Archive for January, 2010

Successful Home Based Entrepreneurship

January 25th, 2010 by admin | 1 Comment | Filed in Entrepreneurship

Budding business people are always on the hunt for useful tips that they can use for their home-based entrepreneurship. More and more people now are interested in creating a home based business because of the endless opportunities available online, even unknowledgeable individuals.

Through the internet, any person can become an entrepreneur. An online home-based entrepreneurship requires less capital investment and so many people think that they can easily make a fortune out of it. But you see, even an online business requires careful thought and consideration. You have to exert a lot of effort and time to make it a success. Some of the online entrepreneurship opportunities include affiliate marketing, blogging, copywriting, and many others. If you take your time to do some research, you can find many high-profits earning business opportunities out there.

For family-oriented individuals who seeks for more flexibilities and for those that don’t have a professional career, a home-based entrepreneurship may be the answer to their financial needs. Running an online business does not evolve mainly on the desire to earn income. It takes more than that. Here are some helpful tips that you can use in running your home-based business: 1.No man is an island. Have you heard of that famous cliche? That is specifically true for entrepreneurs. You are the boss of your business but that does not mean that you will not need any support. You need to seek help from people who are more experienced than you. You have to learn more about your target market so that you can address its needs accordingly.

You can contact professional organizations for more information. Through research, you can learn a lot. 2.Educate yourself and be well informed. Only God knows everything. Man has limitations and so you will not know everything that is happening all at once. You need to get the proper training in running your home-based business. You need to familiarize yourself with record keeping, tax deductions, and basic accounting procedures. Through series of trainings, you will know more about running your online business venture especially if you are new in this field. 3.Never start a business that you are not familiar with. Training and experience are the keys to success. To run your home-based business smoothly, you need to be an expert.

Continue to learn as much as possible. Get to know in detail every possible aspect of the business you can think of before you plunge into your new business. 4.Never lose hope. Always have self confidence so that you can pass all the trainings and become a professional entrepreneur. You must always be patient and don’t give up easily especially if you are encountering certain difficulties and problems. By working hard, you can get the exact results that you want. Huge results don’t come instantly. You must always trust your training, your business plans, and most especially, yourself. These are some tips that you can use in making your home-based business a success. There are many tips that you can find on the internet but these four tips are among the best and most effective. Many expert entrepreneurs can attest to that.

If you want, you can join entrepreneur workshops so that you can meet famous entrepreneurs and learn more about their lives. As the number of home-based entrepreneurship increases, you must be able to compete with other businesses. This is the only way to be successful. Incorporate these helpful tips in starting your online business and soon enough, you can prove if it is effective or not. You can earn huge profits if you start your business with a solid foundation and manage it effectively.

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Entrepreneurship With Ethics

January 24th, 2010 by admin | No Comments | Filed in Entrepreneurship

Why is it important to establish the moral status of entrepreneurship? Unless it can be shown that the entrepreneur does what is morally worthwhile as an entrepreneur, that his role is ethically praiseworthy, not only his or her status in the market but the market itself becomes vulnerable to serious moral criticism. This is because it is well recognised that ethics are the free market’s life line. Many economists are beginning to realise this. Indeed, it is entrepreneurial activity that makes the best sense of profit – another vital part of capitalism.

However, without also demonstrating that entrepreneurship is ethical, the market would at most be hospitable to morally indifferent kinds of behavior; at worst it would encourage moral callousness and discourage the pursuit of presumably morally more significant objectives, such as order, self-restraint, artistic excellence, family values.

When a system is vulnerable in one of its essential ingredients, competing systems that lack this weakness become very powerful if not immediately successful alternatives. Their images improve, even if their actual performance leaves a lot to be desired.

Some argue that all we need is the hospitable environment, but this is false. Even in the freest of societies many, many potential market agents can be lazy. Not that laziness is encouraged but that it is clearly not foreclosed. That is partly what freedom means. One has a genuine choice whether to be productive or not. It is not enough to show that under capitalism human beings are free, unless the kind of uses to which such a system puts human effort can themselves be

morally worthwhile. So the question needs to be addressed. Why should one be productive? Why should entrepreneurship be practiced? What is good about it?

It is not enough by a long shot to answer that entrepreneurship is the ticket to a decent chance for wealth. Certainly one can agree that between stealing and producing, the latter is more honorable. However what if quietism – the form of religious mysticism that involves complete extinction of the human will, drawing away from worldly things – is proposed as an alternative?

How about asceticism – the religious ideal that one can reach a higher spiritual state by self-discipline and self-denial? How will the system that is hospitable to entrepreneurship be defended in the light of such powerful challenges?

The most serious challenges to capitalism come from those who contend that by making entrepreneurial effort possible – by protecting the rights to private property and the pursuit of happiness here on earth – this system corrupts human life. It tends to permit the commercialisation of human relationships, making us self-interested economic agents instead of what we really ought be, altruistic members of our community.

It is insufficient to reply that the capitalist system makes it possible for people to attain a better life here on earth. That is just what is in need of defense. Why should we strive for such a life in the first place?

In a society of just human relationships, there must be a consistent and constant hospitality to entrepreneurship because without this, an important moral dimension of human life would be suppressed or at least seriously distorted. Without such a welcome, public policy and law would yield to more widely accepted but sadly misguided moral sentiments, for example, the call for

greater and greater state power to regiment or re-engineer society instead of making it safe for natural human initiative.

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Social Entrepreneurship Today

January 23rd, 2010 by admin | No Comments | Filed in Entrepreneurship

Depending upon the way in which we choose to view it, the strengths or weaknesses of the concept of social entrepreneurship lie in the fact that most of its applications are in the form of a hybrid between private, non-profit and public sectors. As described, one such hybrid is found in non-profit organisations with an entrepreneurial offshoot that generates revenue for the organisation’s social objectives. With greater emphasis on the private, for-profit sector, a hybrid model is emerging whereby businesses lend money and expertise to non-profits. Increasingly, this latter model is linked to public pressure for businesses to demonstrate a measure of social responsibility.

The most realistic and desirable way for any business to be socially responsible is through what is called ‘‘strategic philanthropy’’ – selected giving in areas tied directly to the company’s interests and in arenas that the company can justly claim to have knowledge and a direct stake. The use of the term clearly suggests an indirect financial return on the philanthropic investment. Indeed, the exercise of traditional philanthropy does not make good business sense as it does not provide a tangible return. In a more refined consideration of types of philanthropy today, the notion of strategic philanthropy yet emphasises that highly motivated and visionary business leaders can bring together networks of organizations in new community ventures.

Like the term ‘‘strategic philanthropy’’, ‘‘social entrepreneurship’’ is an articulation, a combination of two concepts that do not naturally fit together and yet which seeks acceptance as common sense. It is the lack of a natural fit that renders the term open to resistance and challenge. Challenges, implicit or explicit, range from different interpretations of how the terms might justifiably be joined to denial that they should be used together at all.

Language is a key component in the shift towards rationalization of the concept of social entrepreneurship. This is because discourse acceptance precedes or runs in parallel with material acceptance. Thus we see the emergence of terms that were previously restricted to the business sector, such as ‘‘social venture capital’’, ‘‘social return on investment’’, ‘‘invest’’

rather than ‘‘donate’’, ‘‘revenue streams’’ and ‘‘client groups’’ applied to the social and public sectors.

If the colonisation of the social and public sectors by the language of business is accepted, the breakdown of barriers between the sectors becomes normalised. However, the terms cited are in contrast to the distinction between entrepreneurs who create social or artistic capital rather than financial capital, with social capital referring to that which is valuable to communities.

On the other hand, opposition could arise from the close association of the term ‘‘entrepreneur’’ with the creative and destructive aspects of capitalism. Those who are concerned about the negative aspects of business will be resistant to the blurring of the boundaries between public, private and civil society suggested by social entrepreneurship with the potential for increased influence of business beyond the private sector. The non-profit sector has long been associated with the creation and maintenance of a strong civil society. Marketing of that sector then calls that association into question with concerns for the viability of an independent civil society.

Furthermore, if business has the power to choose which non-profits are to benefit materially through socially entrepreneurial partnerships, what happens to those that are not chosen and therefore are marginalised?

A parallel can be drawn between the concept of social entrepreneurship and that of sustainability because sustainability is equally open to broad interpretation. Like social entrepreneurship, sustainability can favour either the social and environmental or the economic sectors, depending upon which model is adopted. Strong sustainability favours the social and environmental over economic development, upholding the social values of a truly civil society based social entrepreneurialism. Interpretations are derived from the beliefs and experiences of individuals. Social entrepreneurs and their work should ultimately be judged by the quality of the social outcomes, and that assessment should be made independently of the private interests of those entrepreneurs.

With concepts and movements such as social entrepreneurship, environmental sustainability, and social responsibility, it is crucial that we pay close attention to the persuasive uses of the terms as well as to their practical implication. All of them are contested, value-laden labels that can be used to reference a wide variety of interests, motives, activities and outcomes.

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Social Entrepreneurship Today!

January 22nd, 2010 by admin | No Comments | Filed in Entrepreneurship

Depending upon the way in which we choose to view it, the strengths or weaknesses of the concept of social entrepreneurship lie in the fact that most of its applications are in the form of a hybrid between private, non-profit and public sectors. As described, one such hybrid is found in non-profit organisations with an entrepreneurial offshoot that generates revenue for the organisation’s social objectives. With greater emphasis on the private, for-profit sector, a hybrid model is emerging whereby businesses lend money and expertise to non-profits. Increasingly, this latter model is linked to public pressure for businesses to demonstrate a measure of social responsibility.

The most realistic and desirable way for any business to be socially responsible is through what is called ‘‘strategic philanthropy’’ – selected giving in areas tied directly to the company’s interests and in arenas that the company can justly claim to have knowledge and a direct stake. The use of the term clearly suggests an indirect financial return on the philanthropic investment. Indeed, the exercise of traditional philanthropy does not make good business sense as it does not provide a tangible return. In a more refined consideration of types of philanthropy today, the notion of strategic philanthropy yet emphasises that highly motivated and visionary business leaders can bring together networks of organizations in new community ventures.

Like the term ‘‘strategic philanthropy’’, ‘‘social entrepreneurship’’ is an articulation, a combination of two concepts that do not naturally fit together and yet which seeks acceptance as common sense. It is the lack of a natural fit that renders the term open to resistance and challenge. Challenges, implicit or explicit, range from different interpretations of how the terms might justifiably be joined to denial that they should be used together at all.

Language is a key component in the shift towards rationalization of the concept of social entrepreneurship. This is because discourse acceptance precedes or runs in parallel with material acceptance. Thus we see the emergence of terms that were previously restricted to the business sector, such as ‘‘social venture capital’’, ‘‘social return on investment’’, ‘‘invest’’ rather than ‘‘donate’’, ‘‘revenue streams’’ and ‘‘client groups’’ applied to the social and public sectors.

If the colonisation of the social and public sectors by the language of business is accepted, the breakdown of barriers between the sectors becomes normalised. However, the terms cited are in contrast to the distinction between entrepreneurs who create social or artistic capital rather than financial capital, with social capital referring to that which is valuable to communities.

On the other hand, opposition could arise from the close association of the term ‘‘entrepreneur’’ with the creative and destructive aspects of capitalism. Those who are concerned about the negative aspects of business will be resistant to the blurring of the boundaries between public, private and civil society suggested by social entrepreneurship with the potential for increased influence of business beyond the private sector. The non-profit sector has long been associated with the creation and maintenance of a strong civil society. Marketing of that sector then calls that association into question with concerns for the viability of an independent civil society.

Furthermore, if business has the power to choose which non-profits are to benefit materially through socially entrepreneurial partnerships, what happens to those that are not chosen and therefore are marginalised?

A parallel can be drawn between the concept of social entrepreneurship and that of sustainability because sustainability is equally open to broad interpretation. Like social entrepreneurship, sustainability can favour either the social and environmental or the economic sectors, depending upon which model is adopted. Strong sustainability favours the social and environmental over economic development, upholding the social values of a truly civil society based social entrepreneurialism. Interpretations are derived from the beliefs and experiences of individuals. Social entrepreneurs and their work should ultimately be judged by the quality of the social outcomes, and that assessment should be made independently of the private interests of those entrepreneurs.

With concepts and movements such as social entrepreneurship, environmental sustainability, and social responsibility, it is crucial that we pay close attention to the persuasive uses of the terms as well as to their practical implication. All of them are contested, value-laden labels that can be used to reference a wide variety of interests, motives, activities and outcomes.

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Entrepreneurship and the Internet

January 21st, 2010 by admin | No Comments | Filed in Entrepreneurship

It seems like everyone these days is talking about one thing: entrepreneurship. Either someone’s an entrepreneur or someone else is talking about a new enterprise. Just what’s so great about this whole entrepreneurship buzz anyway?


The definition


Entrepreneurship is a person (or sometimes a group) which pursues opportunities to satisfy needs and wants using uniqueness and innovation. It’s going after an idea and making it happen.


Some people think an entrepreneur is a business gambler, taking chances on an unproven business or an idea to make money. Sure, entrepreneurs take risks, but they’re calculated ones, not random investments on crazy concepts. The risks entrepreneurs choose are ones determined to have the potential for great return.


The profile


Three factors are the keys to entrepreneurship: opportunities, innovation, and growth.


A person with entrepreneurial aspirations observes environmental trends and changes and pursues unseen opportunities with all possible resources. He or she uses innovative ideas to revolutionize and transform products or services, coping with changing environments.


The entrepreneur is also focused on growth, applying continuous effort to expand their business. Success is the ultimate goal, and creative approaches, such as outsourcing some aspects of the business help to achieve those goals.


The personality


Entrepreneurship involves a desire to be bigger, sell more, and go beyond what is expected. A visionary perspective spurns ideas. Drive and determination push an entrepreneur forward.


Of course, an entrepreneur needs to take some great leaps of faith. They also need to take some incredible risks. But even the largest corporations started out small. Through the calculated strategies of entrepreneurs, small businesses became world leaders.


The landscape


Entrepreneurship happens all around us, in all four corners of the globe. The Internet, though, is the landscape that is buzzing with entrepreneurship right now. It offers new industry possibilities, for those who are motivated to take the chance.


These entrepreneurs drive today’s global business environment. Through calculated risks, they improve the world and profit from it. Stepping out of the comfort zone, they invest in development through technological advancements. They strive for greater heights, providing better products and services to consumers.


Everyone from homemakers to unemployed workers to students are striking it rich because of the opportunities the Internet offers. Many are young, dynamic individuals unafraid of risk and many more are mature people ready to make a change. Avid entrepreneurs in established businesses are realizing the potential the Internet offers, too. Anyone can seize ideas and turn visions into reality. All they have to do is take a chance.

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Book Writing Mistakes That Block The Completion of Your Book

January 21st, 2010 by admin | 1 Comment | Filed in Tips Writing

What’s blocking you from releasing your significant message in a book this year? For many, an unfinished manuscript is the culprit. No worries; read this article to finish strong and sell sooner than you imagined.


Don’t make the simple mistakes that blocked many of us for years. A wildly successful book could be in your near future. But you’ll never know if you don’t complete and release it to the world.


To make sure you finish strong and your book garners all the attention it deserves, start with correcting the simple book writing mistakes below:


Mistake 1 Failure to make the editor’s cut.


Many inexperienced writers are in love with their words. They can’t bear to part with the long wordy prose in their manuscript. Shorten your stories and examples. Use the popular question answer format. Ask a question in the heading; then answer it in the text. Most audiences are busy and respond better to this easy direct style.


Solution: Go ahead you can do it. Edit your book and cut anything not necessary to support your thesis (main central point). Editor cuts make your book concise, easy-to-read, and compelling for your readers. They will reward you by reading it and telling all their friends about your easy to read helpful book.


Mistake 2 Failure to submit one’s writing to a professional editor


First time authors settle for the easiest opinion to get (their family and friends). Always get a professional opinion of the final edition. Someone not blinded by love and concern for your feelings will tell you the truth about your wordiness or grammar mistakes. They’ll help you weed out passive constructions like, “there is”, “is”, “has”, “begin or start”. A professional editor will energize your writing by limiting the “ly” adverbs that tell instead of show. A good editor will spot your tense changes.


Solution: Invest in your book to make it the best it can be. Make it your goal to paint a picture that your readers respond to with their emotions. Professional proofreading pays off with more book profits.


Mistake 3 Failure to know your audience.


Aspiring authors gather all their extensive knowledge and write a book. They often fail to consider the audience they will serve. Write for a specific audience. Top selling books focus on one topic for one audience at a time. Your audience waits for the easy to read and easy to implement solutions you provide in your book. Save them time and money, make life more enjoyable, help them profit; they will love you for it.


Solution: Today choose one or two of your audiences; prepare a profile of their needs or problems. Keep it close to your book writing station. With a targeted market, you’ll write a book for an audience that’s looking for solutions.


Mistake 4 Failure to sizzle your title to sell well.


Titles set the stage for your potential audience. They either work to grab your reader by the collar and pull them in for the read or they don’t. Top titles create excitement, anticipation and enthusiasm for more. You want your titles to express the heart and passion of your book or be ‘the match’ that ignites your reader’s interest in reading your important message.


Solution: Develop this valuable skill and you add magnetic pulling power and punch to all your marketing documents including your front book cover and chapter titles that will get your message read. Remember, don’t stop at your book cover title, sizzle your chapter titles, headlines, bullets and sell more.


Mistake 5 Failure to focus on one main topic.


Top selling authors focus on one main topic. They make sure each chapter supports that subject. If you scatter your focus, you’ll come across as unorganized, long winded, and boring. Your readers may find your book hard to understand.


Solution: Instead of an encyclopedia type book, chunk your information into modules, segments, chapters or parts. In each segment, offer plenty of detail to make it useful to your reader.


To continue with these book writing mistakes could mean your book never reaches the audience for which it was designed. On the other hand, you could finish strong and put your book into the hands of those waiting for your easy to read solutions. Don’t make them wait any longer. Go to your destiny; write and complete a wildly successful book.

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Ten Tips on Writing and Creativity

January 21st, 2010 by admin | No Comments | Filed in Tips Writing

Ten Tips on Writing and Creativity

by Emily Hanlon

1. Don’t think. Creating a story or book has little to do with
the intellect or language when we first begin. Our best ideas
will emerge as a spark or image. Like dreams, they will make
little sense. Followed, they will hold the key to the creative
unconscious.

2. Creativity is cyclical. You cannot and will not be creative
all the time. What is full must empty and what is empty will
fill. Creativity has its own internal rhythms. Learn to listen
to yours.

3. Nothing kills creativity faster than criticism. Don’t share
your work-in-progress with people who are critical or those
whose opinions leave you vulnerable, no matter how much you love
them. Good critiquing should leave you inspired, not deflated.

4. Spend time listening to your inner critic. He or she is not
comfortable with the risks demanded by a creative endeavor. By
becoming aware of the foul jabber of your inner critic, you can
see how your own mind puts up roadblocks to your creativity.

5. Being a creator is risky business. Don’t underestimate the
tremendous emotional and psychic risks the journey demands.
Learn to push ahead even when you are afraid. Learn to love the
risk.

6. Don’t be afraid to fail. Every successful creator has failed
hundreds of times. Failure is an integral part of creativity. It
doesn’t mean you’re wrong or stupid. It only means you’ve
uncovered a path or technique that does not work.

7. Don’t be afraid to write garbage. Every successful writer
writes mounds of garbage. Give your work time to percolate. Play
the What If game. For example, if you’re writing fiction and a
characters is sweet and loving and you’re stuck, have the
character mean and hateful. In the world of the imagination,
anything can happen.

8. Nurture your creativity. It is as fragile as a budding
flower. Open to the dance. Listen to music that makes you feel
like flying. Go for a walk. Laugh with a friend, child or lover.
Creativity is about feeling.

9. Be passionate. Creativity is passionate. Passion is always
creative.

10. Learn your craft. And write, write, write! The more you
write, the better you will get. Discipline yourself. Successful
writers are disciplined writers

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Cover Letter Tips: a Winning Formula

January 20th, 2010 by admin | No Comments | Filed in Tips Writing

It’s true that nobody really likes writing cover letters or resumes. What’s even more interesting is that cover letters are not even enjoyed by their recipients. The problem derives from the cover letter templates. If you want to get the message quickly to as many recipients as possible then you have to create a cover letter template. It’s impossible to structure a new sentence or paragraph for every cover letter.


This causes all cover letters from all job seekers to look the more or less the same and the phrases in the letters to sound repetitive. This repetition simply destroys the entire letter. Imagine 100 job seekers using the same cover letter template and send their letters to the same recipient. After reading some letters the recipient is frustrated and there’s no point at reading any more..


Here are some tips to make your cover letters stand out from the crowd and look inspiring and fresh:

Make A Good Start

It’s true that the beginning of a cover letter is the hardest part. Most writers get stuck and cannot come up with an inspiring first sentence or paragraph. So, write down a list of good “first phrases” and use them accordingly. Here are some examples:

- I am writing to you to introduce myself and to apply for the current opening in your company for a skillful …

- Does your department look for a talented …

- I’ve heard a lot of people talking about a potential opening in your company for a …

- Please accept this letter and my attached resume as an interest in the position of…

- I am a … with … years of experience in … and I hope to utilize my skills at your department…

- I have just completed my … studies at … university and I am looking for a position that will capitalize my experience as a …

- During the last … years I have held complex positions within the … industry. My areas of expertise are …

- There’s nothing that would please me more than to join your team of talented …


These are some examples of interesting and eye-catching first sentences that could help you.

Add Your Contact Details At The Top

On the top of every page write your name, address, phone number and email address. You can create a simple letterhead with this information on your computer. You can use smaller fonts. It will save you a lot of time from writing the same information for every recipient.

Decide What You Want

Before writing a cover letter be realistic and decide why you want to be part of a specific company. What is so different about that company that makes you want to work for them? What specific parts of your work do you like the most? Do not just write a cover letter just because you need a job. Everybody needs a job. So sit down and write the things you like the most about the specific company. Then carefully add this list of things to your cover letter template. It’s also a good practice to use bulleted lists of abilities and skill areas. You could make a grid that matches your skills with the company’s needs.

Professionalize Your Cover Letter

Do not use sentences like “To whom it may concern” or “Dear Human Resources Manager”, it really looks nonprofessional and boring for the reader. Instead try to find the actual name of the recipient.

Closing Is Important

Make a smart close. Do not use begging sentences like “I really hope to talk to you soon”. Be brief and straightforward. Show your intentions. Here are some examples:

- I would be interested in an opportunity to interview for this position and will look forward to scheduling a meeting with you.

- Thank you for your consideration. I will call you next week to talk further or schedule an appointment.


These examples are a bit direct and if this is not you then you can use the good old “..I look forward to hearing from you..”.

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