Hints For Baby Boomer Entrepreneurs

This site has information that will help Baby Boomer Entrepreneurs start and grow businesses.

Shallie Bey

Do Women Make Better Entrepreneurs?

Though I originally started my career as an engineer, I have long felt that the limiting factor on progress is solving people problems…not technical problems.

This article about the potential of entrepreneurial women resonated with me because it speaks to the ability of women to build relationships..solving problems of people. In this era of social media, aren’t we trying to move society forward with relationships? Don’t we speak of relationship marketing as the key to the future?

Can it be that women may move business to the next level more effectively? Certainly women are not afraid to try. In the arena of aspiring baby boomer entrepreneurs, women are starting businesses twice as fast as men.

Take a look. Tell me what you think by commenting.

Shallie

Shallie Bey
Smarter Small Business Blog
http://businessrebirth.blogspot.com

Amplify’d from www.fastcoexist.com

The World Needs Female Entrepreneurs Now More Than Ever

Written by: Jean Brittingham

Women can slowly change corporate culture from the inside, or they can change the world by starting their own companies.

Over the past 100 or so years, we have been solving the problems on our planet as if they are linear, independent, and containable—in other words, as if they are largely technical challenges. And in most if not all cases, our solution is another technical intervention which often creates a new set of problems. Examples abound: The focus on making cars more energy efficient with fossil fuels slowed the introduction of true electric vehicles by decades. Or the current discussion of nuclear as the solution to fossil fuels. It’s technology trumping technology with not nearly enough attention to the unintended consequences for future generations.

I have nothing against technology. But if, as Einstein said, the problem-solving skills that get you into a mess are not the skills you need to get out of that mess, we need more people with a different perspective on the problem and a new set of skills and abilities.

Becoming an entrepreneur doesn’t require any shifts in corporate culture.

What’s needed now is a better grasp of (and comfort with) relationships of all kinds. And this is the kind of thinking and problem solving that is most natural to women:

  • Women are intuitively systems-thinkers
  • Women seek balance
  • Women care more about solutions than who gets credit
  • Women are the worlds’ experts on collaboration
  • When they are passionate about something, women never give up

While I am supportive of any and all efforts to move women into the C-Suite, the boardroom, and the President’s office, it’s hard to ignore the fact that in these traditional places, women are making slow progress, if any at all.

But something began to crystallize as I interviewed hundreds of women entrepreneurs for my book and website The SmartGirls Way. No matter what business they were creating and running, I found that there was a thoughtfulness and intention to their design and operations approach that was different. These women entrepreneurs were intuitively creating businesses that would be better for themselves, their families, their employees, their communities, their customers, and the world.

Take Amra Tareen, a successful venture capitalist, entrepreneur, and a mother of two boys. Her passion and integrity to address the media bias she saw in the world led her to found AllVoices.com, the world’s largest citizen-journalist website. And there’s the story of Michelle King Robson, whose personal health challenges led her to found EmpowHER, an online community promoting women’s health issues so that no woman would ever have to suffer the same way she did.

These aren’t entrepreneurial myths; they’re real-life examples of women-led ventures taking shape right now. The beauty of it is, unlike with getting women into corner offices of corporations, these ventures don’t require any shifts in corporate culture. In the developed world, the rule of law supports women’s rights to pursue their efforts and maintain the wealth they create.

The Dalai Lama definitely had it right when he recently said “Western Women will save the world.” And my money is on the entrepreneurs.

Read more at www.fastcoexist.com