29
Lets Make our Kids an Entrepreneur Fawaad Saleem

Lets make our kids an entrepreneur

Embed Size (px)

DESCRIPTION

 

Citation preview

Page 1: Lets make our kids an entrepreneur

Lets Make our Kids an Entrepreneur

Fawaad Saleem

Page 2: Lets make our kids an entrepreneur

Lets Make our Kids an Entrepreneur Part 1

Page 3: Lets make our kids an entrepreneur

Our Way of Life

Page 4: Lets make our kids an entrepreneur
Page 5: Lets make our kids an entrepreneur
Page 6: Lets make our kids an entrepreneur
Page 7: Lets make our kids an entrepreneur
Page 8: Lets make our kids an entrepreneur
Page 9: Lets make our kids an entrepreneur
Page 10: Lets make our kids an entrepreneur

The Vicious Circle of Life

Page 11: Lets make our kids an entrepreneur

Ask yourself

What would You like to be/do if this was the last day of your life?

Page 12: Lets make our kids an entrepreneur
Page 13: Lets make our kids an entrepreneur

Definition of Entrepreneur

Page 14: Lets make our kids an entrepreneur

Traits Kids Have

Page 15: Lets make our kids an entrepreneur

Why don’t we teach these skills?

Page 16: Lets make our kids an entrepreneur

Tips for Young Entrepreneurs Part 2

Page 17: Lets make our kids an entrepreneur

Follow your Passion

Page 18: Lets make our kids an entrepreneur

Traditional Business!!

Page 19: Lets make our kids an entrepreneur

Watch your Cash flows

Page 20: Lets make our kids an entrepreneur

Networking

Page 21: Lets make our kids an entrepreneur

Find your Niche

Page 22: Lets make our kids an entrepreneur

Build Alliance

Page 23: Lets make our kids an entrepreneur

Easy to work with

Page 24: Lets make our kids an entrepreneur
Page 25: Lets make our kids an entrepreneur
Page 26: Lets make our kids an entrepreneur

Under Capitalized

Page 27: Lets make our kids an entrepreneur

Wrong People

Page 28: Lets make our kids an entrepreneur

Bad Market Conditions

Page 29: Lets make our kids an entrepreneur

In late 1945, after the end of World War II, Masaru Ibuka started a radio repair shop in a bomb-damaged department store building in Nihonbashi of Tokyo.

In 1938, Lee Byung-chull (1910–1987) of the large landowning family in the Uiryeongcounty came to the nearby Daegu city and founded Samsung Sanghoe (삼성상회), a small trading company with forty employees located in Su-dong (now Ingyo-dong). It dealt in green-grocery and dried fish produced in and around the city, and the noodles, Byeolpyo Guksu produced itself.

They gained the mechanical skills essential for their success by working for years in their shopwith printing presses, bicycles, motors, and other machinery.

When he was 16 years old, he moved to Aden, Yemen. He worked with A. Besse & Co. for a salary of Rs.300 (Present Day $6.49). Two years later, A. Besse & Co. became the distributors for Shell products, and Dhirubhai was promoted to manage the company’s filling station at the port of Aden.

Procter & Gamble was founded in 1837 by William Procter, a British citizen who emigrated to the United States, and James Gamble, a U.S.-based Irish soapmaker . The company first sold candles