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Starting and Managing a Business From Your Home
Introduction"There's
No Place Like Home"
The cottage industry, an
old-fashioned enterprise, is enjoying a revival so
strong that it's difficult
to find out just how many Americans are now
working at home. Estimates
range from five to fifteen million.
Because women now enter
business at a rate five times faster than men, the
trend of operating from home
is growing. A natural starting place for many
businesses seems to be the
garage, basement, or den. A recent Census Bureau
study showed that over
300,000 women's businesses are operated out of the
home.
Homemakers, hobbyists,
retirees, people interested in a second income, and
the disabled are just a few
of the groups attracted to home enterprises. A
young mother's craft
business began when she started appliqueing
decorations on her
children's clothes. A retired government worker bought
36 beehives and sold honey
to local health food stores and at craft fairs.
A teacher did typing and
secretarial jobs for her husband and friends until
she realized the potential
market and opened a full-time secretarial
service from her apartment.
Others have become home business owners by
using their skills in
catering, counseling, teaching, day care, sewing,
writing, photography,
consulting, market research, and landscape design.
The list of services that
have been successfully operated from home is
endless: chimney sweeping,
maid services, messenger services, wake-up and
answering services, home
nursing, mail order businesses, party planning,
dog grooming, kitchen and
closet planning and organizing, and others too
numerous to mention. As you
explore the questions asked in the first
chapter, "Home
Entrepreneurship: Is It For You," let your thoughts run
freely through the
possibilities until you can target exactly the right
type of business for your
skills, your home space, your market, and your
part of the country.
Here is a guide for home entrepreneurs with all information you need to start your home based business.
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