure.
SIGNUP FOR PRE-ENTREPRENEURSHIP BOOTCAMP DEC. 17 HERE
Related posts:
View full post on Cory Miller | Adventures in Entrepreneurship
Nov 11th
Cory Miller (that’s me) is a passionate entrepreneur who believes in finding and maintaining work happiness (for himself and others) that aligns with your purpose and plays to your strengths, talents and ambitions, while challenging you to do great things with your life.
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View full post on Cory Miller | Adventures in Entrepreneurship
Sep 23rd
One of our core values at iThemes (and my personal life) is … Learn and Grow, then Teach and Share.
Our commitment has always to helping individuals on our teams grow and push themselves to do more.
We started a nonprofit web tech foundation to help individuals in Oklahoma aspire to make careers in web design and development.
Today, we just announced our Education Program with another example of how we live this core value — we’re giving away about $100K in free web design resources to educators.
Learn more about our new Education Program here … and if you’re an Educator, see if you qualify and submit an application!
Related posts:
View full post on Cory Miller | Adventures in Entrepreneurship
Jul 22nd
Since even before I started iThemes in my home in 2008, my partners and I were thinking that if at some point our fledgling business succeeds and thrives, we wanted to find ways to give back in various ways.
Now going on our fourth year of business, we’ve started to put our money and time and effort where our mouth is.
This year, we donated money to a local project that helps refugees in Oklahoma City through iThemes.
And this week I’m delighted to help announce a new nonprofit foundation that Digimedia LP and iThemes have created called The Div.
The purpose is to foster web innovation and creativity in Oklahoma City. We’re going to do that in a number of ways, including offering local training opportunities through weekly and monthly workshops and classes, coworking days to gather the local web community, hosting web-related user groups, and social gatherings periodically.
Learn more about The Div and what we’re doing here and be sure to follow The Div on Twitter. And if you’re a web professional in Oklahoma City, please signup to volunteer or sponsor events and activities.
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View full post on Cory Miller | Adventures in Entrepreneurship
May 20th
Yesterday, I did a State of iThemes presentation to our community in order to unpack our core values, philosophies and business objectives and goals for 2011.
I’ve done this before, but in the last 3+ years running a business, especially an online one, I’ve realized how valuable it is to simply communicate transparently who we are and how we run our business.
With over 250 people registered, the response was overwhelming, exciting and motivating. We’ve had a number of community members tell us they love our business and our team and are committed to being customers with us for the foreseeable future.
Key takeaway: Explain who you are, your unique philosophy about how and why you do business … and it wins fans.
Here is the video replay from the webinar:
Here are the slides from the webinar:
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View full post on Cory Miller | Adventures in Entrepreneurship
May 2nd
It’s been a lifelong dream of mine to write a book and thanks to my friend Lisa Sabin-Wilson, I had the privilege of doing so by co-authoring WordPress All-in-One for Dummies (Wiley 2011), which debuted last month.
Arguably one of the hardest projects I’ve ever taken on, I couldn’t have done so without the help of my excellent team at iThemes, especially Chris Jean and Matt Danner.
Our “book in a book” in this 900-plus-page tome was the one on WordPress themes. It is a great desk reference for anyone interesting in using WordPress to build great sites and includes information on search engine optimization, WordPress multi-site and plugins, among much more.
Check out the book here on Amazon and for a limited time we’re giving away copies as part of our WordPress Web Designer’s Toolkit package (with over $3,000 in themes, plugins and training).
Related posts:
View full post on Cory Miller | Adventures in Entrepreneurship
Mar 31st

Image: Herb Knufken/PBase
What are we supposed to do with the American Dream? You know, the one where you work hard at a friendly, faceless corporation, have a McMansion with a white picket fence and 2.5 kids, and vacation on the Kona Coast every year?
The Great Recession has scoured the dead skin off this dream. I think it still exists in our national psyche, something like a psychological heiroglyph, but current economic conditions have stuck the old version of it into a harsh, almost surgical light.
After exploring the dream in more detail, I came to the conclusion that the dream hasn’t disappeared. Indeed, some of its main tenets, including homeownership and business ownership, are still very much intact. Indeed, the dream’s trajectory, assuming it projects the way I think it will, is something to look forward to. Here’s my breakdown.
Where We Are Now
Working hard and basking in the fruits of your work—the nice house and car, the decent, secure life situation—still does happen for people. But consider the obstacles that employees in today’s world face:
• Wage stagnation (combined with price inflation)
• Fewer long-term guarantees for jobs
• Sparse pension plans
• Increased global and technological competition
• An unemployment rate of 10% or more means more competition from your peers
• No guarantees higher education will get you a job
That’s in addition to a couple of new norms:
• Having a part-time job or two full-time jobs has become more common
• Diving deep into the debt that supported consumer spending between 1990-2008 isn’t an option anymore. You used to be able to tap your inflated home value through a refinance, then spend away. Or grab your credit card and indulge in the national negative savings rate. Since the financial crisis, however, banks have made accessing personal debt harder. Saving is a new norm; many people can’t sustain steady debt the way they used to. That translates into forsaking the new entertainment center, backyard pool or convertible that used to be an American Dream-themed reward, or entitlement.
Austerity is necessary during times of recession, but I’ve noticed that downward mobility has also become a fact of life for many Americans. For example, older Americans are especially having trouble finding new jobs. Some manage to stabilize themselves off savings. When that runs out, and your real estate assets have depreciated, you end up downsizing.
Our Bootstraps Are Broken
Will hard work really dredge you out of today’s hypercompetitive, underemployed, time-stressed situation? The economic situation makes the staunch American individualism and can-do attitude feel more like weight on Atlas’s shoulders than a real solution. We can’t work our way out of this one, because the jobs don’t exist, or we’re so overworked that we don’t have time.
The traditional American Dream, based on hard work and ever-increasing income, is what Matt Miller calls the Dead Idea. “One in three Americans, of all races and at all income levels, now live in families that earn less than their parents did,” he writes in this CNN article. “Americans see themselves as authors of their economic fate, while Europeans tend to believe that forces outside the individual’s control have greater influence. Yet the forces that are now undermining upward mobility in America are in fact largely outside people’s control,” he says.
What Next?
Knowing this, what’s the best way to revise the old American Dream? There’s a collective movement towards increased sustainability (read: less waste, in all senses of the word), social cooperation, especially through technology; and increased self- and community reliance. It sounds communal and countercultural, and in some ways, this “Echo Boomer” meme is.
As I researched this shift more, however, I’ve found that it’s not a matter of communes vs. staunch capitalism. We’re moving in a hybrid direction. Americans are still holding onto the old dream, albeit with modifications. For example, “seventy percent of Americans still view home ownership as part of their own American dream,” according to this Forbes article. What’s more, Echo Boomers are on board. “(T)he demographic most interested in living the dream is actually the Y generation, A.K.A. the ‘millennials’ aged 18 to 34.”
The other hopeful aspect to Gen-Yers is that they’re entrepreneurially oriented. Since small businesses hire a huge proportion of employees in America, this bodes well, even in while the American Dream model is changing slightly. The fact that the majority of innovation has moved from R&D parks and into small startups is also encouraging, and negates the idea that global competition will turn us all into fruit vendors.
In other words, the American Dream is still entrepreneurial. It still involves homeownership. It just doesn’t center around swimming in debt to coddle the senses as much; it’s more community-oriented. If some parts of the American Dream have composted, these are the shoots growing out of them. This gives me hope.
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Mar 31st

Food is great until you realize that most of it’s laden with chemicals, hormones, and other health-depreciating nonsense. It seems the only way to stay healthy is by turning into an evil, pretentious vegan, so most of us settle for pretending counting calories and carbohydrates truly matters. On the brighter side, at least our food doesn’t contain traces of lead or other bafflingly out-of-place poisons… Except for when it ‘accidentally’ does and subsequently has to be recalled by the thousands (and sometimes millions). If you are what you eat, most of us are pretty gross. Here are ten enormous food recalls.

The FDA was forced to recall a bubble gum from Candy Dynamics which was aptly titled “Toxic Waste” for containing lead. As if ‘traces’ weren’t have been embarrassing enough, the gross gum was laced with ‘elevated levels’ of the deadly chemical. Distributed in Canada, Switzerland, and Pakistan where it was made, the FDA warns that lead could be particularly harmful to infants or pregnant women. However, the name of this gum alone is sure to ward off pregnant woman for sure — unless their idea of ‘healthy’ involves more than one head and less than ten fingers.

Next time your little sister says “leggo my Eggo”, maybe let her win. In 2009, Eggo had to recall certain brands of their waffles because the buttermilk was found to have Listeria monocytogenes. Do you know what that causes? Oh, just possible death. But hey, do you want a balanced breakfast or not?

What’s worse that brushing your teeth with Toxic Waste Bubble Gum? Maybe using toothpaste that was made in China. In 2007, Chinese toothpaste was found to contain diethylene glycol, a chemical found in anti-freeze. Mmm, mmm! Take that Cavity Creeps!

Poor Popeye. He came down with a nasty case of E. coli back in 2006 when bagged spinach was found to be tainted with it. Don’t worry hipsters; poop is still technically organic.

Residents of the UK rely on condiments to make their terrible food taste somewhat edible. Things went to Hell in 2005 when it was revealed that Sudan 1 was illegally being added in 400 different foods, including Worcestershire Sauce. The recall was eventually linked back to India where the carcinogenic chili powder goes unnoticed in their amazingly hot food. You’d probably be better off drinking water from the corpse-choked Ganges.

Forget the contamination, who buys a “French” product from a guy named “Johnny”? Shouldn’t his name at least be Jacques? Well, it turns out the would-be French chef may have salmonella in its Au Jus. It seems the French will surrender even to bacteria.

Why would you think a food that comes out of a chicken’s privates would be unsafe to eat? Turns out, there are lots of reasons to worry. In 2010, 380 million eggs had to be recalled. Local vandals had to work overtime egging nerds just to keep up.

Why is Fluffy looking so sluggish and rolling around on the ground holding his furry tummy? Maybe he ate some of the contaminated pet food from 2006. Once again, those wacky Chinese were putting melamine in food. Thanks China. As if you’re horrible buffets and poorly dubbed action movies weren’t enough.

While not technically a food unless you’re a broker during the last housing market bubble burst, the Chicago Tylenol murders in 1982 set the country on edge. The end results was a lot of new packaging, which is why you can’t get a Fruit Roll up out of a package in under three minutes without giving yourself a headache. Thanks psychotic poisoner who has never been caught. We all hope you end up in a rest home, too old and frail to open your damn pills.

Delicious Skippy Peanut Butter was recently recalled for possibly being contaminated with not-so-delicious Salmonella. The FDA is helping Skippy recall its reduced fat peanut butter and reduced fat super chunk peanut butter from 16 states, including NY and NJ. The company may have been able to save some money by ignoring New Jersey altogether; most of the guidos out there probably think Salmonella is the name of the slutty girl they banged in the bathroom of the club last night.

While technically not a “recall”, you couldn’t eat too much of this molasses. In 1919, a huge molasses storage tank burst sending a wave of sticky gooey deliciousness through Boston killing 21 people, injuring 150 and giving 2000 cats and dogs diabetes. Picture the Japanese tsunami, only brown. And while many local people didn’t have to top their flapjacks for weeks, the end result was many new safety measures and a very sticky lawsuit.
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