The Bootstrapper's Bible: How to Start and Build a Business with a Great Idea and (almost) No Money

Front Cover
Upstart Publishing, 1998 - Business & Economics - 280 pages
Getting ready to start a small business -- specially with little or no money on hand -- is an adventure to the say the least. Plenty of books offer inspiration, ideas and roadmaps, but The Bootstrapper's Bible is the first to combine them all. This happy combination is due to the unique position of author Seth Godin. He was a "bootstrapper" who tells the story of getting his own business up and running. Starting with almost nothing, Godin has built a multimillion dollar business with clients and partners that include Simon & Schuster, Kinko's, The Washington Post and dozens of other companies.To encourage budding bootstrappers, he shares his own story and covers other boostrappers (from Dell Computer to Haagen Dasz) who have parlayed a great idea into a sizeable fortune, using the smart strategies and cash-stretching tactics revealed in this book. Indispensable too is keeping your head when everyone around is losing theirs. Survival is an important item on a bootstrapper's resume.Godin'syears of experience owning, operating, and writing about small business have resulted in his "12 Essential Rules", which every bootstrapper will want to inhale. Bootstrapping details include: -- organizing the business and finding start-up funds -- and mentors-- dealing with customers and suppliers-- balancing work and home, frustration and inspiration, vision and practicality-- success in the bootstrap phase -- and moving beyond

About the author (1998)

Bestselling business book author, entrepreneur, and speaker Seth Godin was born on July 10, 1960. He graduated from Tufts University in 1982 and earned an MBA in marketing from Stanford Business School. Godin worked as a brand manager for Spinnaker Software and founded his own book packaging business, followed by the online marketing company Yoyodyne. He was a vice president of direct marketing for Yahoo, and in 2006 he launched the popular community website Squidoo.

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