How to Create Jobs

Plan how to start catching ideas and making hopes and dreams "appear" (something "ventured" makes it possible to "gain", earn, serve) in your life, in the flesh -- solving problems, whether you are employed or not, as small (even alone) as you may...

23 Steps 2 min read Advanced

Step-by-Step Guide

  1. Step 1: Plan how to start catching ideas and making hopes and dreams "appear" (something "ventured" makes it possible to "gain"

    You define "practical" for your own pathways and realities.
  2. Step 2: serve) in your life

    Like it may be by taking your own opportunity and making your own luck.

    People can still go to community colleges, study, understand, make the grades or forget college, and learn a lot on YouTube and at the library (books are still there!) for you idea for creating jobs.Be realistic: whether that means start part-time or as a hobby
    -- and "don't give up your day job"

    if you need to support your job creation idea, to get started. , Plan (hopefully) for enough available resources:
    Live with parents or with spouse supporting you, to keep afloat until you're making enough or breaking even (after paying all fixed and variable operating costs)! Making a living is not just self-serving, self-interest, as: enough can bring progress and there remains "hope, faith and charity," to spur you and your workers
    -- but being a failed business may be a stepping stone
    -- or breaking-even, really a "bare bones" existence, but keep hope alive! (Greek: "charity" translates to "love".

    Love your neighbor as you love yourself.

    Support each other, if possible). , All these started very small: ,: imagine that "Sky is the limit"; so, en garde:
    Ben Franklin, once just a printer (started a small printing shop) , but Franklin eventually invented the stove, bifocal glasses, became a giant of the political, scientific experiment, as well as publishing areas.

    Bell expanded telegraph concepts and created the telephone.

    Edison (started small with financiers support, did "1000-odd" experiments and went on to create (invent) the light bulb, phonograph, motion pictures, DC electrification).

    Tesla created fluorescent light, AC electrification.

    Ford started at home in his garage workshop: created the idea, then the economical automobile, airplanes, mass production assembly-line and well paid factory workers.

    Burbank bred new plants and sold seeds.

    Wright brothers started as bicycles mechanics, created the first successful, engine powered aircraft. , This could be great, if you think of a unique service, or new
    -- or even an old idea (like a phone), becomes the new idea (smart-phone), or one of a kind creations, or an application of an existing idea
    -- possibly with a twist or turn which may often be a registered or trademarked name or a patented product.
  3. Step 3: in the flesh -- solving problems

  4. Step 4: whether you are employed or not

  5. Step 5: as small (even alone) as you may first desire or need (as fits your reality) -- to create a micro

  6. Step 6: small service

  7. Step 7: retail

  8. Step 8: wholesale

  9. Step 9: e-Internet

  10. Step 10: or make things like hand crafts

  11. Step 11: or building

  12. Step 12: fabricating or manufacturing

  13. Step 13: as large as is practical.

  14. Step 14: Find your niche.

  15. Step 15: Do what works -- on the scale that works -- for you.

  16. Step 16: Start "something"

  17. Step 17: hopefully in growing services/abstract or concrete products

  18. Step 18: enterprises (services may be "industries"

  19. Step 19: too) -- and eventually create jobs for several or multitudes (dream it).

  20. Step 20: Believe big

  21. Step 21: Serve and create in an area of a need -- or create a product or a market; especially

  22. Step 22: start in a need that is opening up in a new way

  23. Step 23: possibly.

Detailed Guide

You define "practical" for your own pathways and realities.

Like it may be by taking your own opportunity and making your own luck.

People can still go to community colleges, study, understand, make the grades or forget college, and learn a lot on YouTube and at the library (books are still there!) for you idea for creating jobs.Be realistic: whether that means start part-time or as a hobby
-- and "don't give up your day job"

if you need to support your job creation idea, to get started. , Plan (hopefully) for enough available resources:
Live with parents or with spouse supporting you, to keep afloat until you're making enough or breaking even (after paying all fixed and variable operating costs)! Making a living is not just self-serving, self-interest, as: enough can bring progress and there remains "hope, faith and charity," to spur you and your workers
-- but being a failed business may be a stepping stone
-- or breaking-even, really a "bare bones" existence, but keep hope alive! (Greek: "charity" translates to "love".

Love your neighbor as you love yourself.

Support each other, if possible). , All these started very small: ,: imagine that "Sky is the limit"; so, en garde:
Ben Franklin, once just a printer (started a small printing shop) , but Franklin eventually invented the stove, bifocal glasses, became a giant of the political, scientific experiment, as well as publishing areas.

Bell expanded telegraph concepts and created the telephone.

Edison (started small with financiers support, did "1000-odd" experiments and went on to create (invent) the light bulb, phonograph, motion pictures, DC electrification).

Tesla created fluorescent light, AC electrification.

Ford started at home in his garage workshop: created the idea, then the economical automobile, airplanes, mass production assembly-line and well paid factory workers.

Burbank bred new plants and sold seeds.

Wright brothers started as bicycles mechanics, created the first successful, engine powered aircraft. , This could be great, if you think of a unique service, or new
-- or even an old idea (like a phone), becomes the new idea (smart-phone), or one of a kind creations, or an application of an existing idea
-- possibly with a twist or turn which may often be a registered or trademarked name or a patented product.

About the Author

J

Janice Hayes

Brings years of experience writing about crafts and related subjects.

66 articles
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