It is filled with the stories of real business owners who overcame real challenges including those that accompany success. Hunting in a Farmer's World celebrates the differences that drive entrepreneurs. Dini draws on thousands of hours of face to face coaching with entrepreneurs, using the personal true stories of successful owners to drive home the challenges, rewards, exhilaration, and terror of being a business owner. From the ambition that captures an entrepreneur and drives him to take the plunge of starting up, to the unexpected pitfalls of runaway success, Hunting in a Farmer's World examines why business owners are different from the people who work for them. If you take on the risks and responsibilities of owning a business, at least it should be fun. Entrepreneurs are the hunters of the 21st century. They build companies with vision, creativity, and tenacity not with policies and procedures. Ancient farming wisdom has been translated into the modern day management tasks of planning, budgeting, standardizing, and measuring. They try to teach hunters to run their businesses using a farming cycle. Management books tell entrepreneurs how to become farmers. They are hunters, and hunters have provided for others for thousands of years. Small business owners make up three percent of America s population, but they create two-thirds of the new jobs in our economy. 2nd FloorĮast 68th Street & Lexington Ave.All men (and women) are created equal, but that doesn't mean that they are all the same. Schools of Social Work & Urban Public Health Library (Silberman Building)Īrchives & Special Collections (68th Street Campus)Įast 68th Street & Lexington Ave. Health Professions Library (Brookdale Campus) Leon and Toby Cooperman (68th Street Campus) Take note of posted signage in the library and check our website for up-to-date information. Please note that the Cooperman Library is undergoing a phased renovation project which involves temporary floor closures due to construction. Request an appointment with a librarian by completing the Research Consultation form here: ask-a-librarian.įor more information about our services, including specifics about each of the libraries, please visit the Hunter College Libraries’ website. Librarians are available for one-on-one and group research consultations. Additionally, we provide desktop, laptop, and tablet computers as well as printers, photocopiers, scanners, whiteboards, and lots of electrical outlets. Our spaces include collaborative work areas, reservable study rooms, and areas for quiet study. The Brookdale campus (425 East 25th Street) is home to the Health Professions Library, and the Silberman Building (2180 Third Avenue) houses the Social Work and Urban Public Health Library. Also at the 68th Street campus, the Zabar Art Library is located on the 16th Floor of the North Building. The Cooperman Library is home to the Hunter College Archives & Special Collections (Floor 2), the Silverstein Student Success Center (Floor 7), and the Education Library (Floor 6). At the 68th Street campus, the Leon & Toby Cooperman Library occupies nine floors in the East Building, with entrances to the library on the 3rd and 7th floors. The Hunter College Libraries, with locations at all of our campuses, offer the Hunter College community access to a wide variety of services, collections, and spaces for research and teaching.
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