tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-5952859233686965744.post3011417337922035569..comments2022-11-12T05:19:30.414-07:00Comments on Random Finds and Thoughts On Any Given Day: The $100 Start-Up (I think I may read this book)Unknownnoreply@blogger.comBlogger1125tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-5952859233686965744.post-39742998877718685112012-06-01T05:26:58.415-07:002012-06-01T05:26:58.415-07:00The book is good, real good. So I had a hard time ...The book is good, real good. So I had a hard time putting it down. But being so good, I had a harder time waiting to apply what I read.<br /><br />The very beginning of The $100 Startup boils down entrepreneurship to 3 basic needs: something to sell, someone to sell it to, and a way to get paid. Simple, but critical. It's not theory, but fact and it got my mind in overdrive.<br /><br />Also from early on, the book cites examples and case studies. The $100 Startup draws from over 1500 interviews, so case studies abound. All these examples hold up to a set of criteria that scream "Achievable success, by anyone, even me."<br /><br />And that's just the beginning. I'd love to tell you how the book ends, but I haven't finished it yet myself. I'm too busy using it. The $100 Startup inspired me to take action and fast. And I can say, so far, it's worth every penny...and now more.Ceskahttp://socialconditioning.wordpress.com/noreply@blogger.com