Entrepreneurism

Entrepreneurism

Is the down economy inspiring your entrepreneurial drive?

When unemployment rises, the truth starts to ring home: All jobs are temporary and people can be let go at any moment. With neither the government nor corporate America looking out for your interests, perhaps it's time to make things happen on their own.

UK plc driving out talented women

Why are so many women in ther UK turning their backs on conventional 9-5 jobs and to go it alone? Perhaps that's a question more comapnies should start asking themselves.

Time for entrepreneurs to step to the fore

During difficult economic times, uncertainty presents a wealth of opportunities to be exploited by entrepreneurs. But without government support and a willing to consider genuine help for start-ups, much of this potential will go to waste.

Entrepreneurs need an exit strategy

Most entrepreneurs are so focused on getting their business established and then surviving that they completely forget about planning how they will eventually move on from it.

Wanted: risk-takers for the next decade

Entrepreneurial individuals are often branded as risk takers and mistrusted by major employers. But their imagination and creativity is exactly what modern businesses need.

Is your work an obligation or an opportunity?

People tend to see work either as an obligation, overbearing, or an opportunity. And if you want to take the opportunity to rise above the mundane and "make a difference", try thinking like an entrepreneur.

Business strategy in the age of opportunity

Opportunity always knocks. And adversity is the mother of opportunity. When the economic picture looks grim, there exist an increasing number of chances for generating bright new success.

Female entrepreneurs have it tougher than men

It's hard enough for women to climb the corporate ladder, but female entrepreneurs also suffer from a gender gap when it comes to owning and starting up their own businesses.

Knowledge economy managers ruling the world

Britain is becoming a global leader of the "knowledge economy", a business world created, staffed and led by highly-educated, technologically-savvy managers.

Goldman funds business education for third-world women

A multi-million dollar initiative by a U.S. bank is set to preach the virtues of good management and business skills to women in developing nations.

Big help available for small businesses

You opened your business with less than $35,000 operating capital. You have less than five employees. Some say you are crazy. I say people like you are the backbone of the country. And the good news is that there is plenty of help out there for you.

Entrepreneurs need to think globally

You may have thought up your brilliant business idea in the shed, but don't think you can succeed by keeping it there. The most successful entrepreneurs are those who think globally.

Senior startups worth billions to Britain

One in every six of all new businesses in the UK are founded by people aged over 50 and together they contribute £24bn annually to the British economy.

So you want to be a millionaire?

Studies have shown that the majority of college students on business courses believe they will eventually become millionaires. In fact, a good number of them think they will reach that mark before they reach the age of thirty.

Entrepreneurs and gender

What effect (if any) does gender have on entrepreneurship or the performance of new business ventures? That's the question Erin Kepler and Scott Shane set out to answer in a report for the U.S. Small Business Administration.

Don't start a business by the seat of your pants

If you try to start a business by the seat of your pants, chances are you're going to lose your shirt. But with so much information out there to help, any budding entrepreneur ought to be able to start and grow a successful, profitable enterprise.

The new generation of entrepreneurs

A generation of thrusting young entrepreneurs from emerging economies are snapping at the heels of today's stuffy Western business leaders – who need to be careful that they don't get left behind.

London to become global knowledge hub

Watch out America. Within eight years London will be rivalling New York, Silicon Valley and Hollywood as the world's hub for, respectively, finance, internet-based start-ups and digital special effects.

Someone else's dream

The average worker is supposed to find a job, dedicate themselves to it, and slowly, inexorably climb up the corporate ladder, right? Well, twenty years ago, perhaps, but not any more.

Entrepreneurial spirit grows among seniors

More older people than ever are starting their own businesses. But why should this be a surprise? After all, 70 is the new 50 - and nothing beats the wisdom forged by experience.

Small business: take advantage of advisors

Many entrepreneurs have a passion for their products, not a background in business. So startups can give themselves a better chance of surviving if they create a board of advisors to provide regular, outside perspectives on internal and external situations.

The rise of the female entrepreneur

Women around the world are increasingly likely to set up their own businesses but tend to be less optimistic about their chances and more cautious than men in the way that they go about it.

Winners and losers

Social networking isn't just important when it comes to landing a job. According to researchers from MIT's Sloan School of Management, the breadth of executives' networks with colleagues at other firms plays a crucial role in deciding which tech start-ups will live or die.

An unhealthy obsession

If affordable, transferable, health insurance existed in America, the number of people currently sheltering in traditional corporations who decided to set up on their own would be far, far higher.

Entrepreneur's golden farewell

He is notorious as the hard-driven entrepreneur who once banned staff from using e-mail because it reduced productivity, but John Caudwell, the billionaire founder of UK mobile phone retailer Phones4U looks like being remembered by many of his staff for a rather different parting shot.

U.S. immigration policy discourages foreign-born entrepreneurs

As a new report highlights the enormous contribution made to the U.S. economy by immigrant entrepreneurs, fears are growing about the long-term effects of restrictive immigration policies.

Rural women more likely to be entrepreneurs

Women are driving enterprise in the rural economy and are almost twice as likely to set up their own businesses as those living in towns, a new UK report has found.

Entrepreneurs give politicians the thumbs-down

Britain's political parties may like to paint themselves as business-friendly, but they are all failing to win the hearts and minds of the country's wealth-creating entrepreneurs.

Entrepreneurism - nature or nurture?

Are entrepreneurs born or made? According to new research, six out of 10 entrepreneurs in the U.S. claim that their entrepreneurial drive is a result of nature, not nurture.

Angel investment on the increase

Investments by U.S. angel investors increased by 15 per cent to $12.7 billion in the first half of 2006 over the same period in 2005, with health care services and medical equipment the sectors of choice.

Laid-off Americans find new jobs more quickly

Americans who have been unfortunate enough to lose their jobs during the first half of the year can are likely to have have found new jobs more quickly than in each of the past two years.

Asian entrepreneurs race ahead

The wealth of Asian entrepreneurs in the UK has grown by three times as the economy as a whole since 1998, with Asian success stories increasingly being seen in "non-traditional" sectors and industries.

Bootstrapping women achieve faster growth

Women entrepreneurs who are creative about the way they raise money for their businesses and take advantage of every financing opportunity going are more likely to reach the rapid growth stage in their businesses, a new study has found.

Millions of Americans want to go it alone

This Labor day, millions Americans say they want to stop laboring for others and take control of their own destinies by starting their own businesses.

Founder-led firms do better on the stock market

Public companies such as Berkshire Hathaway, Comcast and Dell that are still run by their original founders tend to perform better on the stock markets than do other firms, U.S. research has suggested.

Banking staff block women's access to finance

Access to finance has long been identified as one of the major barriers preventing more women from developing successful businesses. But how far are the banks to blame for this state of affairs?

Funding gulf drives UK entrepreneurs across the pond

The UK is encouraging its entrepreneurial talent to set up shop in the US rather than at home as a new report reveals that tech start-ups in the US receive 10 times as much government financial support as their counterparts in the UK.

Fewer entrepreneurs among ageing populations

Countries where ageing populations are increasing faster than younger people may also see a decline in entrepreneurial business activity according to research from Babson College Professor Maria Minniti.

In praise of control-freakery

If you're the sort of boss who gets accused of being a bit of a control freak, well done. Stand up, take the applause and be proud of yourself. It's time to come out of the closet and stop apologising.

Black Americans more likely to start a business

Black Americans are twice as likely as white Americans to try to start a business and tend to be more optimistic about their business environment than other racial groups.

Owning a business may not be as tough as you think

If you're fed up with ceaseless demands for results from "the man" without any respect in return, why not join the growing ranks of those who have turned their backs on thankless work within impersonal corporate entities and started their own businesses?

Overcoming the odds

Setting up a business is a tough proposition for anybody, wherever they are located, with women finding that the odds are often further stacked against them. But even in Afghanistan, women are succeeding despite the odds.

Left behind in the enterprise stakes

The UK economy could receive a £580 billion shot in the arm if more businesses were started by women, ethnic minorities and people living outside London and the South East.

Appreciating value

Value sensitivity is key to entrepreneurship. Because if you cannot find value in the new idea then it is not going to be pursued or developed.

Self-employed work harder and longer for less

The uncertain nature of self-employment means that self-employed men in Britain work longer hours for lower wages than their employee counterparts.

Global gender gap for entrepreneurs

Women entrepreneurs are just as likely as men to seek out new opportunities and take risks – yet nevertheless find themselves lagging behind their male counterparts when it comes to entrepreneurial activity.

U.S. firms even more concerned about tax and regulation than those in the UK

In a challenge to the accepted wisdom that the U.S. is the best place in the world in which to run a business, a new report has found that companies in the U.S. find running a business just as challenging - if not even more so - than those in the UK.

Women see balance in working for themselves

Following the publication in Britain this week of the Women and Work commission's report into gender segregation and pay, it was interesting to see a survey of Londoners which found that far more women than men view owning a business as the key to better work-life balance.

Employers slow to respond as workers ditch traditional careers

Despite a growing number of us rejecting traditional careers in favour of becoming free agents, employers are being far too slow in giving their managers the freedom to employ people in new and agile ways.

Founders' fortunes

How far can the the founder of a business take their success? Surprisingly, the percentage of founder-CEOs who go the distance is extremely low. But why?

UK has caught the Ebay bug

Almost 70,000 people in the UK make at least a quarter of their annual income by trading on Ebay, according to a survey by market research outfit, A C Neilsen.

The World's oldest CEO?

Jack Weil, founder and CEO of Denver-based Rockmount Ranch Wear, turns up for work every morning just as he has done since 1946. At 104 years old, he's not planning to go anywhere else because "what else am I supposed to do all day?".

Entrepreneurship by design

Entrepreneurship isn't just about having a new idea. It also needs effective design if the idea is going to take off.

Day-to-day worries mount for small business owners

The working week for Britain's small business entrepreneurs may have grown by almost 10 per cent in the past three years, but the desire to be their own boss shows no sign of deterring people from wanting to go it alone.

Management mentors

Hard though it can be to believe, you can make a difference without toeing the corporate line. What you need more than anything else is passion.

The entrepreneurial age

Entrepreneurs might not necessarily be more skilled than those less successful, but they have the knack of spotting opportunities and seizing their chances.

Secrets of start-up success

With nine out of 10 new ventures doomed to failure, what is it that enables the remaining one in 10 to succeed?

Britons give thumbs up to enterprise

A poll commissioned by the Daily Telegraph newspaper has found that the majority of people in Britain embrace wealth creation and respect entrepreneurs but are suspicious of large companies and their bosses.

Lack of role models deterring young entrepreneurs

Young people are being deterred from starting up their own businesses because of a fear of failure, lack of role models and a rules-based 'conveyor-belt' educational system that crushes the enterprise spirit.

Entrepreneurs plump for friends, not family

Entrepreneurs are shunning family members when setting up a business and increasingly setting up new ventures with friends rather than relatives.