The above article was written, edited, and reviewed with AI assistance by experienced Silicon Slopes journalists and researchers to produce the most accurate and highest-quality information.
The grind. The GRIND. If you’ve ever started a business or if you’ve even considered it, you know what “the grind” means. Long days, long weeks, and longer months of slogging through the hard things until finally finally, you breakthrough.
There are dozens of articles, blogs, and thought-leadership pieces floating around that claim the ultimate accelerator to getting a business moving is having real passion for what you’re building. I never fully understood how true that was until the last 12 months.
A decade ago, I founded Libertas Institute, a free-market think tank in Utah. Some might think it odd that a state like ours would need such a voice—after all, aren’t we already widely recognized as being “best for business”? But the reality is that every single year we’ve been around
Over the past year a large portion of the U.S. workforce has figured out something that women-owned home-based businesses have known all along: working from home works. With a little flexibility, women for decades have been able to keep their overhead down and
I’m a first-time founder, and my pedigree is a bit unconventional. I’m just as surprised as anyone to find myself here.
Seasoned entrepreneurs say the second time around is much better. And who am I to argue?
A little over a year ago, our team pivoted to a completely different product after observing a much deeper pain point surface from early usage. As we navigated this pivot, we stumbled into a deep tech problem. Because we aren't funded like most deep tech companies
7 min readPublic
Subscribe to newsletter
Stay up to date! Get all the latest posts delivered straight to your inbox.