Dear Reader,
So you're moving on or want to.

Next is to decide the "where" as in where you are going.

Should you not know where you're going how will you know when you get there, eh?

I grew up a Military Brat.

My father was career military and we traveled frequently.

As an example, I went to 21 different schools before I graduated high school and I never repeated a grade.

That's lots of experience in moving on, eh?

I've some suggestions for your movement.

Get yourself a mentor who can guide you through the process of transition and have you accomplish more than you doing it on your on.

Be active in a professional development networking group to expand your skills sets while you're in your transition - I recommend Houston Crossroads.

Come have a Business Building Breakfast with me any Wednesday morning and we'll see if I may have other recommendations.

I'll be at Corner Bakery Cafe, 9311 Katy Freeway (I-10 W at Echo Lane), 7:30 to 8:30 AM and we'll use this meeting as the opportunity to meet personally, face-to-face, while we evaluate your needs and determine if I have the skill sets required to move you forward.

Be sure to let me know you're coming.

Through our co-op and business incubators we've worked with thousands of people to get them where they wanted to go and more rapidly than they could have done on their own.

Successful regard$,
C. Dean Kring ~ 713.932.7495

"Be short on promises and long on delivery."
Motivational Speaker:
"Getting From Where You Are To Where You Want To Be"
C. Dean Kring - Director of Research, Services Cooperative Association
Featured Speaker:
Call us to be the Featured Speaker: 713.932.7495
Business Showcase:
Business of The Week: Financial Planner.
If you are in this type of business, please attend for special recognition.

COMMUNITY ACTIVITY
OPEN 24/7 IN HOUSTON
"The problem is not that people are taxed too little, the problem is that government spends too much."
Ronald Reagan
THE ESSENCE OF ENTREPRENEURSHIP:
"Find a niche. Make sales. Manage to profits. Repeat the process."
C. Dean Kring
How smart are you?
FEATURED BUSINESS
FEATURED DEVELOPMENT GROUP
FEATURED PUBLICATION
COMING EVENTS
NBDA Workshop & Networking
Kevin Sidebottom ~ "Great Sales Professionals Are Not Born"

PPP Deadline Extended to May 31st
Friday Forum
May 28th
Noon until 1:00 PM via Skype.
WBAF logo
Mentoring Monday
May 31st
10:00 AM to 2:00 PM via Skype
31st Annual Houston All British Car Day
Stallion Vineyards, 5969 W. Rayford Rd., Spring, TX 77389
FEATURED EVENT
ON THIS DAY MAY 19TH
1647
Forty-five years before the hysteria of the Salem Witch Trials, the first American colonist accused of witchcraft, Alse Young, is executed in the town square of Hartford, Connecticut. More executions will follow, as witchcraft would remain a capital crime in Connecticut until 1750.
1897
Irish author Bram Stoker's novel of Gothic horror, 'Dracula,' is published in London. Readers are hooked by the bloodthirsty tale, and the story makes an ideal yarn for invasion literature fans, but the count's allure will really take flight decades later with the advent of cinema.
1951
Sally Kristen Ride is born in Los Angeles, where she'll become a nationally ranked tennis player by her junior year of high school. Her focus, however, will shift to science and astronomy. She will join NASA in 1978 and in 1983, she will become the first American woman in space.
2020
Protests and riots against police brutality erupt in Minneapolis the day after George Floyd, a 46-year-old Black man, died when a white police officer knelt on his neck for almost nine minutes. Floyd's death, captured on video by a bystander, will spark additional protests, including violent clashes with police, across the country and the world.
SHARED BY A READER
SHARED BY A READER
SHARED BY A READER
SHARED BY A READER
SHARED BY A READER
SHARED BY A READER
SHARED BY A READER
SHARED BY A READER
SHARED BY A READER
SHARED BY A READER
SHARED BY A READER
SHARED BY A READER
SHARED BY A READER
SHARED BY A READER
SHARED BY A READER
SHARED BY A READER
SHARED BY A READER
SHARED BY A READER
SHARED BY A READER
SHARED BY A READER
SHARED BY A READER
SHARED BY A READER
SHARED BY A READER
TIPS OF THE DAY
"Houston's greatest energy resource is entrepreneurial energy."
C. Dean Kring
"Recognized as an industry leader and pioneer in small business incubation" by the National Business Incubation Association and as "One of Houston's core entrepreneurial groups" by the Center for Entrepreneurship and Innovation and "Ranked the #1 new business development group in Houston" by Houston Proud!

We are a not-for-profit cooperative association of independent
business owners for market expansion, business development,
entrepreneurial education and professional growth.

We were created from a specific and priority research project of the Houston Chamber of Commerce in the late 1970's on the importance of start-up and emerging small businesses. We brought you Houston's first small business incubator, which became Texas' oldest, the first co-working space in Texas, the first Womens Business Center in the United States and the first Residency Incubator and first Virtual Accelerator Program in the World. Our clients have ranged from pre-start-ups to the largest companies in the United States! We clearly demonstrated that entrepreneurship could be taught, that business plans were not a requirement for a successful business, that women were starting businesses at a faster rate than men and that entrepreneurship was color-blind and gender neutral. Our start-ups have won virtually every award in Houston for business growth, some nationally, some even internationally and some of our established client companies are now household names in Houston. We operate entirely without grants, gifts, donations or public funding. We don't have our hand out and are NOT your tax dollars at work! We are totally self-sufficient!

We grow companies, build careers and advance ideas!
May we assist with yours?

Come • Call • Click - Chat - Connect - We're here for you!
Enjoy weekly EntrepreNEWS for Entrepreneurial Knowledge!
Brought to you by:
  Call: 713.932.7495
Sally Smart: service@servicesca.org