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What Great Entrepreneur s Looked Like When They Started Their First Company

Great Entrepreneurs At the Start

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Page 1: Great Entrepreneurs At the Start

What Great Entrepreneurs

Looked Like When They

Started Their First Company

Page 2: Great Entrepreneurs At the Start

Henry Ford (Ford Motor Co.)

•Formed Ford & Malcomson in 1902 (age 39).

•Fun fact: Ford became an apprentice machinist in Detroit at the age of 16.

Photo: “Barney Oldfield & Henry Ford,” The History Channel

Page 3: Great Entrepreneurs At the Start

Mary Kay Ash (Mary Kay®)

•Opened her first store in 1963 (age 45).

•Fun fact: Ash quit her sales job in 1963 after being passed over for a promotion by a man she had trained.

Photo: Corbis for Inc. Magazine

Page 4: Great Entrepreneurs At the Start

Steve Jobs (Apple)

•Founded Apple with Steve Wozniak in 1976 (age 21).

•Fun fact: After dropping out of Reed College after one semester, Steve Jobs worked as a technician with Atari.

Photo: Silvermac.com

Page 5: Great Entrepreneurs At the Start

Debbi Fields (Mrs. Fields®)

•Founded Mrs. Fields Cookies in 1977 (age 21).

•Fun fact: Fields used money from her childhood job as a “ball girl” for the Oakland Athletics to buy ingredients for baking cookies.

Photo: mrsfields.com

Page 6: Great Entrepreneurs At the Start

Ben Cohen and Jerry Greenfield (Ben and Jerry’s®)

•Opened their first Ben & Jerry’s ice cream parlor in 1978 in a renovated gas station in Vermont, using $8,000 of their own and $4,000 they borrowed (ages: 27).•Fun fact: Boyhood friends, Cohen and Greenfield wanted to do something that was “fun” and decided to start a food business. After realizing bagel equipment was too expensive, they took a correspondence course in ice-cream making.

Source: Star Magazine

Page 7: Great Entrepreneurs At the Start

Oprah Winfrey•Launched her own production company, Harpo Studios, in 1988 (age: 34).

•Fun fact: Winfrey started out in rural Mississippi, where her grandmother said she used to interview her corncob doll.

Source: AP

Page 8: Great Entrepreneurs At the Start

Pierre Omidyar (eBay™)

•Launched “Auction Web,” now eBay, in 1995 (age:28).

•Fun fact: he wrote the basics of eBay over labor day weekend in 1995 to help his fiancée trade PEZ candy dispensers.

Page 9: Great Entrepreneurs At the Start

Wendy Kopp (Teach for America)

•Kopp founded Teach for America in 1989 (age: 22).

•Kopp described her idea of Teach for America in her college undergraduate thesis.

Source: Echoing Green