| Actual for You |
Hubs | Hubbers | Topics | Request |
| #1 in Business | Subscribe Email Print |
|
You are here: Home > Business > Entrepreneurialism > 7 Signs of an Entrepreneur |
|
Actual for You - 7 Signs of an Entrepreneur
The Top 5 Myths Keeping You From Being a Pharmaceutical Sales Representative go, or you're not going anywhere at all. Sometimes the motivation to start a new venture comes from having reached the top of the pile where you are, looking around, and saying, "What's next?" Early success can be wonderful, but early retirement can sometimes drive energetic and motivated people totally crazy.I hear excuses every day. Reasons people can't get a job as a pharmaceutical sales representative. If you're in this situation and can't find your way out, know this - 90% of the time the "reasons" you can't get a job as a pharmaceutical sales representative have been planted in your head by someone who doesn't want to see you succeed. I'm here to tell you, if you want a job as a pharmaceutical sales representative, you can have it.Here are the top 10 myths keeping you from 5. You've done the market research already. Don't even talk to me about your great business idea if you haven't put the time into figuring out if there's a market fo What is Travel Nursing? Do you have the right personality type to successfully run your own business?Nurses today have the best possible career! Today, with the health care system and population as they are, nurses can find employment any where they want. Today, more than ever, health care workers are in high demand every place on earth! As the need for quality healthcare has grown, a new profession has been created and it's called Travel Nursing.Today's Nurses find Travel Nursing rewarding in many ways. Benefits of being a Travel Nurse are many. Salary is atop the list of gre It takes an entrepreneurial fire in your belly to start a business and make it succeed. Not everyone has it. How do you know if you have what it takes to start a business? There's really no way to know for sure. But I do find things in common among the emotional and family fabric of people ready to consider an entrepreneurial venture. You don't have to fit all seven of these categories to be a good candidate for entrepreneurship. But it probably wouldn't hurt. In general, the more you have in common with these characteristics, the closer you probably are to being ready to try going out on your own. 1. You come from a line of people who couldn't work for someone else. I don't mean that in a negative way. People who are successful at establishing their own business tend to have had parents who worked for themselves. It's usually easier to get a job with a company than to start your own business; people who strike out on their own often have the direct example of a parent to look to. 2. You're a lousy employee. No need to sugar-coat this one. People who start their own businesses tend to have been fired from or quit more than one job. I'm not saying you were laid off for lack of work or moved from one job to a better-paying one. You were asked to leave, or you quit before they could fire you. Think of it as the marketplace telling you that the only person who can effectively motivate and manage you is yourself. 3. You see more than one definition of "job security." I am truly envious of the few people I know who have stayed with one employer for 25 or 30 years. They look very secure. But how many people do you know who are able to stay with one company for that long? In a rapidly changing economy, job security can be frighteningly fleeting. 4. You've gone as far as you can go, or you're not going anywhere at all. Sometimes the motivation to start a new venture comes from having reached the top of the pile where you are, looking around, and saying, "What's next?" Early success can be wonderful, but early retirement can sometimes drive energetic and motivated people totally crazy. 5. You've done the market research already. Don't even talk to me about your great business idea if you haven't put the time into figuring out if there's a market for Loyalty Programs May Keep Customers Coming Back - But First You've Got to Earn their Trust
Remember trading stamps? If you’re over 40, chances are you will. Every time you shopped at a participating grocery store or gas station they gave you stamps to paste into a book. When you’d accumulated enough stamps, you could cash them in for “free” gifts.These stamps were one of the first loyalty programs. They kept customers loyal to a particular product or merchant because they offered an incentive that encouraged the customer to keep coming back – and spend more money. these categories to be a good candidate for entrepreneurship. But it probably wouldn't hurt. In general, the more you have in common with these characteristics, the closer you probably are to being ready to try going out on your own. 1. You come from a line of people who couldn't work for someone else. I don't mean that in a negative way. People who are successful at establishing their own business tend to have had parents who worked for themselves. It's usually easier to get a job with a company than to start your own business; people who strike out on their own often have the direct example of a parent to look to. 2. You're a lousy employee. No need to sugar-coat this one. People who start their own businesses tend to have been fired from or quit more than one job. I'm not saying you were laid off for lack of work or moved from one job to a better-paying one. You were asked to leave, or you quit before they could fire you. Think of it as the marketplace telling you that the only person who can effectively motivate and manage you is yourself. 3. You see more than one definition of "job security." I am truly envious of the few people I know who have stayed with one employer for 25 or 30 years. They look very secure. But how many people do you know who are able to stay with one company for that long? In a rapidly changing economy, job security can be frighteningly fleeting. 4. You've gone as far as you can go, or you're not going anywhere at all. Sometimes the motivation to start a new venture comes from having reached the top of the pile where you are, looking around, and saying, "What's next?" Early success can be wonderful, but early retirement can sometimes drive energetic and motivated people totally crazy. 5. You've done the market research already. Don't even talk to me about your great business idea if you haven't put the time into figuring out if there's a market fo Sacks of Money to Burn on Marketing and Advertising get a job with a company than to start your own business; people who strike out on their own often have the direct example of a parent to look to.Do you have sacks of money to burn on your marketing and advertising? All of the small businesses that I’ve come across say they don’t. Yet there are a good number of small businesses that have held their own marketing and advertising budget bonfires.How does this happen? A conclusion I’ve come to is that many small businesses burn sacks full of money in advertising with miserable results because they just don’t understand the core basics of how advertising works.A co 2. You're a lousy employee. No need to sugar-coat this one. People who start their own businesses tend to have been fired from or quit more than one job. I'm not saying you were laid off for lack of work or moved from one job to a better-paying one. You were asked to leave, or you quit before they could fire you. Think of it as the marketplace telling you that the only person who can effectively motivate and manage you is yourself. 3. You see more than one definition of "job security." I am truly envious of the few people I know who have stayed with one employer for 25 or 30 years. They look very secure. But how many people do you know who are able to stay with one company for that long? In a rapidly changing economy, job security can be frighteningly fleeting. 4. You've gone as far as you can go, or you're not going anywhere at all. Sometimes the motivation to start a new venture comes from having reached the top of the pile where you are, looking around, and saying, "What's next?" Early success can be wonderful, but early retirement can sometimes drive energetic and motivated people totally crazy. 5. You've done the market research already. Don't even talk to me about your great business idea if you haven't put the time into figuring out if there's a market fo The Truth About Direct Hire Positions e marketplace telling you that the only person who can effectively motivate and manage you is yourself.Why do you think you need a direct hire in order to make a living? It seems that 99% of ‘direct hire’ job seekers are looking for security above everything else. But the truth of the matter is that over the past 2-3 years the bulk of companies in America experienced a slowdown and were forced to layoff both contract employees as well as direct employees; but when things started coming back around in 2004, guess who those same companies hired back first….the contractors!Contract 3. You see more than one definition of "job security." I am truly envious of the few people I know who have stayed with one employer for 25 or 30 years. They look very secure. But how many people do you know who are able to stay with one company for that long? In a rapidly changing economy, job security can be frighteningly fleeting. 4. You've gone as far as you can go, or you're not going anywhere at all. Sometimes the motivation to start a new venture comes from having reached the top of the pile where you are, looking around, and saying, "What's next?" Early success can be wonderful, but early retirement can sometimes drive energetic and motivated people totally crazy. 5. You've done the market research already. Don't even talk to me about your great business idea if you haven't put the time into figuring out if there's a market fo Brochure Printing Without much Effort go, or you're not going anywhere at all. Sometimes the motivation to start a new venture comes from having reached the top of the pile where you are, looking around, and saying, "What's next?" Early success can be wonderful, but early retirement can sometimes drive energetic and motivated people totally crazy.In marketing what is important is to keep your customers. Creating a long-term relationship with your customers is of the essence if you want your business to grow. But marketing is not that easy. You need and effective marketing plan to get to the top of the competition.One effective way of marketing a business is through brochures. Brochures are usually integrated by companies in their business plan because of the fact that everybody has them. They fail to recognize that broc 5. You've done the market research already. Don't even talk to me about your great business idea if you haven't put the time into figuring out if there's a market for your product or service. As the people behind any number of failed Internet ventures will tell you, "cool" doesn't necessarily translate into "profitable." Don't bother building it if you haven't figured out whether there's a good chance the customers will come. 6. You've got the support of your family. Starting a business is stressful under the best of circumstances. Trying to do it without the support of your spouse or other significant family members or friends would probably be unbearable. 7. You know you cannot do it alone. You might excel at promoting a business. Maybe you love running the financial end of the enterprise. You could be someone who starts a business because you have unique creative or technical know-how to create a product. Any of the above is possible, but it's unlikely that you are going to excel at all of these tasks -- or at all of the tasks involved in running any business. Forget all that doing it alone stuff. You are going to need some help sometime. The willingness to get that help -- having employees, partners or consultants for those areas in which you are not an expert -- is one indicator of likely future success. "No successful entrepreneur has ever succeeded alone," development consultant Ernesto Sirolli writes in "Ripples From the Zambezi." "The person who is most capable of enlisting the support of others is the most likely to succeed."
HTTP = HTML link (for blogs, profiles,phorums):
Related Articles:
|