
Facts About Female Founders
In a recent post by Lisa Calhoun on Inc. she listed out 30 surprising facts about female entrepreneurs. Reading through this list was affirming, inspiring, surprising and, you guessed it, frustrating. Let me give you some examples: Affirming: "#3. Women entrepreneurs in the United States rank their happiness at nearly three times that of women who are not entrepreneurs or established business owners." I can't tell you how many times over the past year-and-a-half I've said to

How to Land a Job in the Tech Industry Without a Tech Degree
The biggest secret of the tech world is that a huge percentage of people who work in the tech industry started out knowing nothing. They didn’t go to MIT, they didn’t get a degree in computer science and they still don’t know how to code. That’s because the high tech industry needs people to help their business run, not just create their product or service offering. Even New York State Comptroller, Thomas D. Napoli, stated this in his April report on New York City’s growing h

Curated Content for the Frustrated Entrepreneur
?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8" standalone="no"? I’ve been thinking a lot about where Bite Size Learning is going over the past few weeks. Over the past few days I’ve been struck by a few different sentiments that have propelled me forward. In the spirit of the sharing economy I’d like to offer them up here for others. Think of it as some curated content for the frustrated entrepreneur... 1) Willingness to Pivot. In an Entrepreneur article by Sam Edwards a few weeks ago,