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Entrepreneurship: Create Your Own Business
Entrepreneurship: Create Your Own Business
Entrepreneurship: Create Your Own Business
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Entrepreneurship: Create Your Own Business

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From the early days of traders and trappers to today's global online marketplace, business is the glue that holds our world together. In Entrepreneurship: Create Your Own Business, children learn what it takes to transform a great idea into their own new business. Through plenty of hands-on activities, art and history meet economics and math while young readers gain a solid understanding of how a business works.

Kids use familiar resources to develop a business idea of their own, create a presentation for potential investors, and utilize basic cost and price analysis worksheets. The skills they learn by writing a business plan, creating a prototype of an item to sell, designing packaging, and finding ways to advertise their products translate into language, math, and problem-solving skills that are relevant across all subjects. Cartoon illustrations, fun facts, and interviews with successful entrepreneurs make Entrepreneurship entertaining and informative. Supplemental materials include a glossary, list of resources, and an index.

Entrepreneurship meets common core state standards in language arts for reading informational text and literary nonfiction; Guided Reading Levels and Lexile measurements indicate grade level and text complexity.

LanguageEnglish
PublisherNomad Press
Release dateOct 20, 2014
ISBN9781619302679
Entrepreneurship: Create Your Own Business

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    Book preview

    Entrepreneurship - Alex Kahan

    120.

    Timeline

    Introduction

    Take a look around you. What kind of shoes are you wearing? Do you have an iPod? The shoes on your feet, the clothes you’re wearing, the book or tablet you’re reading, the music you listen to, the car your family drives—someone with an idea created a business to make each of these things. That person is called an entrepreneur.

    Entrepreneurs are part of our daily lives. When you walk into a room and turn on the light, you are using something that was invented by one of America’s earliest entrepreneurs: Thomas Edison.

    WORDS 2 KNOW

    business: the act of making, buying, or selling goods or services in exchange for money.

    entrepreneur: a person who takes a risk to start and operate a business.

    risk: the chance that something bad will happen.

    invent: to be the first to think of or make something new.

    When you pop open a bag of potato chips for an afternoon snack, you are using technology developed by a woman named Laura Scudder. In 1926, she figured out how to store potato chips in an airtight bag so they wouldn’t go stale. Examples like these of innovation and entrepreneurship are all around us.

    In this book, you’ll learn how to become an entrepreneur and turn a great idea into a business. Who knows? Maybe you’ll create the next Facebook application or Apple computer!

    Why become an entrepreneur? There are many reasons. Maybe you have a great idea and want to share it with others. Maybe you dream of making millions of dollars and becoming famous. Some people become entrepreneurs because they love the idea of working for themselves. Others start their own businesses because they want to help people in need. These people are called social entrepreneurs.

    WORDS 2 KNOW

    technology: tools, methods, and systems used to solve a problem or do work.

    innovation: a new invention or way of doing something.

    entrepreneurship: taking a risk to start a new business.

    social entrepreneur: an entrepreneur who identifies and works to solve social problems to bring about sweeping, long-term change.

    industry: the large-scale production of something.

    founder: the person who starts a business.

    SAVVY SOURCE

    Social entrepreneurs are not content just to give a fish or teach how to fish. They will not rest until they have revolutionized the fishing industry.

    —Bill Drayton, founder of Ashoka, an organization that identifies and invests in social entrepreneurs

    What is an entrepreneur? The word entrepreneur comes from a combination of the French word entreprende, meaning to undertake, and the English word enterprise. Literally, it means to undertake enterprise. Undertake means to start something and enterprise is a big project. The word entrepreneur was invented to describe someone who starts or undertakes a business or enterprise.

    Most entrepreneurs want to make money, but that’s not always the main reason people start their own businesses. Entrepreneurs are passionate about their ideas. They believe in them so strongly they are willing to take risks to turn those ideas into reality. Most new businesses do not succeed at first, and entrepreneurs are willing to accept the possibility of failure. In fact, many successful entrepreneurs have created businesses that failed before they finally start one that succeeds.

    WORDS 2 KNOW

    passionate: having strong feelings about something.

    persistent: refusing to give up or quit.

    An entrepreneur is a person who sees a way to change the world and focuses on accomplishing that change. He or she is persistent, willing to take big risks, passionate about his or her project, and focused on achieving goals.

    Entrepreneurs have been around ever since people first began forming communities. Croesus, the king of Lydia in Greece from 560 to 547 BCE, was an entrepreneur. He issued the first true gold coins and started the first monetary system.

    Marco Polo was a famous explorer who traded goods around the world. Henry Ford started the first automated car company—your parents might own a car produced by his company. Sir Richard Branson created Virgin Atlantic Airlines. Phil Knight started Nike by making sneakers with a waffle iron and selling them out of the trunk of his car, and Mark Zuckerberg started Facebook from his college dorm room.

    These are some of the more famous entrepreneurs. But there are millions of entrepreneurs, all over the world, who have created successful businesses out of their ideas.

    WORDS 2 KNOW

    community: a group of people who live in the same area.

    BCE: put after a date, BCE stands for Before Common Era and counts down to zero. CE stands for Common Era and counts up from zero. The year this book is published is 2014 CE.

    monetary system: the system used by a country to provide money and to control the exchange of money.

    goods: things for sale or to use.

    Was Columbus an Entrepreneur?

    We all know Christopher Columbus sailed the ocean blue to discover the New World (even though he was trying to get to India). But do you think he was an entrepreneur? Let’s look at the evidence. He worked for seven years to convince someone rich and powerful to pay for his journey—that takes a lot of passion. He sailed out into the great unknown—that’s a huge risk! He refused to turn around even when his crew was on the verge of mutiny—that shows great persistence. It sounds as though Columbus certainly possessed some of the key characteristics of an entrepreneur!

    WORDS 2 KNOW

    mutiny: a revolt or rebellion against authority.

    characteristic: a feature of a person, place, or thing.

    communicate: to share information in some way.

    investor: a person who agrees to give time or money to an enterprise.

    mentor: a person who advises and guides a younger person.

    customer: someone who buys goods or services from a business.

    product: an item, such as a book or clothing, that is made and sold to people.

    service: work done by one person for another person.

    partner: a person who shares the work and reward of a business.

    Do you want to become an entrepreneur? There are a lot of different things to think about. You need to start with an idea. How are you going to communicate your idea to other people, including investors, mentors, and customers? You need to figure out how to pay for everything you need to operate your business before you start selling your product or service. Are you going to have a partner or employees?

    In this book, you’ll find out about all the details you need to consider when making decisions about your new business. Are you ready to become an entrepreneur? Let’s go!

    Chapter 1

    Entrepreneurs and Business

    Business touches every part of your life, from school and clothing to sports and entertainment. We have the things we need and want, such as televisions, organic strawberries, and bubble gum-flavored toothpaste, because an entrepreneur formed a business that makes and sells those things.

    Businesses begin with an idea. But they succeed because of the efforts of an entrepreneur who keeps the business focused and growing. Do you have an idea for a business? Are you an entrepreneur?

    Have you ever heard the expression, Think outside the box? This means finding creative solutions to problems. For example, imagine that you sleep through your alarm clock every morning. You can’t help it! It rings, you turn it off, and go right back to sleep. By the time your parents finally wake you up an hour later, you’re nearly late for school and don’t have time for breakfast.

    How would you solve the problem? Buy a louder alarm clock? Buy a second alarm clock? Ask your parents to wake you up earlier and hope they remember? Put your alarm clock in a metal trash can where its sound is magnified and you can’t reach it from your bed? Some of these solutions are more creative than others. People who come up

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