My Library and Courses
Last Update: Thursday March 18, 2010

Should Barack invite the unemployed to start a businesses?

 Be driven.  Focus like a laser.

Santa Clara and San Jose, California:  Silicon Valley is famous for technology startups and its goal is to never lose the distinction of being "the place" for innovation. The Enterprise Network (TEN) houses over a dozen start-ups working to bring new technologies to the marketplace. At TEN they find low-cost office space and mentors who guide them. You will meet the men who run the incubator and a number of the entrepreneurs who depend upon the leadership and camaraderie offered here.

According to the National Business Incubation Association, there are about 5,000 incubators worldwide with about 1,100 in the US. 

We chose this incubator because it became famous during the dot-com boom and it is situated  close to Stanford University. 

Stanford was early to the idea of technology licensing.  Technology licensing has assisted faculty and students in the process of launching companies which in turn have created thousands of jobs and brought millions of dollars into Stanford University.  Stanford enjoys the "success breeds success" principal so things are popping there.   In this program we go to the campus to see how one PhD student is working to commercialize his discoveries.

Go to all the key ideas and video of this episode...
Go to the homepage of this episode...

He'd say, "Laid off? Try creating your job by starting a business."

Why not? We'll all help. Get everybody pulling together: An open letter to Barak...

We can give them our Reality Check as our guest (free). This $49 course helps people make the decision, "Do I dare start?"  Some shouldn't. Others should; and of those, they will help turn this economy around. Know someone? Have them register. That's free. Then, ask them to drop us a note, "I'd like to participate for free."

Everybody here on this website has said, "If I don't do this my life will be incomplete."

An idea can change the course of history Every day on this television show, people say, "Be brave. Have courage." If you have an idea that keeps you awake at night, that always comes up in conversations, then what are you waiting for?

These people below were fired, laid off, or quit their job in tough times. They
started a business, became successful by moving from Step 1
, then Step 2, Step 3...


Step 1: Dreaming

Meet Glenn Walser of Automated Foods
Step 2: Starting

Lorraine Miller, founder, Cactus & Tropicals, Salt Lake City
Step 3: Selling

Leonor Ferrer, founder, Ferrer Brokers, Otay Mesa, California
Step 4:  Growing

Pamela Rodgers, founder, Rodgers Chevrolet, Woodhaven, Michigan
Step 5: Employing

Meet Paul Scharfman of Specialty Cheese, Wisconsin
Step 6: Scaling

XTO's Chairman, Bob Simpson
Step 7: Sustaining

Meet Anne Beiler, founder, Auntie Anne's Pretzels
Step 8: Exiting

Join a 14-year effort that explores the very best side of business.

Please be our guest  That's free. Or, become a premium member today:
(1) Register everyone in your business.  You'll get a private registration page.
(2) Starting? Do a reality check. (You're employed but you're thinking about it.)
(3) Growing? Grow faster-better.  Learn more...

Go to a prior homepage...


1

2

3

4