Entrepreneurs usually think of themselves as businesspeople or missionaries. But focusing on the bottom line or the cause isn’t the best way to make your startup successful. You need to think of yourself as a scientist.
Designing products for underdeveloped nations is a far different art from design as we know it. Find out why so many products and strategies fail in poverty-stricken markets and how hard-nosed entrepreneurs are defining success.
Goal setting is huge in the world of entrepreneurship, but are we doing it entirely wrong? This post discusses the problems with outcome-based goals and proposes the solution: rate-based goals.
If you’re reading this article it’s likely you’re someone who took the road less traveled. If you’ve pioneered a new idea or product, it’s also likely along the way you were encouraged to keep going despite your unorthodox idea...
Your ability to galvanize the support of key individuals, build incredible teams that are relentlessly dedicated, and excite rooms filled with innovators and investors all depends on your ability to build powerful relationships.
Understandably, we equate excellence with performance. But my dad, a neurologist, makes the case that being excellent is more a consequence of how you treat people than what you deliver to them.
Use the resources in this post to easily build a beautiful website, create a new brand, string up a logo, design the best presentation you've ever seen.
It’s important to recognize that some things are, well, just better on your own. Save yourself the time for group think. Most of the time, it does not lead to creativity.
The next Steve Jobs will come out of an emerging economy and it's time we started to create investment templates that make it easy to invest in these markets.
There is an opportunity for social entrepreneurs to fix the riddle of getting the product to the end consumer in underdeveloped countries. Read why many ideas have failed and why some approaches might just eradicate the problem.