Chris Guillebeau, author of "The Art of Non-Conformity,"
is interested in freedom -- and in helping dissatisfied people who are
seeking a change and don’t know what the next step is in a limited job
market. He poses the following question in his new book "The $100 Startup:" What
if today was your last day of working for someone other than
yourself? He previewed the book, which will publish in May, at SXSW
Interactive in Austin, Texas.
Guillebeau says he hopes to inspire people to ask, “Do I have enough
freedom?” and, just as important, “Am I creating freedom for someone
else?”
To write the book, Guillebeau surveyed more than 1,500 entrepreneurs
earning at least $50,000 for their business and wrote about 50 case
studies. Half are from U.S. entrepreneurs. Each entrepreneur had to be
generating revenue with a skill (or skills) that can be easily acquired
by anyone. And, many of those profiled never considered themselves
entrepreneurs before, had no strategy or even the intention of starting a
business.
Guillebeau found that each of the companies had three things in common.
1. Each entrepreneur found a way to combine their passion with
something that people would pay for. (He calls this “Passion &
Usefulness.”)
2. Each company gave people what they really want, not what they say they want.
3. Each company’s product was somehow tied to making people happy. The more a product was related to happiness, the better.
As for the title of the book, the startup
costs of his case-study companies averaged about $450. (“$100 Startup
just sounded better.”) Guillebeau stated that the wrong question to ask
is how much the startup costs will be. The better question to ask, he
said, is: “How will this make money?”
SOURCE: www.entrepreneur.com
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