Tag Archives: business start-ups

“Older Americans fuel entrepreneurial boom” — says article in Smart Money

"Faced with bruised nest eggs and high unemployment rates, older Americans—ever resourceful—are becoming entrepreneurs, " begins this Smart Money article by Anne Tergesen.

The core of the article is a Q and A with  Eric Ries, Entrepreneur in Residence at Harvard Business School, focusing on his forthcoming book, The Lean Startup.

Here is one sample, making a point  that I think is very much on-target with what we speak of in this blog.  Notice how there are elements of making cold calls, using a consultative selling model to find prospects' real needs, and then crafting a brief, focused message making the case of how he can best fill those needs expresssed:

Q: What if you are offering a service, such as carpentry work, and you know there is a market. How can you go about testing whether your business will succeed?

A: I know someone who started a home interior design company. He knew that people would spend money on home refurnishing, but would they want to buy it from him? He spoke to prospective customers, to find out why it was that they wanted to remodel. It turned out that many potential customers in the place where he was based were women. He had the realization that they were not just buying home remodeling, but the sense of control a designer could create for them over their environments. He tried out tag lines for his business until he found a hit—which enabled him to market himself as offering something they could not get elsewhere. The tag line he chose was “unlike your husband, we listen.”

Link to that Smart Money article, "Older Americans fuel entrepreneurial boom."

“Good-paying jobs don’t come from bailouts. They come from start-ups”– Tom Friedman in NYTimes

Yeah, it surprised me, too, to read that in what I'd long viewed as the ultra-liberal, pro-big-government New York  Times.

But it wasn't really the Times speaking, rather it was Tom Friedman, one of the Times' most savvy and open-minded columnists. 

Continue reading “Good-paying jobs don’t come from bailouts. They come from start-ups”– Tom Friedman in NYTimes

“People 55 and Older Start Own Businesses in Growing Numbers,” NYTimes

"Starting over at 55" — title of the article by Stephen Greenhouse, part of a New York Times special section on retirement.

Some interesting case studies on early retirees who used their skills and experience to start-up new

Continue reading “People 55 and Older Start Own Businesses in Growing Numbers,” NYTimes