URL:
http://www.entrepreneur.com/magazine/entrepreneur/2005/february/75542.html
Close Encounters
I also would love to be able to start and develop a successful
business with a close friend ("Women,"
November). In reality, I would probably not be willing to take that
risk.
I agree that it is much easier to appreciate and support someone
you already have a personal relationship with. I also agree that
trust is a key benefit of working with a friend. Personally, I
would hate to jeopardize a good friendship, because good friends
are hard to find.
Keeping work and personal items separate is such an enormous
challenge. When money and work ethic get involved in a friendship,
different viewpoints can destroy the relationship. I have read
horror stories about partnerships that bear an unequal workload or
where one partner abandons the other. Rather than take the risk of
losing a close friend, I would prefer to separate business and
friends or family.
Arnold Dauz
Chula Vista, California
Golden Age
I read with great interest your article on hot senior-care
businesses in the December issue ("Fever
Pitch").Thank you for writing such an informative article
on our fast-growing industry.
My company, Spectrum Home Services, is the only senior-care
franchise to provide seniors with personal care, homemaking,
companionship, cleaning, maintenance, yard care and relocation
services all in the convenience of a one-stop shop. As you mention
in your article, the senior-care industry is booming.
Even though senior care is a relatively new industry, this
market is changing, as are the wishes and expectations of our
clientele. Just providing companionship, light housekeeping and
simple homemaking will soon not be enough. Clients and their
families are demanding more, and rightfully so. As baby boomers
enter the market, they will demand a higher quality of service and
expect greater convenience and a wider list of service options.
Anthony Nelson
President
Spectrum Home Services
Midvale, Utah
Education Counts
The editorial staff of Entrepreneur is to be
congratulated on providing a fascinating glimpse into the world of
young, smart wannabes and accomplished millionaires ("Young Millionaires: Class of 2004," November). I
find the magazine stimulating and educational in its coverage of
many dynamic, hardworking individuals who have plainly established
their goals and are driven to attain them.
Now the question comes to mind: Why are these stories
exceptional? Is it because they represent the tip of the business
iceberg? Are their accomplishments the exception rather than the
rule? If we understand the adverse odds of succeeding in starting
up a business venture, then the answer is yes!
But do the high failure rates of businesses stem from some
immutable law of business dynamics, or can they be changed? Is the
typical dream based upon faulty premises or, rather, are the
mechanics of implementing the dream haphazardly applied?
This begs the question: Why can we not learn about the basics of
business during our high school years? Why do we have to learn the
hard way? Bankruptcies and indebtedness, the offshoots of poor
fiscal planning, are growing blights on our society.
Academically, we start to learn about the rules of business too
late. Business rules our lives. It is the basis of our very
existence and yet, when we leave school, we have little or no idea
as to how the average business works. Our primary concern upon
leaving school is either to go to college and pursue a profession,
or get a job. In the latter case, we learn about business from our
on-the-job training--the hard way.
A working knowledge of business planning and cash flow control
would benefit the average student in everyday life and later assist
him or her in handling the budgetary requirements of family life.
In the humble opinion of an old-timer business consultant, the
fundamentals of business should be a mandatory part of the academic
curricula.
In the meantime, Entrepreneur will serve as a fount of
knowledge and inspiration. Keep up the good work.
Charles J. Lawrence
Lawrence Business Press
Pembroke Pines, Florida
Correction:
December "Wheels" pictured the Jaguar XJ instead of the
Jaguar X-Type.
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