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Go-It-Alone Businesses Think your biz will never succeed if you go it alone? Think again.

By April Y. Pennington

Opinions expressed by Entrepreneur contributors are their own.

There's no time like the present to start a business. And according to Bruce Judson, senior faculty fellow at the Yale School of Management in New Haven, Connecticut, it's easier than ever to start a substantial business with your army of one. Judson, who wrote Go It Alone: The Secret to Building a Successful Business on Your Own--available at www.brucejudson.com--points to technology as the main reason people can do it so easily.

"Many easy-to-use services on the internet are designed for startup businesses," says Judson, an entrepreneur himself. Because so many services are relatively inexpensive and based on monthly fees, you can "leverage your talents and time in ways that were impossible before." Outsource what you can, and concentrate on what you do best.

Judson's three defining criteria for a go-it-alone business: It's started and run entirely by a small number of people (generally one to six); it's started with the idea that it will grow in terms of a potentially unlimited income rather than employees; and it requires minimal investment. The key to a successful one-person startup is not a revolutionary idea, says Judson: "It's executing fabulously."