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Resources
for New Entrepreneurs
Publications from Absolute Business Press focus on
business essentials – the things entrepreneurs really need to
know. They also focus on a new breed of Internet entrepreneurs
– Interpreneurs – everyday people who are using the Internet to
start new ventures and changing the way America does business.
We also
maintain the New Interpreneur website (www.NewInterpreneur.com).
This website, though still under construction, is a
comprehensive startup guide and provides links to other
resources designed to help entrepreneurs and interpreneurs with
the planning and startup of new ventures.
An
Interpreneur’s Journey: The Birth of a New Economy Business
By Tom
Eckmann
Every year
more than half a million people start a new business. And
sometimes it seems like an equal number of people write books
describing how to do it. Unfortunately, most of these books are
colorless compendiums of rules, checklists, and hard-to-follow
advice. Few help the novice entrepreneur understand what the
startup experience is like or how to put the information to
work. An Interpreneur’s Journey by Tom Eckmann (Absolute
Business Press) offers a refreshing alternative to these
“user-unfriendly” guides.
This book
introduces the startup process through the eyes of a first-time
entrepreneur and describes what he goes through each step of the
way—the doubts and uncertainties, the family and financial
pressures, and the problems that even experienced entrepreneurs
run into. The book is further distinguished by its focus on
Internet entrepreneurs—Interpreneurs—who
the author defines as everyday people with few technical skills
who are using the Internet to start new businesses and reinvent
old ones.
The main
character, Bill Partridge, is laid off from a job he’s had for
14 years. He knows little about starting or running a business,
but when he finds few job opportunities, he decides to take a
chance. He starts a contracting company selling and installing
in-floor radiant heating systems. He’s a smart guy and does the
right things, but despite his best efforts, profits elude him.
He’s almost out of money and ready to hang it up when he makes
an important discovery—he can sell his systems on the Internet
and reach a much bigger market. He re-invents his business and
finds success selling kits to people all over the country.
An
Interpreneur’s Journey
is very readable and the characters believable. Dialog and
illustrations are used to introduce important business concepts,
making them interesting and easier to understand. For example,
readers learn about business financial statements in a lively
exchange between Bill and his accountant; while this topic is
among the most boring on earth, the format adds life and clarity
to the explanation. Wisely, the author has moved some of the
more complex discussions to the book’s website; by doing so he’s
avoided bogging down the storyline while still making the
material available to those who are interested. Overall,
readers will find themselves drawn into the story and rooting
for Bill to succeed.
At the end of
each chapter is a startup guide, which summarizes the key steps
involved in starting a business. What makes this guide
particularly useful is that it doesn’t deal with mundane startup
issues such as getting a business license; instead it deals with
more strategic issues such as how to define a target market.
There are also many references to the book’s website, which
contains additional tips, planning tools and other information
for first-time Interpreneurs.
The author,
Tom Eckmann, is a seasoned entrepreneur who is well versed in
both new and old economy businesses. He has started and sold
several successful companies and helped dozens of other
entrepreneurs start and grow theirs. In this book he provides a
first-hand look at the startup experience and describes many
lessons he’s learned.
An
Interpreneur’s Journey
is a unique addition to the genre of business startup books. It
follows in the tradition of The E-Myth by Michael Gerber,
The Goal by Eliyahu Goldratt, and a handful of other
books that have successfully used fiction to communicate complex
business ideas. The book is particularly timely because it
speaks to the rapidly growing number of people whose jobs have
been outsourced or off-shored. Many will seek refuge from
unemployment by starting their own business. This book offers
useful insights and points them in the right direction.
Additional information:
Book Review
[PDF]
Book Excerpt (Table of
Contents and Chapter One) [PDF]
Back cover text [PDF]
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