Book Review: The Entrepreneur Guide, 2010 (U.S.) Edition
by Owen O. Daniels
Publication Date: Sep 24, 2009
List Price: $29.95
Format: Paperback, 204 pages
Classification: Fiction
ISBN13: 9780615322971
Imprint: The Small Business Zone
Publisher: The Small Business Zone
Parent Company: The Small Business Zone
Book Reviewed by Kam Williams
"Are you
someone seeking to start your own business and frustrated with the lack of
straightforward answers to your countless questions? Or are you a business
owner whose time is too consumed with researching how to spark growth
instead of actually performing the right actions that will and success? Or
is there an entrepreneur inside of you that isn’t [doesn’t] know where to
start?
…The
Entrepreneur Guide will walk you through the entire journey of building your
own business from the ground up… This guide breaks down the most difficult
tasks and possible future obstacles so that producing success from scratch
becomes simply simple.
Now don’t get
us wrong, there will be blood sweat and tears involved—more tears than
anything else. Bu now you have the best tools and the right answers at your
fingertips."
—Excerpted from the Introduction
(pg. 1)
There’s been
a bumper crop of books published lately by black authors offering all sorts
of relationship advice. But in order to be able to afford to do all that
dating, you might want to make a little money first. And for folks so
inclined, The Entrepreneur Guide arrives like a refreshing and worthwhile
change of pace.
The book is
the brainchild of Owen O. Daniels, who recently returned to the States after
serving his second tour of duty over in Iraq. Besides rising to the rank of
Lieutenant Colonel in the Army, the author has also earned a Bachelor’s
degree in Public Administration from John Jay College in New York, and a
Master’s in Computer Science with a minor in Business Administration from
Webster College in St. Louis.
This unique
combination of skills obviously came in very handy in enabling Daniels to
craft a sensible step-by-step resource designed to address any question
which might arise in the mind of a budding entrepreneur en route to making
that first million. Succinctly written in layman’s terms the average
educated person can understand, the user-friendly text virtually takes you
by the hand and walks you through the typical start-up process in sequential
fashion.
Thus, it
starts by having you assess your basic business idea before coming up with a
plan and then picking and registering a name, if warranted. It subsequently
helps you decide whether you might need to incorporate or protect any
intellectual property via patent trademark or copyright.
From there,
the guide moves on to a variety of marketing concerns, and pertinent issues
involving insurance, taxes and employees. Detailed-oriented Daniels even
devotes attention to such minutiae as internet access, domain names, office
furniture and barcodes for your products. As an attorney/MBA and small
businessman myself, I was quite impressed overall, and can guarantee that
The Entrepreneur Guide arrives stocked with some solid advice.
That being said, however, as the author states in his intro, your success ultimately will still be contingent on your work ethic and willingness to spill some blood, sweat and tears.