Sentences with phrase «failed entrepreneur»

Keep it varied, serial and serious — repeating the same message over and over will get you in the same place as the other failed entrepreneurs: bankrupt.
If every entrepreneur thought of himself as a startup founder, there would be a lot more successful startups and a lot fewer failed entrepreneurs.
Starting your business journey by telling yourself how wealthy it will make you is probably the most common mistake failed entrepreneurs make.
Almost half of new startups fail within five years, and the reason is clear: As 42 percent of failed entrepreneurs said in one survey, there wasn't a market need for their products.
Posted by Susan Cartier Liebel, Esq. in Current Affairs, How Law Schools Fail The Entrepreneur Permalink Comments (1) TrackBack (0)
no entrepreneur actively wants to be known as the failing entrepreneur.
Shepherd's study looks at career - injured veterans and musicians, fired executives and failed entrepreneurs, but rock bottom is mostly one of those places that you'll know when you get there.
«Almost every failed entrepreneur... overestimates their ability to generate revenue, or underestimates what it'll take» to start making money, says Stewart Thornhill, executive director at the Pierre L. Morrissette Institute for Entrepreneurship at the Richard Ivey School of Business.
At the end of the day, they are very important — as any failed entrepreneur can tell you.
Failed entrepreneurs are more likely to get funding than successful entrepreneurs from the same VC firm.
In Silicon Valley, we have a special word for a failed entrepreneur — it's called experienced.
Similarly, a failed entrepreneur might explore how skills learned in starting a business could be applied in a corporate setting, take standardized exams to be considered for law school or engage in other low risk exploration activities.
He's a college dropout who massages Miami's biggest clientele (which sounds better than it seems), and a failing entrepreneur who hitched his wagon attempting to sell blankets to unneedy retirement homes.
Just a few of the book projects she's worked on are: «Raising Eyebrows: A Failed Entrepreneur Finally Gets It Right» by Dal LaMagna, in collaboration with Wally Carbone and Carla S. Reuben (Wiley Books), «Saving CeeCee Honeycutt» by Beth Hoffman (Pamela Dorman Books / Viking), and «The Art of Social War: A Novel» by Jodi Wing (Harper Paperbacks).
a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w x y z