Trade Research Guide

Fair Trade Leather Section


 

Fair Trade Leather Navigation


|

Partners
Tell A Friend about us
New York Fair Trade |
Starbucks Fair Trade |
Green Mountain Fair Trade Organic Whole Bean Coffee Espresso |
Fair Trade Festivals |
Solutions To Fair Trade Coffee |
Fair Trade And Eastern Caribbean Banana Farmers Rhetoric And |
Fairtrade Raw Jersey Cotton |
Fair Trade T Shirts |
Federal Trade Commission Fair Credit Reporting |
Christmas Cards Fair Trade |
India Leather Trade Fair |
Fairtrade Products |
Fair Trade Clothing |
Google0f610cfdbe4a65ba.html |
International Tourism Trade Fair In Spain By 2630th January |

List of fair-trade Articles

Fair Trade Leather Best seller



Best Fair Trade Leather products

Social bookmarking
You like it? Share it!
socialize it


Main Fair Trade Leather sponsors


 

Latest Fair Trade Leather Link Added

INSERT YOUR OWN BANNER HERE

Submit your link on Fair Trade Leather!



Fair Trade: A Beginner's Guide (Beginner's Guides)
-By: Jacqueline Decarlo
-Price: $7.44 (New)
$7.42 (Used)

Fair Trade for All: How Trade Can Promote Development
-By: Joseph E. Stiglitz, Andrew Charlton
-Price: $16.00 (New)
$8.80 (Used)

Brewing Justice: Fair Trade Coffee, Sustainability, and Survival
-By: Daniel Jaffee
-Price: $19.08 (New)
$14.90 (Used)

Confronting the Coffee Crisis: Fair Trade, Sustainable Livelihoods and Ecosystems in Mexico and Central America (Food, Health, and the Environment)
-Price: $19.30 (New)
$19.30 (Used)

Fair Trade and a Global Commodity: Coffee in Costa Rica (Anthropology, Culture and Society)
-By: Peter Luetchford
-Price: $25.69 (New)
$29.94 (Used)

Fair Trade Coffee: The Prospects and Pitfalls of Market-Driven Social Justice (Studies in Comparative Political Economy and Public Policy)
-By: Gavin Fridell
-Price: $24.78 (New)
$28.72 (Used)

 

Welcome to Trade Research Guide

 

Fair Trade Leather Article

Thumbnail example

This is a selection made from among articles on Fair Trade Leather. For a permanent link to this article, or to bookmark it for future reading, click here.

Veteran Entrepreneurs Are Growing In Ranks

from: Tim Knox




When I’m not running my own business, writing articles about business, speaking to groups and organizations about business, or consulting with companies who want my advice about the running of their business, I teach a weekly class on the subject of (care to guess?) starting and running a business.

To quote my frequently-mentioned and wise-beyond-her-years teenage daughter, Chelsea, “Dad, you really need to get a life.” This advice coming from a child who believes all roads lead to the mall.

What my eldest offspring doesn’t understand is I have a great life. In fact, I am living the life I have always dreamed of living. My life just happens to revolve around Planet Business. I am an entrepreneurial addict, a business junkie. Business is my chocolate, my Krispy Kreme donut, my nicotine, my caffeine, my crack. Maybe I’ll start a 12 step program for entrepreneurs who want to kick the habit and charge a cover to get in. Hi, my name is Tim, and I’m an entrepreneur... Sounds like a great business idea to me.

Out of everything I do I get the most enjoyment from speaking and teaching. Maybe it’s the old stand up comedian in me, but nothing feeds my addiction like standing in front of a room of entrepreneurs talking about the ups and downs, the ins and outs, the do’s and don’ts of business.

My latest class of eager entrepreneurs is a special one in that it is made up almost entirely of U.S. Military Veterans: nearly two dozen men and women of all ages who either have a business idea in mind or are in the process of actually starting and running a business.

Going around the room, I asked each student to stand up, introduce themselves, and talk a little about their business idea and what they expect to get from the class. As I listened to each Vet speak, I was impressed at the passion the entire group exuded. Most new entrepreneurs love to talk about their business idea, but this group was somehow different. They were more precise in their thinking, more intense, more passionate than the average entrepreneur. This group was not only excited at the prospect of starting their own business. They were downright zealous about it.

As each Vet stood to talk about their idea and their expectations, the rest of the group hung on every word and was truly interested in what was being said. The typical entrepreneur is only interested in his own venture and has a hard time feigning interest in anyone else’s. That was not the case here. Each Vet not only listened intently, but empathized with the speaker, as if they were taking a vested interest in the speaker’s idea and were eager to help the speaker succeed. It was as if the group who had never met before, had come together as a single cohesive unit with one mission in mind: to succeed in business.

The theme became: No man (or woman) left behind, in battle and in business.

I supposed I should not have been too surprised. These were, after all, highly-trained, highly-disciplined individuals who have spent time in every corner of the globe in conditions most of us can only imagine. One young entrepreneur in particular was so freshly back from the Middle East that you could almost imagine sand on the floor beneath his boots.

They are an impressive group, indeed, and it is my privilege to serve as their leader for the next six weeks. I am learning far more from them about the human spirit than they are learning from me about business. I hope they see it as a fair trade.

Veteran entrepreneurs are emerging as one of the fastest growing segments of new entrepreneurs. According to a recent Small Business Administration (SBA) study there are approximately 4.2 to 5.5 million veteran-owned businesses in the United States. The study further revealed that 22% of veterans are either considering starting or purchasing a business in the near future or are in the business start up or purchase phase now.

The SBA study was done as a result of The Veterans Entrepreneurship and Small Business Development Act of 1999, which required the SBA’s Office of Advocacy to develop information on the various programs designed to assist veteran and service-disabled veterans succeed in business.

The SBA study found that:

More than one-third of “new veteran-entrepreneurs” and current veteran business owners had obtained skills from their active duty service that were directly relevant to business ownership. This should come as no surprise when you consider the intensity of the training and the emphasis on discipline that comes with military training.

Over the course of their career the typical longer-term Veteran receives at least cursory training in everything from time management to employee relations to supervisory techniques to dealing with subordinates (employees) to budgeting and accounting to supply chain management and so on and so on.

One organization that is working hard to promote entrepreneurship among Veterans is the Veteran’s Corporation. Headquartered in Alexandria, Virginia, the Veteran’s Corporation bills itself as “the complete business source for current and prospective Veterans and Service-Disabled Veteran business owners, and for companies interested in working with Veteran-owned businesses.” The Veterans Corporation is a 501(c)(3) non-profit corporation that was created in 1999 by Public Law 106-50, which also set a 3 percent goal for federal procurement to Veterans including Service Disabled Veteran-owned businesses.

The Veterans Corporation serves transitioning military personnel and all Veterans of the U.S. Armed Forces, National Guard and Reserve, seeking to link them with partners and purchasing agents in both the public and private sectors.

Membership to the Veterans Corporation is free and available to all transitioning military personnel and all Veterans of the U.S. Armed Forces, National Guard and Reserve. Members will find assistance in securing capital for a business, entrepreneurial education, access to markets and services, and business networking.

For more information or to apply for membership visit the Veterans Corporation online at http://www.veteranscorp.org/

Here's to your success!

Tim Knox

About the Author

Tim serves as the president and CEO of is the founder of DropshipWholesale.net, an online organization dedicated to the success of online and eBay entrepreneurs. Related Links: http://www.prosperityandprofits.com - http://www.smallbusinessqa.com - http://www.dropshipwholesale.net







Other Fair Trade Leather related Articles

All About UK Accountancy
How To Find A Good Accountant
How To Use Links Effectively
The Self Appointed Altruists
When To Use A Certified Public Accountant

Do you want to contribute to our site : submit your articles HERE


 

Fair Trade Leather News

Oh no! It's Kevinsgate! - bbc

Well that didn't take long, did it? Came in like a breath of fresh air, went out like a bad smell. Remember that massive movie flop called Heaven's Gate . How long before they make KevinsGate and make all their money back? What is it with Kevin ...

Read more...


5 of Dallas' freshest java joints - Dallas Morning News

The scoop: This Uptown boho haven provides a caffeine jolt you can feel good about, since all its coffee is made from organic, Fair Trade-certified beans. Even sweeter are candy-flavored creations such as the mocha latte with coconut, which tastes ...

Read more...


Things Others Are Doing to Go Green - Seattle Post Intelligencer Blogs

According to a story in the Seattle Times among others, apparently Mayor Nickels has decided to reverse his policy regarding the use of road salt. And wow, right there in paragraph two, "Nickels - whose stormtime decision making has been criticized ...

Read more...


20 ways to upgrade your style - Los Angeles Times

Find the right color palette for you and stick to it. In a time of reduced resources, we all need a strategy for looking great. Don't go into the mall or your closet blind; find out if the blue for you is teal, sky, sapphire or ice using style ...

Read more...


Background Note: Kosovo - Scoop

Area: 10,887 square kilometers (4,203 square miles), slightly smaller than Connecticut. Capital: Pristina. Terrain: Varied. Climate: Temperate. Population (2000 est.): 2.1 million. Ethnic groups: 90% ethnic Albanians, 6% ethnic Serbs, 2% Bosniaks ...

Read more...


Tuesday link dump: dispelling the Lee rumor - Oregonian

Pritchard said he would not address today's trade rumors linking the Blazers in trade talks with New York and the Clippers. However, I have been told by multiple people, multiple times that this talk has zero legs to it. Zero. Adding to that, Dwight ...

Read more...


 

Warning: fopen(feed.xml) [function.fopen]: failed to open stream: Permission denied in /home/powertra/public_html/fair-trade/datas/rss_gen.php on line 130

Warning: fwrite(): supplied argument is not a valid stream resource in /home/powertra/public_html/fair-trade/datas/rss_gen.php on line 132

Warning: fclose(): supplied argument is not a valid stream resource in /home/powertra/public_html/fair-trade/datas/rss_gen.php on line 134