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Entrepreneurship

Kenosha professor releases book to help young entrepreneurs [Video]

Carthage College Assistant Professor Joseph Tenuta has released a new book meant to help young entrepreneurs trying to start their own business, “The Starting BluPrnt.”

Tenuta said he wanted to create a resource for people who are working to start their own business or side hustle and would be “especially useful” to high school and college students “apprehensive about starting a company.”

“These students tend to have great ideas and/or can provide great services but are discouraged by all the nuances of starting a business that awaits them,” Tenuta said.

The book is available on Amazon at https://a.co/d/3U2aq4f and is a mixture of materials from Tenuta’s lectures, personal experiences and stories, designed to “guide readers … not scare them.”

“My hope is many young budding entrepreneurs will read it and be inspired to work on their idea,” Tenuta said. “I’m a big believer that when people, especially young people, channel their efforts and create, develop, build businesses that …

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Entrepreneurship

S4E1 Grit & Growth | From Local Startup to Pan-African Success: The Beem Story [Video]

Starting a business and growing it are challenging enough. However, expanding globally, across the entire African continent with 54 very different countries, increases the difficulty exponentially. That’s what Taha Jiwaji, CEO and founder of Beem, is experiencing first hand. Hear what it takes to create a Pan-African business and gain strategic insights on going global from Steve Ciesinski, who teaches entrepreneurship at Stanford Graduate School of Business.Starting a business and growing it are challenging enough. However, expanding globally, across the entire African continent with 54 very different countries, increases the difficulty exponentially. That’s what Taha Jiwaji, CEO and founder of Beem, is experiencing first hand. Hear what it takes to create a Pan-African business and gain strategic insights on going global from Steve Ciesinski, who teaches entrepreneurship at Stanford Graduate School of Business.After attending college in the United States and working as a consultant in Los Angeles, Taha Jiwajiopen in new window left his safe corporate job and moved back to his home of Tanzania to become an entrepreneur. He had no idea what he was in for. But 20-plus years later, he’s built Beem, a Pan-African cloud computing platform that helps businesses create lasting relationships with their customers through their mobile phones. Beem is currently in 30-plus countries and growing. On a continent where only 36% of the population has broadband internet, reaching customers on their phones through SMS is a huge win. And as connectivity across Africa increases, the opportunities for Beem and its customers expand, too.“You know, there’s 54 different countries on the continent. Each one is different in terms of language, policies, etc. So you need to spend time in them, on the ground, to really learn about them,” Jiwaji explains.Steve Ciesinski is both a Stanford GSB lecturer in entrepreneurship and past president of SRI International and other Silicon Valley firms. As an investor and board member of growth-oriented tech companies and mission-based organizations, he’s had plenty of experience advising entrepreneurs on global expansion.What’s the country like? What’s the culture in the country? How do they do business? These are the very first questions you need to ask, according to Ciesinski. Then you need the right people. “You need to have somebody very, very close who’s been with your company, understands your culture — and is going to move there. And then find somebody there who eventually can become the general manager of that business because you’re expecting that business to grow,” he advises.Jiwaji did just that, focusing on building relationships on the ground, in person, and getting customers and partners to sign up. When it comes to giving advice to other entrepreneurs, Jiwaji suggests “grit and persistence. Things take a long time, government regulation, people move very slowly across these markets. And sometimes it takes years for a relationship to finally come to fruition.”Get more insights and advice on going global from Jiwaji and Ciesinski, including how to create differentiation, establish your value proposition, handle regulations, and, most important, find and retain global talent to help you expand.