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Books - Women Entrepreneurs

Click on each book's cover to purchase from Amazon.com

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The Girl's Guide to Starting Your Own Business: candid advice, frank talk, and true stories for the successful entrepreneur. (HarperResource, 2003) Caitlin Friedman & Kimberly Yorio. ISBN 0-06-052157-0.

Very easy to read yet substantive with practical advice and interviews. Does a good job of equally highlighting the positive and negative aspects of business ownership.

Careerpreneurs: Lessons from leading women entrepreneurs on building a career without boundaries. (Davies-Black  2000) Dorothy Perrin Moore. ISBN 0-89106-144-4.

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The Old Girls' Network: Insider Advice for Women Building Businesses in a Man's World. (Basic Books 2003) Sharon Whiteley, Kathy Elliott, and Connie Duckworth. ISBN 0-7382-0806-X.

Practical advice on how to network and break mental logjams in getting started on an entrepreneurial adverture. Great section at the end called the “tool kit” ranging from how to conduct a competitive analysis to a sample non-disclosure agreement (NDA).

Pitch like a girl: how a woman can be herself and still succeed. (Rodale 2005) Ronna Lichtenberg.
ISBN 13-978-I-009-6.

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Stop Whining & Start Winning: 8 surefire ways for women to thrive in business. (Penguin/Plume 2005) Molly Dickinson Shepard with Jane K. Stimmler. ISBN 0-452-28692-1.

Not so focused on women entrepreneurs per se, this book has advice with a broader application to business women, such as communication style and relationship building techniques. One of our favorite chapters was “Stop beating around the bush and start networking.”

She Wins, You Win: The Most Important Rule Every Businesswoman Needs To Know. (Penguin/Gotham 2003), Gail Evans. 

A call to action and suggestions for women on how to help one another in creating the networks that lead to success.

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Clearing the Hurdles: Women Building High-Growth Businesses. Candida Brush, Nancy M. Carter, Elizabeth Gatewood, Patricia G. Greene, Myra M. Hart. (Financial Times/Prentice Hall 2004) ISBN 0-13-111201-5. 

A comprehensive study examines why more women don't oversee or start high growth (higher revenue generating) businesses and focuses on how to improve your access to venture capital. Compiles advice from experts on why the way things are now, and how women can become success in getting money to grow their businesses.

Martha Rules: 10 Essentials for achieving success as you start, build, or manage a business. Martha Stewart (Rodale 2005) ISBN 13-978-1-59486-470-4.

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Kitchen Table Entrepreneurs: How Eleven Women escaped poverty and became their own bosses. Martha Shirt and Anna S. Wadia. (Westview Press 2002). ISBN 0-8133-3910-3

How to Run Your Business like a Girl: successful strategies from entrepreneurial women who made it happen. Elizabeth Cogswell Baskin (Adams Media 2005). ISBN 1-59337-455-0.

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Millionaire Women Next Door: The Many Journeys of Successful American Businesswomen.  Thomas J. Stanley, phD. Andrews McMeel Publishing 2004, ISBN 0-7407-4532-8. 

Characteristics of successful self-made millionaire business women, profiles successful wealthy women in different careers, mostly self-employed, both in the office and home. He also looks at the role of charity and sharing wealth as part of the journey.

 

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