Self-employed: starting a business: competition takes place every day, in every community in America, and around the world. Thousands vie for the top spot, winners are revered, and losers are forgotten. The contest is fierce. This is the Business Olympics. Do you want to work for the gold?
Many of us with disabilities consider starting a business, and the challenges and our skills to meet them must be put into perspective. This is the Olympics, not the Paralympics. It's mainstream business, and we must be able to compete in this able-bodied arena against the world's brightest, most
Publication: Paraplegia News
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LOOK Before You LEAP.(advice on starting a business)
Ready to take your first entrepreneurial steps? Consider these tips to find the right venture for you. DO YOU HAVE AN IDEA FOR A BUSINESS THAT YOU'VE ALWAYS WANTED TO explore? Perhaps a series of cultural toys, a dessert delivery service, or a clothing line for pedigree pooches? Starting a business
Publication: Black Enterprise
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Rewards of Starting A Business Outweigh the Risks.
By Joyce Smith, The Kansas City Star, Mo. Knight Ridder/Tribune Business News Mar. 3--After five years at a Country Club Plaza law firm, Tonna Farrar felt her career was somewhat limited. As an associate, she had to do the work that was assigned to her. But she wanted to concentrate more on equine
Publication: Knight Ridder/Tribune Business News
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Good sports: get off the sidelines and into the game! Starting a business based on professional sports could put you in the big leagues.(Be Your Own Boss)
The crunching of body parts, as 300-pound linebackers slam into each other. The crack of the bat, as Sammy Sosa slams another ball, whipping through the air and into a stadium full of thousands of cheering fans. Millionaire giants lunge for a ball, hoping for the chance to seize a brief moment of
Publication: Entrepreneur
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Home Start-Ups: The Right Recipe.(starting an at-home business)
Sometimes you need to rethink the ingredients that go into the mix. Like many home-based entrepreneurs, Lindsay Frucci got off to a painfully slow start. After one year of operation, No Pudge! Foods, which sells fat-free, fudgy brownie mixes, posted just $6,000 in revenues. But last year--her
Publication: Kiplinger's Personal Finance Magazine
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