Home Wealth Project
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.
Nov 19th
Affiliates Earn 60% With This Killer Offer That’s Red Hot And Converts! Extremely Low Refund Rate. Show Your Subscribers How To Stop Screwing Around, And Make Money In Real Estate This Month Without Credit Checks!
Real Estate Under Ground – Converts Like Crazy!
Mar 19th
It’s been a long time since we’ve reviewed a book on becoming a small business owner or entrepreneur. So, when I received Startup From the Ground Up from a publicist, I thought it was time to give it a read and see what the most current advice is about getting out on your own.
About the Author
Cynthia Kocialski (@ckocialski) has been involved in 25 startups and writes the Start-Up Entrepreneurs’ Blog. All of the startups she’s been involved in have been acquired for nearly $20 billion. She’s also had a variety of executive positions in technical companies and served as a consultant. So she’s been on just about every side of the entrepreneur’s journey.
Kocialski wrote her own foreword and in it describes the book as being about making the entrepreneurial dream a reality. It will show you how to go from an idea to a launch. I think the benefit this book promises to today’s entrepreneur is the ability to learn from another’s experience and hopefully not make the same mistakes.
Startup From the Ground Up Is Ideal for Tech Startups That Need Investors
When I read the author’s background and the first few chapters of this book, I could see that it was really targeted to people who have a tech product and may be interested in getting investors.
This book covers a lot of topics very quickly and with broad brush strokes. It’s the book you would run out and get right after you and your tech buddies finished hashing out a plan for taking over the world with the next revolutionary tech product. Before you quit your day job, take the time to quickly go through this book, and when you find yourself flinching at any of the chapters, bookmark that one for further review.
There are quite a few chapters dedicated to marketing and sales topics. Each chapter is written from the perspective of a technical person, covering what they think might be important and what’s actually important from the customer’s or investor’s perspective.
How to Read This Book
I’m not sure if the book I received from the publicist was a review copy or a final copy. I’m mentioning this because I have to admit I was a bit overwhelmed when I looked at the table of contents. It looked like there were more than 30 chapters.
I thought they might be in sections because there were three or four chapters in a row that seemed to be on a similar topic, but I couldn’t tell what the sections were until I started reading. So I’m going to give you the sections here because they aren’t easy to spot in the table of contents without going through the book:
This is a book you would probably want to read from cover to cover the first time around. This book is a terrific litmus test to see if going into “startup mode” really what you want to do.
If you’ve gone through this book and are still fired up about your idea, go back to the sections that made you wince and get some professional advice as to how to handle that.
Startup From the Ground Up Will Give Budding Entrepreneurs the Lingo and a Road Map
Another benefit of Startup From the Ground Up is that it gives aspiring entrepreneurs the framework and phrases that they will need to use to get help in areas where they feel less comfortable.
Startup From the Ground Up is a realistic, real-life book about taking your idea out of your head and into the marketplace. If you’ve been sitting in a cubicle mulling over the next “Google-sized” idea, then this book is a great first step.
Before You Quit Your Day Job: Read Startup From the Ground Up
![]()
View full post on Small Business News, Tips, Advice – Small Business Trends
Nov 14th
Right now there’s a lot of focus at the Federal government level here in the United States on creating jobs. Of course, anyone that thinks government can create jobs doesn’t really understand how jobs in the private sector are created.
Government cannot create jobs. What government can do is make an environment that encourages businesses to do more hiring. And government definitely can get in the way of new businesses and they employees may hire.
But if you want to encourage entrepreneurs and small businesses that actually do the hiring, instead of looking at the Federal level, you should be looking at the impact of government at the state and local levels.
According to a series of reports by the Institute of Justice:
” … one of the principal obstacles to creating new jobs and entrepreneurial activity in cities across the country is the complex maze of regulations cities and states impose on small businesses. IJ’s “city study” reports are filled with real-world examples of specific restrictions that often make it impossible for entrepreneurs to create jobs for themselves, let alone for others.”
The following video from the Institute of Justice (discovered via Instapundit.com), gives examples of the maze of local regulations and laws that hinder entrepreneurship — and by extension job creation — often in baffling and unexplainable ways. Watch the 5-minute video, “Why Chuck Can’t Get His Business Off the Ground”:
Why Entrepreneurs Cannot Get Businesses Off the Ground
![]()
View full post on Small Business News, Tips, Advice – Small Business Trends
Aug 2nd
![]() |
After years of decline, Internet Explorer has managed to gain market share for the last two months, according to a market researcher. Safari also hit a… |
|
||||
![]()
![]()
View full post on Home Wealth Project Riot!
Jan 8th
| Lately, Twitter has been down more than the ground. So many are commenting why Twitter is having so many issues: scalability due to Ruby on Rails,… |
|
||||