Definition of SUCCESS:
1.having attained a desired end or state of good fortune <the play had a successful run on 2.marked by vigorous growth and well-being especially economically
1.having attained a desired end or state of good fortune <the play had a successful run on
2.marked by vigorous growth and well-being especially economically
Success might mean, but is not limited to:
- a level of social status
- achievement of an objective/goal
- the opposite of failure
Successful Stories...
* OFW entrepreneur successful stories and how to become a successful OFW entrepreneur
Entrepreneurship is on the rise among Overseas Filipino Workers (OFWs).
There are several types of OFWs. Some invest in the Philippines, mostly in the form of buying properties; Some send all money to their families and come back empty handed; Some decide to enter the business ventures with their savings earned abroad.
It is those OFWs who take the initiatives, who have passion and ambition, who know the power of positive thinking without the fear of failure, who can get up and take action in addition to their payers.
Any OFW is a would-be entrepreneur. There is no guarantee for success. But if you never try, for sure you will never succeed.
The growing Entrepreneurial Spirit among OFWs is evidently seen in the growing trend for entrepreneurship among OFWs, not only in the Philippines, but also around the world.
There are inspiring successful stores of OFW entrepreneurs in the Philippines, and there are also such stories abroad.
What’s most inspiring is that most successful OFW entrepreneurs started very humble. They don’t have large initial capital, or large investments from venture capital firms. Some of them don’t even have a legal status abroad. Yet against all odds, they succeeded eventually.
**Pinays share secrets to business success
There are several types of OFWs. Some invest in the Philippines, mostly in the form of buying properties; Some send all money to their families and come back empty handed; Some decide to enter the business ventures with their savings earned abroad.
It is those OFWs who take the initiatives, who have passion and ambition, who know the power of positive thinking without the fear of failure, who can get up and take action in addition to their payers.
Any OFW is a would-be entrepreneur. There is no guarantee for success. But if you never try, for sure you will never succeed.
The growing Entrepreneurial Spirit among OFWs is evidently seen in the growing trend for entrepreneurship among OFWs, not only in the Philippines, but also around the world.
There are inspiring successful stores of OFW entrepreneurs in the Philippines, and there are also such stories abroad.
What’s most inspiring is that most successful OFW entrepreneurs started very humble. They don’t have large initial capital, or large investments from venture capital firms. Some of them don’t even have a legal status abroad. Yet against all odds, they succeeded eventually.
**Pinays share secrets to business success
By Dheza Marie Aguilar, ABS-CBN
9/08/2010
NETHERLANDS – Determination and hard work are what define the Filipino migrant workers.
With a burning desire to provide for a family back home, Pinoys always strive to be the best in their jobs abroad and eventually achieve the dream of having a better life for them and their loved ones.
But for those who dare to dream bigger, courage is an additional component to success. And this is what Pinoy businesswomen in the Netherlands shared in the second series of a business seminar conducted by the Philippine Trade and Investment Center.
Taking risks
Despite the fear of loosing her job, Rosario Ong was decisive on starting on her business and not being an employee for the rest of her life.
“Karamihan sa atin pag may trabaho tayo dito, feeling safe. Gusto natin safe, dahil kailangan ng pamilya natin sa Pilipinas ng tulong. So ang pagkakaroon ng business, it’s about a risk. That is the most difficult part. You have to make a choice. I-ririsk mo yun trabaho and you’re gonna try to have your own business or pagsasabayin mo yun business and trabaho mo,” said the enterprising mother.
She found an opportunity in the money changing business, and worked hard in convincing a Dutch businessman to partner with her venture. Today, her money exchange business called Sunro has grown into a money-remittance center, the most trusted among Filipinos in the Netherlands. She now employs 14 Filipinos, and the preferred remittance center with the biggest network with Philippine banks.
Ong shares 3 important tips for other Filipinos who also want to succeed as businessmen in other countries.
“Do not be afraid to ask questions. You have to do research. You have to know what you are going into. Kailangan alam mo kung ano yong market, ano yong kliyente, ano un gusto nila alam mo yun competitor mo, ano ang ini-ooffer nila. Kailangan assertive ka,” she said.
She also said that integrating a country’s language and culture will help a lot in achieving business goals because it will lessen the fear of starting on your own.
Following your passion
Meanwhile, 26-year-old Mervylle Formilleza had to use hers and her boyfriend’s savings to start an organic soap manufacturing.
A chemist who was granted a scholarship in Erasmus University, Formilleza suffered persistent eczema.
Together with a classmate from the university, they decided to experiment with organic products to find a solution for her skin dilemma. The outcome is “Pink Baskets”, a company which produces soaps and bath products made only from natural ingredients.
“It is really my passion. Nagsimula pa ito sa Pilipinas kasi ang pamilya ko, nagsisimula ng mga projects para sa mga non-government organizations. Ang paggawa ng sabon ang tinuturo namin sa mga tao para makapagsimula ng negosyo,” shares Formilleza.
Like Ong, Formilleza believes that asking the right questions and having the right information is the best way to start a business where you have a passion for. Her company, despite being small, now sells to most parts of Europe including Belgium, Germany, Italy and Spain.
For small businesses like hers who do not have enough money for advertising and big marketing, Formilleza’s tip is to have a professionally-made website to reach out to clients.
“The presence of a website itself will give an impression to the people kung ano yong business mo. The more you make it professional, people will trust you somehow.”
Ong and Formilleza were 2 of the speakers in the Magnegosyo Tayo Seminar held in Rotterdam to encourage Filipinos migrant workers to invest their hard-earned money into business ventures. The seminar gave an insight and step-by-step guide to potential business owners about the risks and benefits of having your own business both abroad and in the Philippines.
9/08/2010
NETHERLANDS – Determination and hard work are what define the Filipino migrant workers.
With a burning desire to provide for a family back home, Pinoys always strive to be the best in their jobs abroad and eventually achieve the dream of having a better life for them and their loved ones.
But for those who dare to dream bigger, courage is an additional component to success. And this is what Pinoy businesswomen in the Netherlands shared in the second series of a business seminar conducted by the Philippine Trade and Investment Center.
Taking risks
Despite the fear of loosing her job, Rosario Ong was decisive on starting on her business and not being an employee for the rest of her life.
“Karamihan sa atin pag may trabaho tayo dito, feeling safe. Gusto natin safe, dahil kailangan ng pamilya natin sa Pilipinas ng tulong. So ang pagkakaroon ng business, it’s about a risk. That is the most difficult part. You have to make a choice. I-ririsk mo yun trabaho and you’re gonna try to have your own business or pagsasabayin mo yun business and trabaho mo,” said the enterprising mother.
She found an opportunity in the money changing business, and worked hard in convincing a Dutch businessman to partner with her venture. Today, her money exchange business called Sunro has grown into a money-remittance center, the most trusted among Filipinos in the Netherlands. She now employs 14 Filipinos, and the preferred remittance center with the biggest network with Philippine banks.
Ong shares 3 important tips for other Filipinos who also want to succeed as businessmen in other countries.
“Do not be afraid to ask questions. You have to do research. You have to know what you are going into. Kailangan alam mo kung ano yong market, ano yong kliyente, ano un gusto nila alam mo yun competitor mo, ano ang ini-ooffer nila. Kailangan assertive ka,” she said.
She also said that integrating a country’s language and culture will help a lot in achieving business goals because it will lessen the fear of starting on your own.
Following your passion
Meanwhile, 26-year-old Mervylle Formilleza had to use hers and her boyfriend’s savings to start an organic soap manufacturing.
A chemist who was granted a scholarship in Erasmus University, Formilleza suffered persistent eczema.
Together with a classmate from the university, they decided to experiment with organic products to find a solution for her skin dilemma. The outcome is “Pink Baskets”, a company which produces soaps and bath products made only from natural ingredients.
“It is really my passion. Nagsimula pa ito sa Pilipinas kasi ang pamilya ko, nagsisimula ng mga projects para sa mga non-government organizations. Ang paggawa ng sabon ang tinuturo namin sa mga tao para makapagsimula ng negosyo,” shares Formilleza.
Like Ong, Formilleza believes that asking the right questions and having the right information is the best way to start a business where you have a passion for. Her company, despite being small, now sells to most parts of Europe including Belgium, Germany, Italy and Spain.
For small businesses like hers who do not have enough money for advertising and big marketing, Formilleza’s tip is to have a professionally-made website to reach out to clients.
“The presence of a website itself will give an impression to the people kung ano yong business mo. The more you make it professional, people will trust you somehow.”
Ong and Formilleza were 2 of the speakers in the Magnegosyo Tayo Seminar held in Rotterdam to encourage Filipinos migrant workers to invest their hard-earned money into business ventures. The seminar gave an insight and step-by-step guide to potential business owners about the risks and benefits of having your own business both abroad and in the Philippines.
Please share your thoughts and stories here.
Success Quotes for you...
"The person who gets the farthest is generally the one who is willing to do and dare. The sure-thing boat never gets far from shore."
-Dale Carnegie
"Most successful men have not achieved their distinction by having some new talent or opportunity presented to them. They have developed the opportunity that was at hand."
-- Bruce Barton
"Would you like me to give you a formula for success? It's quite simple, really. Double your rate of failure. You are thinking of failure as the enemy of success. But it isn't at all. You can be discouraged by failure or you can learn from it, So go ahead and make mistakes. Make all you can. Because remember that?s where you will find success."
- Thomas J. Watson
"The successful always has a number of projects planned, to which he looks forward. Anyone of them could change the course of his life overnight."
-Mark Caine
-Dale Carnegie
"Most successful men have not achieved their distinction by having some new talent or opportunity presented to them. They have developed the opportunity that was at hand."
-- Bruce Barton
"Would you like me to give you a formula for success? It's quite simple, really. Double your rate of failure. You are thinking of failure as the enemy of success. But it isn't at all. You can be discouraged by failure or you can learn from it, So go ahead and make mistakes. Make all you can. Because remember that?s where you will find success."
- Thomas J. Watson
"The successful always has a number of projects planned, to which he looks forward. Anyone of them could change the course of his life overnight."
-Mark Caine
Pity the man who inherits a million and isn't a millionaire.Here's what would be pitiful,if your income grew and you didn't.
"The great successful men of the world have used their imagination?they think ahead and create their mental picture in all its details, filling in here, adding a little there, altering this a bit and that a bit, but steadily building - steadily building."
Robert Collier
"Success doesn't come to you?you go to it."Marva Collins
"The difference between a successful person and others is not a lack of strength, not a lack of knowledge, but rather in a lack of will." Vincent T. Lombardi
"Success is a journey, not a destination." Ben Sweetland
"The great successful men of the world have used their imagination?they think ahead and create their mental picture in all its details, filling in here, adding a little there, altering this a bit and that a bit, but steadily building - steadily building."
Robert Collier
"Success doesn't come to you?you go to it."Marva Collins
"The difference between a successful person and others is not a lack of strength, not a lack of knowledge, but rather in a lack of will." Vincent T. Lombardi
"Success is a journey, not a destination." Ben Sweetland