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faye bautista's Articles in Start Up

  • How To Start an Internet Business Without Capital
    I often meet new Internet marketers on various forums and they aspire to earn the big bucks like some of the well-known personas out there, such as Yanik Silver and Bryan Kumar. However, most of these new marketers have only the slightest ideas on where to start, and a lot of them are not willing or able to invest a startup capital in their online business.
  • Bootstrap Business: Tips On Borrowing From Family And Friends
    Another method of shoestring start-up is to borrow from family and friends, but the arrangement can become difficult if problems occur with the loan, some business owners say. Based on an article, "Starting up on a shoestring" guide are some suggestions to keep business from ruining relationships and three rules to follow when borrowing from those closest to you.
  • Reasons For A Barebones Business Start-Up And Alternative Financing
    Jeff Hester has these observations about whether the current trend in the Web 2.0 world constitutes too much money chasing too few sound business ideas. Here are 10 reasons to keep your business start-up (whether online or off) lean and mean at least in the early years.
  • Bootstrapping: Using The Plastic Potential
    Though some might urge staying away from credit card debt, Eric Rosenfeld, president of Adaptive Consulting Partners LLC, insists they may be the best tool for bootstrap entrepreneurs.
  • Bootstrapping Is Valuable While Seeking Funds
    Alex Welch, co-founder of Photobucket, talks about starting his company with a variety of funding means and efforts to save costs. Welch used everything he had from savings, credit cards and home mortgages to a fortuitous partnership with his former boss, wheeling and dealing for equipment and a loan from a sympathetic banker to launch his company and push it to profitability.
  • Starting A Home Business: The Bootstrapping Way
    Many bootstrapped businesses have started in the home, some as part-time jobs until they develop real revenue. In fact, one site provided by Small Business and Government Grants Resources suggests 50 million people in the United States have already started some kind of business from home up from just 6 million in 1984.

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