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by Jake Mogul on December 11th, 2009
I think a lot. And I was raised to believe a lot of concepts and paradigms that didn’t really make a lot of sense to me. I never really dared say it out loud but I was always a little doubtful about various social constructs and the nature of working life. Then, one day, quite by chance, I came across a book – The Four Hour Work Week – a title which instantly appealed to me, because I was one of the living dead who didn’t want to waste his life working.
When I read The Four Hour Work Week, my life changed.If nothing else, it was proof of one thing: there was another human being in the world that thought the same way I did. And, further, he’d actually gone out and proved it. When I finished the book, I knew I was not deluded. I was simply a minority thinker.
I’ve always wondered whether quoting books in a blog is legal, because isn’t the book content copyrighted? But Tim does it all the time on his own blog, so I’m sure he won’t mind me doing it here. The parts in bold are in my opinion the real gems and parts I agree with the most. Read the rest of this entry »
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by Jake Mogul on December 6th, 2009
The media will have you believe that all successful entrepreneurs are high school drop outs. None of them ever went to university because they weren’t academic. Instead they possessed some intangible sort of “street savvy” that you cannot learn, but have to be born with. They all started out very young selling sweets to other kids at school and were probably dislexic.
Doug Richard finished high school, went to university and never did anything entrepreneurial until his mid 20s. He was seriously disadvantaged, he jokes. And yet, despite all the odds being against him, he still managed to create a software company and sell it to IBM several years later for £710 million.
Doug Richard, former star of BBC’s Dragons’ Den, while plugging his School For Startups, spoke like Dr House on business, about where his ideas come from, his biggest mistakes and how to know if your business idea has what it takes to make you millions. Read the rest of this entry »
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