CEO and Founder of InterPro Solutions, offering a suite of award-winning mobile Ops & Maintenance apps designed exclusively for IBM Maximo. A common question for a founder is whether they should take ...
Bootstrapping is a self-starting process that entrepreneurs use to fund and grow their startups or businesses using their resources or the company's operating revenue. Rather than relying on external ...
Far more entrepreneurs appear to be shooting for the stars and going for the gold in attempting to raise capital to fuel their startup ventures taking the guerilla style bootstrapping path. What are ...
Bootstrapping is an approach where entrepreneurs use their own resources and rely on revenue generated by the business to grow. Bootstrapping is when an entrepreneur starts a company with little ...
Money talks. There is no way to start a startup if the entrepreneur does not have enough capital to start the business. While it is important to have a good team, a great innovative, disruptive and ...
Bootstrapping involves relying on personal resources to start your business instead of raising money through a business loan or selling shares in your company. Many, or all, of the products featured ...
The lack of diversity among startup founders isn’t about talent or intellect. It’s money. A study published by RateMyInvestor exposed the bitter truth: Black startup founders only make up a measly 1% ...
Bootstrapping, or funding your own company, has long been the first route many founders take when they set out on their entrepreneurial journey. But it’s not a decision that they have any say in.
While it can be an uncertain path to success, I believe there are many reasons bootstrapping is a better plan for startup founders than pursuing the VC route. The Fast Company Executive Board is a ...
The heyday of VC funding has come to an end and the impact is a pretty bleak picture for aspiring entrepreneurs. Reports show that global venture capital funding declined 30% in the first quarter of ...
You can feel the tension every time you open your inbox. One tab has a half-finished pitch deck, a graveyard of bullet points you’re not sure investors will care about. Another tab has your Stripe ...