Weary of Looking for Work, Some Create Their Own
Sunday, March 15th, 2009

- Image via Wikipedia
Alex Andon, 24, a graduate of Duke University in biology, was laid off from a biotech company last May. For months he sought new work. Then, frustrated with the hunt, he turned to jellyfish.
In an apartment he shares here with six roommates, Mr. Andon started a business in September building jellyfish aquariums, capitalizing on new technology that helps the fragile creatures survive in captivity. He has sold three tanks, one for $25,000 to a restaurant, and is starting a Web site to sell desktop versions for $350.
“I keep getting stung,” he said. And his crowded home office is filled with beakers and test tubes of jellyfish food. “But it beats looking for work. I hate looking for work.”
Plenty of other laid-off workers across the country, burned out by a merciless job market, are building business plans instead of sending out résumés. For these people, recession has become the mother of invention.
Economists say that when the economy takes a dive, it is common for people to turn to their inner entrepreneur to try to make their own work. But they say that it takes months for that mentality to sink in, and that this is about the time in the economic cycle when it really starts to happen — when the formerly employed realize that traditional job searches are not working, and that they are running out of time and money.
Mark V. Cannice, executive director of the entrepreneurship program at the University of San Francisco, calls the phenomenon “forced entrepreneurship.”
“If there is a silver lining, the large-scale downsizing from major companies will release a lot of new entrepreneurial talent and ideas — scientists, engineers, business folks now looking to do other things,” Mr. Cannice said. “It’s a Darwinian unleashing of talent into the entrepreneurial ecosystem.”
Related articles
- Bad Times Spur Entrepreneurship, But There’s a Catch (boingboing.net)
- Recession Sales Strategy: Tell Them Something They Don’t Know (blogs.harvardbusiness.org)
- Bits: Call Them Venture Pessimists (bits.blogs.nytimes.com)
Random Posts:
- Google Options Make Masseuse a Multimillionaire
- New Fuel Cell Catalyst Enables a Cost-Effective Fuel Cell Technology
- Repair Options for Ailing Electronics
- A Paper Trail for Voting Machines
- ‘Fantastic Voyage,’ Revisited: The Pill That Navigates
2. Right-Click then Copy
3. Paste the HTML code into your webpage
Related posts:

![Reblog this post [with Zemanta]](http://img.zemanta.com/reblog_b.png?x-id=523c1561-6750-497c-8956-cd00975a5be9)









































