Jason Feifer: Page 2

Entrepreneur Staff

Book 1 on 1 with Jason Feifer

Bio

Jason Feifer is the editor in chief of Entrepreneur magazine and host of the podcast Problem Solvers. Outside of Entrepreneur, he is the author of the book Build For Tomorrow, which helps readers find new opportunities in times of change, and co-hosts the podcast Help Wanted, where he helps solve listeners' work problems. He also writes a newsletter called One Thing Better, which each week gives you one better way to build a career or company you love.

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Latest: Page 2

Growing a Business

I Faced My First True Professional Meltdown — And It Led to an Eye-Opening Revelation

We all know the importance of picking yourself back up after a failure. But I had always believed how fast you make that recovery was what mattered.

Starting a Business

NBA Star Jaylen Brown Turned Down $50 Million Worth of Deals to Start His New Business — And He Got the Idea From Kobe Bryant

The NBA Finals MVP sat down to talk business with Kickstarter CEO Everette Taylor for a new series called 'The Playbook,' by Entrepreneur and Sports Illustrated.

Side Hustle

Want to Turn Your Passion Into A Business? Follow These 3 Important Rules

We helped an artist turn his art into a business — and you can do it too

Recently Edited Content by Jason Feifer

Growing a Business

This VC Has Landed Some of the Biggest Tech Deals in Recent Memory. He Says to Look at This Historical Era to Understand AI.

Chris Lyons is a talent-spotter and celebrity whisperer at VC firm Andreessen Horowitz. He thinks our current era becomes less intimidating when you look to the past.

Marketing

How to Make Consistent Passive Income With Your Online Course — Follow These 5 Steps

An evergreen sales expert's guide to selling courses while you sleep.

Career

Tired of Applying to Jobs with No Response? Try This Tactic, According to An Expert Who Helps Thousands of People Get Jobs

It's all about finding your "candidate-market fit," says the author of the book Never Search Alone.

Growing a Business

I Was a Highly-Paid Executive In Customer Experience. Then I Started Working Minimum Wage Jobs, And Realized Everything I'd Gotten Wrong.

It wasn't until I started working frontline jobs that I realized the massive disconnect between how CEOs see customer service, and how customers experience it. That showed me how to fix the problem.