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Disorderly Conduct Entrepreneurs make their quirks work for them.

By Mark Henricks

Opinions expressed by Entrepreneur contributors are their own.

Sometimes Brook Noel finds it helpful to focus on details andpursue perfection like a true obsessive-compulsive. "IfI'm going to have a real analytical week, sometimes I'll gooff my medicine, because those skills come in handy," says thefounder of Champion Press Ltd. in Fredonia, Wisconsin, who wasdiagnosed with obsessive-compulsive disorder as a teenager.

Noel says that other times, OCD can be a hang-up. "I'vehad to learn to give people an assignment, let them know theresults I expect and give them the control to get from Point A toPoint B," says Noel, 31, who employs nine at the bookpublisher she founded in 1997, which is on target to bring in $2million in sales this year.

Noel says OCD motivated her to start her company because of herdesire for control. Another entrepreneur, Kinko's founderPaulOrfalea, started his company because hisconditions--hyper-activity and dyslexia--made him practicallyunemployable. And an increasing number of people thinkmental-health conditions like OCD, hyperactivity and others can becompatible with successful entrepreneurship.

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