FOREWORD
by Peter Shea
When we first published our Start Your Own Business in 1998, we thought it would make a great reference for people who wanted to be their own boss. We offered advice on what steps to take, and what pitfalls to avoid. The book offers common sense approaches to a wide range of challenges facing the new entrepreneur, drawing solutions from the successes and failures of others.
Start Your Own Business has been a phenomenal success. With more than 400,000 copies in circulation through four editions, it’s the best-selling business startup book of all time. Business is affected by everything from advances in social marketing to the iPhone, from law changes governing entrepreneurs to the impact of Google on building a customer base. These are fascinating, and exciting, times for the independent business owner.
There’s no doubt that the recent recession has created the most challenging business environment in generations, affecting everyone from the self-employed to General Motors. While most people might see such a sour economy as a mountainous barrier to success, the true entrepreneur sees the opportunities, and navigates the passes through to the other side. Even in economic downturns those with vision, and drive, can thrive.
With that in mind, I welcome you to the fifth edition of Start Your Own Business, updated with insights on the latest trends—including an entirely new chapter on social media and how to make it work for your business. We’re also offering a somewhat longer view of what it takes to succeed. Earlier editions focused on the crucial startup phase. As an entrepreneur myself, I can tell you that starting a business is one thing, and nurturing it to robust health is something else. So we’ve also expanded portions of Start Your Own Business to include advice and guidance on surviving the crucial first three years.
Few people realize that some 600,000 new businesses are born each year, and the vast majority of them succeed. I’ll let you in on a little secret about the winners. They succeed primarily because they prepare. And if Start Your Own Business does nothing else, it will give you the tools to build your own future and success. You can’t just think about that great idea for a business. Once your idea is in place, you need to burrow down into the details of what you need to know and do in order to achieve the entrepreneur’s ultimate goal—financial security while working for yourself.
I’ve had my own successes and failures over the years, and some of the lessons from both types of experiences are in these pages. The staff at Entrepreneur, who also know a thing or two about what it takes to thrive, have added their considerable knowledge, too. Start Your Own Business contains the best of what we all have to offer, in clear and unvarnished language.
All the best in your success.
—Peter Shea, CEO and owner of
Entrepreneur Media, Inc.