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"Getting Rich In Your Underwear: How To Start And Run A Profitable Home-Based Business" shows entrepreneurs what they need to know to start a home-based business. Topics covered include: * Business Models And The Home Business * Distribution/Fulfillment of Your Product Or Service * Marketing And Sales * Personal Success Characteristics * Overcoming The Fear Of Starting A Business * Naming Your Business * Zoning And Insurance * Intellectual Capital: Copyrights, Trademarks, And Patents * Limited Liability Companies And S Corporations * Business Expenses And Accounting For Your Home Business * Home-Based Business Taxes (Including Sample Schedule C, Schedule SE, and Estimated Tax Payments) * Seven Home-Based Business Ideas * Fifteen Basic Steps In Starting A Home-Based Business * State Resources For Starting Your Business
The second edition of a book we didn't intend to publish, it started as a letter sent to the many people who approached author/ publisher Gordon Woolf about getting their book published. First published in a way that was an example of what it advised, it sold too many to stay away. This and Pathway to Publication makes a useful pair, covering all aspects of authorship and publishing.
A complete, authoritative guide to Roth IRAs, covering all the rules -- and explaining strategies that will help build and preserve retirement wealth.
Horowitz offers the latest addition to the deluge of morally-centred business tomes. In one way, it's an overturning of traditional corporate wisdom -- see your competitors as your allies, not your adversaries, Horowitz suggests -- but it's also something we've been hearing an awful lot of lately: build meaningful relationships with your customers, view your employees as your partners and so on. Nevertheless, the arguments are all sound and illustrated with the customer-obsessed success stories of ventures like Saturn and Nordstrom. Horowitz is at his best when displaying his canny understanding of the media world, advising how to fit your business's message with the media's need to produce timely, relevant stories.
Readers can gain a lot of interest without mortgaging their time with this book of words that are really worth the money.
Whether it's a favorite television show, an artist at the top of the music charts, a best-selling book, or a hometown sports team, we love entertainment. It's big business and in this accessible introduction, Andi Stein and Beth Bingham Evans give readers a glimpse inside the industry, to better understand how each segment operates and the challenges and trends it faces. Each chapter addresses a different segment of the entertainment industry including: - Film - Television - Radio - Theatre - Music - Travel/Tourism - Sports The book is designed as an introductory text for entertainment courses and as an overview of the industry for those looking to pursue careers in the field of entertainment. A list of resources is provided at the end of each chapter.
Provides information on salaries, skill requirements, and employment opportunities for ninety writing and writing-related professions.
Increasingly, the availability of entrepreneurship education is becoming a factor in college choice as fine arts students demand training that helps them create an arts-based career after graduation. For too long, the arts academy has ignored the long-term career outcomes of its graduates and has only recently begun to meaningfully address how students can earn a living as working artists and arts entrepreneurs. Written to address this challenge, Disciplining the Arts explores the policy, programming, and curricular issues in the emerging field of arts entrepreneurship. By articulating the need, purpose and outcomes for arts entrepreneurship education, listening to graduates and identifying models, this essay collection begins an important conversation on preparing students for arts self-employment.
This is the comprehensively revised second edition of a popular professional book on textbook writing and finding one's way in the higher education publishing world--for academic authors and editors, college instructors, and instructional designers. The second edition has two new chapters on the latest industry trends--such as the pricing revolt, open access movement, and wiki-textbook phenomenon, and on the use of learning objectives to structure textbook package development. Every chapter features new sections, links, forms, models, or examples from an even greater range of college courses. Contains updated and expanded appendices, glossary entries, references, bibliography entries, and index. BISAC: Language Arts & Disciplines/Authorship and Publishing