Site Map
Search the Catalog
Kids Zone
Find a Library
FAQ
Sign Up
Contact Us
Home > Bibliographies > Minibibliographies > Self-Employment
Content last modified April 2000
Working for yourself can be the American dream. Before the dream can be realized, however, many challenges must be faced and many details must be considered. The self-employed individual bears responsibility for every aspect of the business, works long hours, and pays the entire cost of health benefits, life insurance, and taxes. The person must hire and supervise other employees or work alone, overcoming the sense of solitude and maintaining the motivation to persevere through difficult times. Following is a list of books available from NLS library collections that may help ensure a profitable and rewarding career.
Climb Your Own Ladder: 101 Home Businesses That Can Make You Wealthy by Allen J. Lieberoff
Basic information on starting and running a variety of rewarding small businesses, ranging from clerical, automotive, and cleaning services to unusual occupations such as theatrical producer, astrologer, and sex surrogate. 1982
BR 5681
The Entrepreneurial Mind by Jeffry A. Timmons
A professor at Babson College and Harvard Business School writes a how-to book for entrepreneurs based on his experience as a teacher, researcher, and practitioner. Topics covered include necessary skills, forming a new venture team, managing the family business, and dealing with the law. 1989
RC 31825
Going for It! How to Succeed as an Entrepreneur by Victor Kiam
According to the author, an entrepreneur can be anyone who sees little difference between obstacle and opportunity and is able to capitalize on either. Kiam shares personal remembrances and offers credible, useful advice to beginners and professionals. 1986
RC 24802
High-Tech Ventures: The Guide for Entrepreneurial Success by C. Gordon Bell and John E. McNamara
For someone contemplating starting a company, the author offers practical advice based on his experience and identifies important stages to consider: "concept and seed" (planning), product and market development, and the steady state. He provides analytical tools for success and a diagnostic checklist of concerns to be addressed at each stage. 1991
RC 34414
Home, Inc.: How to Start and Operate a Successful Business from Your Home by Stuart Feldstein
A Business Week editor outlines preparations for setting up a home business. Practical manual offers lively interviews combined with economic research. Feldstein spells out the profit potential, prospective hazards, and the possibilities of enjoyment. 1981
RD 17565
The Home Office and Small Business Answer Book: Solutions to the Most Frequently Asked Questions about Starting and Running Home Offices and Small Businesses by Janet Attard
Business information provider to the GEnie and America Online services offers practical solutions to hundreds of questions about starting a small or home-based business. With its emphasis on electronic resources, Attard's approach can also serve as a reference guide for established entrepreneurs. Includes glossary. 1993
RC 40470
Home Operated Business Opportunities for the Disabled by Raymond C. Cheever
Practical guide for those individuals who find that the best way to make a productive living is to operate a business in their own homes. Offers tips on getting started and suggests considering your own skills and interests as well as physical limitations in selecting a business. 1976
RC 21752
How to Start a Word Processing Business at Home by John J. Branson
Instructions on establishing a word processing service and making the business successful and profitable. Discusses types of software and hardware and advises on marketing and managing the business. 1985
RC 24816
How to Succeed on Your Own: Overcoming the Emotional Roadblocks on the Way from Corporation to Cottage, from Employee to Entrepreneur by Karin Abarbanel
Female entrepreneurs and experts give advice and firsthand experience on what to expect, personally and professionally, when forgoing a corporate career to launch a small business. Discussions cover timing the move, preparing for emotional impacts of the change, avoiding possible traps, and enjoying the rich rewards. 1994
RC 40190
I'll Work for Free: A Short-Term Strategy with a Long-Term Payoff by Bob Weinstein
Instead of spending time searching for a job, the author suggests deciding which job you want and offering to work without pay for a few months to prove your worth. He explains how to sell yourself in letters and interviews, how to ensure that you won't be stuck with gopher-type work, and how to pay the bills while working for free. 1994
BR 10424
Innovation and Entrepreneurship: Practice and Principles by Peter Ferdinand Drucker
The well-known management authority examines the phenomenon of American entrepreneurship and discusses policies and practices essential to success. 1985
RC 23790
Jumping the Job Track: Security, Satisfaction, and Success as an Independent Consultant by Peter C. Brown
Guide to making it on one's own. Brown discusses initial steps toward independence, such as leaving a job, weighing risks versus rewards, marketing one's skills, winning over clients, and separating business from private life. Each chapter ends with a profile of someone who has succeeded at the topic under discussion. The final section deals with other practical issues. 1994
RC 41217
Managing the One-Person Business by Mary Jean Parson
A writer, teacher, and entrepreneur has written this succinct handbook for individuals starting a one-person business. The author discusses a broad range of issues such as finding start-up money, marketing products, taking a vacation, and maximizing profits. Work sheets, sample contracts, and standardized forms are also included. 1987
BR 07419
Minding My Own Business: Entrepreneurial Women Share Their Secrets for Success by Marjorie McVicar and Julia F. Craig
Practical guide for the woman interested in starting her own business. Describes specifics of operating retail stores, restaurants, food services, franchising, mail-order enterprises, and personal services. 1981
RC 20103
The New Venture Handbook: Everything You Need to Know to Start and Run Your Own Business by Ronald E. Merrill and Henry Dwight Sedgwick
Two experienced entrepreneurs emphasize the importance of realistic and well-defined business goals, the need for thorough market research, and requirements for recruiting competent business associates. Includes the basics and some unconventional wisdom as well. 1987
RC 26493
On Your Own: A Guide to Working Happily, Productively, and Successfully from Home by Lionel L. Fisher
A writer who works out of his home focuses on the emotional, psychological, and motivational challenges of working alone. Topics include getting organized, avoiding procrastination, promoting self-actualization, setting office boundaries, and befriending solitude. 1995
BR 10380
101 Home Office Success Secrets by Lisa Kanarek
A handbook of practical tips for the home-office entrepreneur. Garnered from interviews with thirty home-office professionals, the advice covers such areas as marketing, office management, work habits, and personal development. Uses illustrative anecdotes. 1993
RC 45570
The Portable MBA in Entrepreneurship by William D. Bygrave
Estimating that the nation would need at least fifteen million new entrepreneurs by the end of the twentieth century, businessman and professor Bygrave provides guidelines for "anyone who wants to get involved in the birth and growth of an enterprise." Topics covered include recognizing a high-potential opportunity, creating a business, financing, marketing, and "harvesting" cash flows from the investment. 1994
RC 39698
The Small Business Start-Up Guide by Robert Sullivan
A practical handbook for prospective small-business owners. Guides the reader in assessing his or her entrepreneurial abilities, picking the "right" business, planning, marketing, hiring employees, using available technology, and handling other management responsibilities. 1998
RC 45744
Starting on a Shoestring: Building a Business without a Bankroll by Arnold S. Goldstein
Comprehensive, step-by-step guide aimed at those who are low on cash but have the ambition and survival skills necessary to become successful entrepreneurs. Goldstein advises readers on such topics as selecting a business, borrowing money, setting up shop, producing profits, and deciding whether to establish a partnership. Includes case histories and anecdotes. 1984
BR 5956
What Losing Taught Me about Winning: The Ultimate Guide for Success in Small and Home-Based Businesses by Fran Tarkenton
A former football star and accomplished entrepreneur offers advice on how to succeed in a small business. Discusses attitudes, ideas, skills, methods, and resources that are common to successful owners. Uses case studies to dramatize key points. 1997
RC 46108
Working Solo: The Real Guide to Freedom and Financial Success with Your Own Business by Terri Lonier
A longtime consultant gives tips for self-employed people. Outlines the wide variety of possible solo businesses and details the steps necessary for success, including creating a personal and financial support structure, making the best use of technology, and obtaining clients. 1994
RC 45387
Your Home Office by Norman Schreiber
Guidelines for creating and organizing a home office for efficient use. Includes advice on basic needs and designs--space, computers, and telephones; how and when to obtain outside help--from accountants to couriers; and general business information--marketing, record-keeping for tax purposes, and allocating resources. The author also discusses dealing with problems of motivation and solitude. 1990
RC 33467
Compiled by Joyce Y. Carter
and Catherine O'Connor
Library of Congress Home
NLS Home
Comments about NLS to nls@loc.gov
About this site
Comments about this site to nlswebmaster@loc.gov
Posted on 2006-02-24