Leap! - Ditch you Job, Start Your Own Business and Set Yourself Free
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  • Wiley

More About This Title Leap! - Ditch you Job, Start Your Own Business and Set Yourself Free

English

Who Do You Think You Are?

Times are changing fast. Traditional working practices and the concept of a conventional job are increasingly becoming things of the past as we make sense of a new marketplace where the only limit to success is our own imagination.

What Does it take to Survive in This New Scrambled Up World of Work?
* Attitude - to get started
* Enterprise - to succeed
* Success - at maximising opportunities
* Worklife - in the right balance

The challenges - and the opportunities - for the 'entrepreneur-within' the huge. For micro-businesses, home-workers, freelancers, it's all for the taking.

That is the essence of LEAP! A stimulus for taking the plunge to go it alone and set yourself free... and for making it up as you go along!

"Ian Sanders connects brilliantly wit the mindset and needs of talented professionals in their migration away from corporate mediocrity. LEAP! is a personal guidebook to both the practicality and emotion of making work matter." - Chris Nel, Partner, Tom Peters Company

English

Ian Sanders has been ‘doing it himself’ for seven years as a business and marketing consultant. He has helped launch new ventures in radio, television, design and music. His current marketing company, OHM, (Outhouse Media), has clients that range from global brands such as Benetton to the small business around the corner.
Ian’s skills are in bringing common sense advice and fresh perspectives to clients whatever their size, helping them to exploit their market potential. With more and more of his contacts setting up by themselves, Ian was inspired to write up his experiences in Leap! With his eight years as an independent and another ten years working for others, his mix of experience, insight and ideas makes him best placed to guide others through this new scrambled up world of work.
Ian is passionate about enterprise, about doing it differently and reinventing to succeed. He currently lives in Leigh-on-Sea with his wife, Zoë, and two children.

English

Preface.

Acknowledgements.

Introduction.

What this isn’t.

Who do you think you are?

Part One: ATTITUDE.

1 Starting out.

2 Make sure you’re hungry.

3 Passion wins.

4 Get known for being a safe pair of hands.

5 Be distinctive.

6 Don’t bullshit.

7 Perception is everything.

8 Soaking it up.

9 Warning: steep incline ahead.

10 Get involved and get visible.

11 Don’t listen to anyone who says ‘no’ to your ambition.

12 Be real!

13 Follow your gut feeling.

14 Leverage what you’ve learnt.

15 Get out of the classroom.

16 Knock down the barriers.

17 A focal point.

18 Why failure’s OK.

19 You’d better believe it …

20 From city trader to sole trader.

21 Conformity sucks.

22 Why catalysts count.

23 It’s a risky business.

24 ‘Easy’??!

25 Go for it …

Part Two: ENTERPRISE.

1 The bare basics.

2 Having the idea.

3 Do it yourself.

4 Making something (anything) out of nothing.

5 Wrapping up your know-how.

6 ‘Sell’ is not an expletive.

7 Expressing yourself.

8 Learn to juggle … well.

9 Turning a contact into a client.

10 Charge them!

11 Make sure you are valued.

12 Doing the deal.

13 Enterprise is the only way.

14 Why being a chameleon can be a good thing.

15 A toe in the water.

16 Funding ain’t often fun.

17 The power of collaboration.

18 Introduction time.

19 Know how to make money.

20 Counting your money.

21 On the cheap.

22 Different kinds of profit.

23 What is ‘core business’ anyway?

24 Get a reward.

25 Doing the sell.

26 Keep in touch.

27 Quick and ready.

28 Brand power.

29 Reinvent yourself.

30 Living off your latest gig.

31 Picking your team.

32 Get some personalities.

33 Going naked.

Part Three: SUCCESS.

1 Starting up and fi nishing up.

2 Do you have what it takes?

3 You don’t need big tools.

4 Business doesn’t come in a flat pack.

5 The six-point business plan.

6 It’s who you know (of course).

7 Getting connected.

8 Get yourself a mentor.

9 Polymaths have all the fun.

10 What do you do again?

11 Lucky breaks.

12 Facing up.

13 Don’t waste time.

14 Ideas, ideas, ideas.

15 The importance of scribbles on little scraps of paper.

16 Learn to say ‘no’.

17 Know when to shut up!

18 Value + value.

19 Don’t do mediocrity.

20 Consume the world of your client.

21 Here’s to a damn good lunch!

22 Think ahead.

23 Burnt fi ngers.

24 Just like that.

25 When to walk away.

26 Details.

27 Get it right online.

28 Don’t hide from the customer.

29 Getting regular gigs.

30 Bloody obvious management.

31 Small is best.

32 Get your hands dirty.

33 Don’t give too much away.

34 Think ‘entrepreneur’, not ‘freelance’.

35 Avoid those faux pas.

36 Making a difference.

Part Four: WORKLIFE.

1 If you don’t want to know the score, look away now.

2 It’s a life thing.

3 Nostalgia trips.

4 Do you love stress?

5 A space to work.

6 Somewhere else.

7 Motivation.

8 Get stimulated.

9 Benchmarks that really count.

10 A secret.

11 There is always an alternative.

12 A love of speed.

13 From feast to famine.

14 What is ‘the working day’?

15 Budgets, business plans and babies.

16 Trying to switch off.

17 Home time …

18 Taking time out.

19 No rungs on the ladder.

20 Who wanted a job for life anyway?

21 The importance of self-sufficiency.

22 Where is everybody?

23 Making it up as you go along.

24 Getting a return.

25 What you do, not where you are.

26 Giving up.

27 Is there any going back?

28 A new way of being.

29 Now, the end (or, actually, the beginning).

Appendix: Tales from the frontline of the scrambled up world of work.

Index.

English

“The book is aimed at anyone who is thinking of quitting their day job to go into business for themselves.” (essex.newsrequest, Thursday 6th September 2007)

"...A brilliant book..." (Leigh Times, March 2008)

“Through unpretentious, conversational writing, Sanders urges readers to instil independence into their business attitudes” (City AM, Tues 17th March 2008)

“The title sums up the allure of being self-employed”. (Financial Times Weekend, March 22/March 23 2008)


 

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