View allAll Photos Tagged Entrepreneurship
Jemy's Grocery also markets a line of "specialty" over-the-counter foods like hot dogs. I hope it succeeds.
Something scary is staring out from the first window on the second floor to the left.
Visit a blog post about social entrepreneurship in Morocco! auraionline.com/2017/01/28/moroccan-social-entrepreneurship/
I found this business card in an old book that my Grandpa had given me. (bookmark?) Can only guess he met Mr Perot when Perot was still a salesman for IBM. Every leader starts somewhere =)
Patrice Motsepe, Founder and Chairman, African Rainbow Minerals
Precious Moloi-Motsepe, Founder and Executive Chairperson, African Fashion International; Co-Chair, Motsepe Foundation
President Bill Clinton hosted the fifth No Ceilings Conversation in Lucknow, India. More than 80 local women gathered to share their experiences, discussing progress they’ve seen and obstacles that remain to achieving full participation in their communities.
At Stanford tonight… with teams from all over the world.
When I got up to speak, I told them we just had to capture the stage sight for the blog, and so I asked everyone to smile for the camera. =)
Carl Schramm, CEO of the Kauffman Foundation, stated that today’s U.S. college students will have an average of four different jobs between the ages of 22 and 30, and 70% of them will start a new company at some point in their careers.
Here is the Stanford agenda for the week.
Resolution HR699 established the national entrepreneurship week.
The 2017 SkillsUSA National Leadership and Skills Conference Competition Medalists were announced Friday, June 23, 2017 at Freedom Hall in Louisville.
Entrepreneurship
Team O (consisting of Geoff Zdgiebloski, Nicholas Walton, Noah Williams, William Huffman)
High School Appomattox County High School
Gold Appomattox, VA
EntrepreneurshipTeam J (consisting of Enoc Romero, Ashley Smith, Colby Bringas, Jadely Thao)
High School Bayshore High School
Silver Bradenton, FL
EntrepreneurshipTeam M (consisting of Danielle Choy, Hayley Villapudua, Natalie X Deng, Brandon Lee)
High School South Pasadena High School
Bronze South Pasadena, CA
EntrepreneurshipTeam B (consisting of Shavonne Williams, Betty Colman, Peterson Lissaint, Jalisa Wright)
College Orange Technical College - Orlando Campus
Gold Orlando, FL
EntrepreneurshipTeam C (consisting of Grace McDougall, Melissa Mooney, Vanessa Sharp, Sierra Tuttle)
College Catawba Valley Community College
Silver Hickory, NC
EntrepreneurshipTeam A (consisting of Theophile Brown-Tuyishimire, Jonathan Hall, Brittany Williams, Benjamin Vaughn)
College Savannah Technical College
Bronze Savannah, GA
Ribbon cutting and dedication of the Lowcountry’s first youth entrepreneurship center. The center will be run under the programming of Metanoia Community Development Corporation, a SC 501 c 3 nonprofit.
Metanoia CDC, located in the Chicora-Cherokee community of North Charleston, has spent the last three years renovating the 5,000 square foot building at 2021 Reynolds Ave, which was built in the 1940’s as retail space and has been shuttered since the mid- 1990s.
The Youth Entrepreneurship & Volunteer Center will house Metanoia’s high school Civic Leaders program which focuses on developing youth leadership with an emphasis on teaching entrepreneurship. The Civic Leaders will run two businesses on the first floor, screen printing and jewelry making, while the second floor will be used by out of town youth volunteer groups. This space includes dormitories for 20 volunteers, separate bedrooms for chaperones, and a full kitchen and dining area.
Plans for 2015 include a new café on the street level which will also be run by Metanoia high school students.
Photo by Ryan Johnson
Suzanne Singer (R), Founder of Native Renewables, received the 2019 Entrepreneurship Award from Alla Weinstein (L), Co-Founder of Trident Winds LLC and C3E Ambassador.
The 2017 SkillsUSA National Leadership and Skills Conference Competition Medalists were announced Friday, June 23, 2017 at Freedom Hall in Louisville.
Entrepreneurship
Team O (consisting of Geoff Zdgiebloski, Nicholas Walton, Noah Williams, William Huffman)
High School Appomattox County High School
Gold Appomattox, VA
EntrepreneurshipTeam J (consisting of Enoc Romero, Ashley Smith, Colby Bringas, Jadely Thao)
High School Bayshore High School
Silver Bradenton, FL
EntrepreneurshipTeam M (consisting of Danielle Choy, Hayley Villapudua, Natalie X Deng, Brandon Lee)
High School South Pasadena High School
Bronze South Pasadena, CA
EntrepreneurshipTeam B (consisting of Shavonne Williams, Betty Colman, Peterson Lissaint, Jalisa Wright)
College Orange Technical College - Orlando Campus
Gold Orlando, FL
EntrepreneurshipTeam C (consisting of Grace McDougall, Melissa Mooney, Vanessa Sharp, Sierra Tuttle)
College Catawba Valley Community College
Silver Hickory, NC
EntrepreneurshipTeam A (consisting of Theophile Brown-Tuyishimire, Jonathan Hall, Brittany Williams, Benjamin Vaughn)
College Savannah Technical College
Bronze Savannah, GA
Entrepreneurship: www.pinterest.com/pin/405535141427489215 and www.pinterest.com/daviddallore/entrepreneurship/ #money #business #marketing #socialmedia #entrepreneurship
Once an active student-run organization on campus, over the past few years the club had become idle. So, with the encouragement of Bara Watts, director of entrepreneurship, the students reinvigorated the club in February 2018.
The club’s mission is to “create platforms and events in order to generate business and financial access for everyone in the Oberlin College community,” and it has been successful in doing just that.
Photo by Bryan Rubin '18
Special Representative for Commercial and Business Affairs Scott Nathan participates in a Facebook Q&A on Entrepreneurship on June 11, 2015. [State Department photo/ Public Domain]
Special Representative for Commercial and Business Affairs Scott Nathan participates in a Facebook Q&A on Entrepreneurship on June 11, 2015. [State Department photo/ Public Domain]
Entrepreneurship, Created December 2014
Designer: Taylor Early
Project Managers: Sue Robinson and Bettina Peacemaker
Materials collected by Bettina Peacemaker and Patricia Sobczak
entrepreneurship ideas
"How To Rake In $3,480 of Dollars Every Week Simply Using The Jealously Guarded Secret Sources They Don't Want You To Know About!"
Click to see the video of entrepreneurship ideas
Participants at World Economic Forum on Latin America 2016 in Medellin, Colombia. Copyright by World Economic Forum / Benedikt von Loebell
Ribbon cutting and dedication of the Lowcountry’s first youth entrepreneurship center. The center will be run under the programming of Metanoia Community Development Corporation, a SC 501 c 3 nonprofit.
Metanoia CDC, located in the Chicora-Cherokee community of North Charleston, has spent the last three years renovating the 5,000 square foot building at 2021 Reynolds Ave, which was built in the 1940’s as retail space and has been shuttered since the mid- 1990s.
The Youth Entrepreneurship & Volunteer Center will house Metanoia’s high school Civic Leaders program which focuses on developing youth leadership with an emphasis on teaching entrepreneurship. The Civic Leaders will run two businesses on the first floor, screen printing and jewelry making, while the second floor will be used by out of town youth volunteer groups. This space includes dormitories for 20 volunteers, separate bedrooms for chaperones, and a full kitchen and dining area.
Plans for 2015 include a new café on the street level which will also be run by Metanoia high school students.
Photo by Ryan Johnson
Ribbon cutting and dedication of the Lowcountry’s first youth entrepreneurship center. The center will be run under the programming of Metanoia Community Development Corporation, a SC 501 c 3 nonprofit.
Metanoia CDC, located in the Chicora-Cherokee community of North Charleston, has spent the last three years renovating the 5,000 square foot building at 2021 Reynolds Ave, which was built in the 1940’s as retail space and has been shuttered since the mid- 1990s.
The Youth Entrepreneurship & Volunteer Center will house Metanoia’s high school Civic Leaders program which focuses on developing youth leadership with an emphasis on teaching entrepreneurship. The Civic Leaders will run two businesses on the first floor, screen printing and jewelry making, while the second floor will be used by out of town youth volunteer groups. This space includes dormitories for 20 volunteers, separate bedrooms for chaperones, and a full kitchen and dining area.
Plans for 2015 include a new café on the street level which will also be run by Metanoia high school students.
Photo by Ryan Johnson
Pussywillow, the sock puppet my son, Nathan created, calling @raster to action to join the High Stakes Entrepreneurship Sock Puppet Land!
Ribbon cutting and dedication of the Lowcountry’s first youth entrepreneurship center. The center will be run under the programming of Metanoia Community Development Corporation, a SC 501 c 3 nonprofit.
Metanoia CDC, located in the Chicora-Cherokee community of North Charleston, has spent the last three years renovating the 5,000 square foot building at 2021 Reynolds Ave, which was built in the 1940’s as retail space and has been shuttered since the mid- 1990s.
The Youth Entrepreneurship & Volunteer Center will house Metanoia’s high school Civic Leaders program which focuses on developing youth leadership with an emphasis on teaching entrepreneurship. The Civic Leaders will run two businesses on the first floor, screen printing and jewelry making, while the second floor will be used by out of town youth volunteer groups. This space includes dormitories for 20 volunteers, separate bedrooms for chaperones, and a full kitchen and dining area.
Plans for 2015 include a new café on the street level which will also be run by Metanoia high school students.
Photo by Ryan Johnson
Ribbon cutting and dedication of the Lowcountry’s first youth entrepreneurship center. The center will be run under the programming of Metanoia Community Development Corporation, a SC 501 c 3 nonprofit.
Metanoia CDC, located in the Chicora-Cherokee community of North Charleston, has spent the last three years renovating the 5,000 square foot building at 2021 Reynolds Ave, which was built in the 1940’s as retail space and has been shuttered since the mid- 1990s.
The Youth Entrepreneurship & Volunteer Center will house Metanoia’s high school Civic Leaders program which focuses on developing youth leadership with an emphasis on teaching entrepreneurship. The Civic Leaders will run two businesses on the first floor, screen printing and jewelry making, while the second floor will be used by out of town youth volunteer groups. This space includes dormitories for 20 volunteers, separate bedrooms for chaperones, and a full kitchen and dining area.
Plans for 2015 include a new café on the street level which will also be run by Metanoia high school students.
Photo by Ryan Johnson
Ribbon cutting and dedication of the Lowcountry’s first youth entrepreneurship center. The center will be run under the programming of Metanoia Community Development Corporation, a SC 501 c 3 nonprofit.
Metanoia CDC, located in the Chicora-Cherokee community of North Charleston, has spent the last three years renovating the 5,000 square foot building at 2021 Reynolds Ave, which was built in the 1940’s as retail space and has been shuttered since the mid- 1990s.
The Youth Entrepreneurship & Volunteer Center will house Metanoia’s high school Civic Leaders program which focuses on developing youth leadership with an emphasis on teaching entrepreneurship. The Civic Leaders will run two businesses on the first floor, screen printing and jewelry making, while the second floor will be used by out of town youth volunteer groups. This space includes dormitories for 20 volunteers, separate bedrooms for chaperones, and a full kitchen and dining area.
Plans for 2015 include a new café on the street level which will also be run by Metanoia high school students
Photo by Ryan Johnson
Ribbon cutting and dedication of the Lowcountry’s first youth entrepreneurship center. The center will be run under the programming of Metanoia Community Development Corporation, a SC 501 c 3 nonprofit.
Metanoia CDC, located in the Chicora-Cherokee community of North Charleston, has spent the last three years renovating the 5,000 square foot building at 2021 Reynolds Ave, which was built in the 1940’s as retail space and has been shuttered since the mid- 1990s.
The Youth Entrepreneurship & Volunteer Center will house Metanoia’s high school Civic Leaders program which focuses on developing youth leadership with an emphasis on teaching entrepreneurship. The Civic Leaders will run two businesses on the first floor, screen printing and jewelry making, while the second floor will be used by out of town youth volunteer groups. This space includes dormitories for 20 volunteers, separate bedrooms for chaperones, and a full kitchen and dining area.
Plans for 2015 include a new café on the street level which will also be run by Metanoia high school students.
Photo by Ryan Johnson
As part of the Great Minds Summer Experience, an Entrepreneurship Bootcamp was hosted by the Center for Entrepreneurial Studies. Students were mentored on how to build a business and pitched ideas to a panel of alumni entrepreneurs.
Ribbon cutting and dedication of the Lowcountry’s first youth entrepreneurship center. The center will be run under the programming of Metanoia Community Development Corporation, a SC 501 c 3 nonprofit.
Metanoia CDC, located in the Chicora-Cherokee community of North Charleston, has spent the last three years renovating the 5,000 square foot building at 2021 Reynolds Ave, which was built in the 1940’s as retail space and has been shuttered since the mid- 1990s.
The Youth Entrepreneurship & Volunteer Center will house Metanoia’s high school Civic Leaders program which focuses on developing youth leadership with an emphasis on teaching entrepreneurship. The Civic Leaders will run two businesses on the first floor, screen printing and jewelry making, while the second floor will be used by out of town youth volunteer groups. This space includes dormitories for 20 volunteers, separate bedrooms for chaperones, and a full kitchen and dining area.
Plans for 2015 include a new café on the street level which will also be run by Metanoia high school students.
Photo by Ryan Johnson
On Wed July 30th from 6 30 pm to 9 pm, we joined Leyla Razeghi and Guest Speakers for an event dedicated to Entrepreneurettes! Network with like-minded ladies and learn tips that will help you take your business to the next level.
Meet Our Guest Speakers:
Kavita Suri: Wellness and Nutrition Expert; Beauty Editor and successful Entrepreneurette
Marcos Bulgheroni, Executive Director, Pan American Energy, Argentina during the Session: "Fostering Development and Entrepreneurship in the Fourth Industrial Revolution" at the World Economic Forum on Latin America 2017 in Buenos Aires, Argentina. Copyright by World Economic Forum / Benedikt von Loebell
Ambassador Betty E. King opened the U.S. Mission's Earth Day Panel remarking that innovation and entrepreneurship are critical to economic growth and to the transition to a green economy.
Katherine Milligan of the Schwab Foundation for Social Entrepreneurship presented the concept of social entrepreneurship and how its network of ent...repreneurs operate in the green economy. Milligan moderated a Skype discussion with Recycla in Chile and Waste Concern in Bangladesh, companies focused on recycling and waste management, with ecological-minded and forward-looking business models.
The U.S. Mission also hosted a panel with representatives from the World Economic Forum, the United Nations Environment Programme, the United Nations Conference on Trade and Development and Bamboo Finance. The panelists discussed the challenges to and opportunities arising from transitioning to a green economy with a particular focus on finance, policy and private sector involvement.
Photo Credit: U.S. Mission / Pam Proctor
Ambassador Betty E. King opened the U.S. Mission's Earth Day Panel remarking that innovation and entrepreneurship are critical to economic growth and to the transition to a green economy.
Katherine Milligan of the Schwab Foundation for Social Entrepreneurship presented the concept of social entrepreneurship and how its network of ent...repreneurs operate in the green economy. Milligan moderated a Skype discussion with Recycla in Chile and Waste Concern in Bangladesh, companies focused on recycling and waste management, with ecological-minded and forward-looking business models.
The U.S. Mission also hosted a panel with representatives from the World Economic Forum, the United Nations Environment Programme, the United Nations Conference on Trade and Development and Bamboo Finance. The panelists discussed the challenges to and opportunities arising from transitioning to a green economy with a particular focus on finance, policy and private sector involvement.
Photo Credit: U.S. Mission / Pam Proctor
Ambassador Betty E. King opened the U.S. Mission's Earth Day Panel remarking that innovation and entrepreneurship are critical to economic growth and to the transition to a green economy.
Katherine Milligan of the Schwab Foundation for Social Entrepreneurship presented the concept of social entrepreneurship and how its network of ent...repreneurs operate in the green economy. Milligan moderated a Skype discussion with Recycla in Chile and Waste Concern in Bangladesh, companies focused on recycling and waste management, with ecological-minded and forward-looking business models.
The U.S. Mission also hosted a panel with representatives from the World Economic Forum, the United Nations Environment Programme, the United Nations Conference on Trade and Development and Bamboo Finance. The panelists discussed the challenges to and opportunities arising from transitioning to a green economy with a particular focus on finance, policy and private sector involvement.
Photo Credit: U.S. Mission / Pam Proctor