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Entrepreneurs In Paradise
Aug. 29, 2008 Panama City,
Panama
PLUS:
n Maybe
You Can’t Get A Job…But Who
Wants A Job Anyway?...
n
Entrepreneurs Welcome…And Other
Fundamentals Of The Current
Panama Market…
n Six
Panama Biz Ideas To Pursue Now…
n Delivering
The Goods In Oman…
n Coming
Soon: Trader Jack’s Bazaar…
n France’s
Best Winter Climate…
AND:
n Help
Wanted In Paitilla…
-
Free Week In The Switzerland Of
South America -
For A Limited Time, You’re Invited
For
Seven Nights Free
In Beautiful And Charming
Montevideo, Uruguay, As The Guest
Of Sugarloaf, The Premier Private
Residential And Resort Community On
This Country’s Gold Coast.
One Week’s Free Stay In
Montevideo…Details Here.
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Dear
Overseas Opportunity Letter
Reader,
Seated around the table in the
Casco Viejo jazz joint, we were:
A young woman who has just launched
her own events firm. Want to throw
a party…plan a reception…put on a
conference…in Panama? Stephanie’s
standing by to help.
To her left, another young woman
who has this summer gone into
business for herself. She handed in
notice at the real estate agency
where she’d been working for more
than six years…and struck out on
her own. Kathia knows the Panama
City property market as well as
anyone you’re going to meet. She
has a solid reputation and a long
client list. Why not put her
experience and expertise to work
for herself?
To my right, a friend who has been
running his own reforestation
investment company in this country
for 15 years. Today, Robert’s
United Nature, one of the most
respected reforestation outfits in
Panama, is making a name for itself
worldwide.
Across the table, Lief, one year
into his efforts, with
partner-friends, as an independent
developer.
And me. Building a publishing
business from an apartment in
Paitilla.
I wrote last week to caution
that, realistically speaking,
you’re not going to get a job
overseas.
But that is not to say you can’t
earn a living…and maybe make more
money than you ever did 9-to-5’ing
it back home.
Plus, who wouldn’t want to work for
him- (or her-) self, rather than
someone else, if given the chance?
Here’s the chance. Right now, right
here in Panama, a would-be
entrepreneur with an idea can
parlay any real-world experience
into a profitable new life.
You don’t need much capital.
Stephanie, for example, sees the
expanding local events market, has
experience with an international
firm organizing and hosting
conferences, and, as she explained
the other night in Casco Viejo, is
“young and enthusiastic.”
“I don’t have a lot of money,” she
explained, “but I understand this
business. And if I don’t take the
chance now…when will I?”
Stephanie’s operation is
low-overhead but professional.
After only a few weeks, she’s got
three gigs lined up.
Robert’s operation, on the other
hand, is mature and thriving. But
I’ve known him since he started
out.
United Nature wasn’t
always as big and as impressive as
it is today, of course. But Robert
has paid his dues and now is
reaping the rewards of being in the
right place at the right time.
Lief targeted Panama two years ago.
When the people of this country
voted to ok the plan for the
expansion of the Panama Canal, the
writing was on the wall. Lief
recognized that, with the
investment in a bigger canal, this
country was guaranteeing itself a
decade at least of solid growth. As
he explains, “Panama is a market
with legs…solid fundamentals that
should carry it onward and upward,
U.S. market woes and the ups and
downs of other markets in the
region notwithstanding.”
Lief began scouting shortly after
the Yes vote for the Canal
Referendum. He spent 12 months
bumping along the dirt roads and
hiking up and down the beaches and
hills of the region of the country
he identified as most directly
positioned in this country’s
big-picture path of progress. He
partnered with one friend…then
another…and today, the three
developer-friends own more than 500
acres on the beautiful west coast
of
Panama’s Azuero Peninsula. They’re
meeting with surveyors and
architects, land planners and
engineers, moving quickly toward
launch…and having the time of their
lives.
Does the idea of buying 500 acres
of coastline in a foreign country
seem a little…big?
Here’s a smaller but no less
interesting and viable one: Launch
an import/export website.
That’s what Jackson, our 8-year-old
son, is doing. Here in Panama he’s
noticed interesting jewelry,
baskets, and other handicrafts that
you don’t see other places.
“If I bought some, could I sell
them on the Internet?” he asked.
“Yes, in fact, I bet you could,”
replied his father.
Lief has purchased the domain name
for Trader Jack’s Bazaar. A friend
is helping to build the website.
I’ve promised to write ad copy.
Jack’s sister, Kaitlin, in college
in the States, has offered to help
with fulfillment (we’ll drop-ship
in bulk to her in Annapolis…then
she’ll wrap and pack each item in
an envelope and send off to the
buyer via the U.S. mail). Panama
friends are helping to source
products.
After visiting his tree plantation
in the Darien last week, for
example, Robert returned to Panama
City with a dozen necklaces, some
with seeds and nuts from the rain
forest, others with spines, bones,
and teeth from the local river
fish…plus colorful beads and, in
the center of one, a small tusk.
Unique and interesting, these
necklaces were made by young Kuna
Indian girls from the village of
Mandugandi. I don’t want to give
away Jack’s cost basis, but we
figure that he ought to be able to
sell them online for as much as
four times what Robert paid (and
they’ll still be a great bargain
for the buyer).
Kathleen Peddicord
P.S. It’s no easy thing to find a
job in a foreign country, but
here’s one particular opening right
now:
Live and Invest Overseas is in the
market for an
E-commerce Business Assistant.
The position is in Panama City with
a fast-growing international
publishing group (yes, us). The
right candidate will be comfortable
in a fast-paced, unstructured
environment and will embrace the
chance to help build a business
from the ground up. This is an
entry-level opportunity and not a
lot of formal experience is
required. We’re looking for someone
who is smart and enthusiastic and
who wants to learn this business.
Remember: The job is in Panama…and
the pay is Panama scale. However,
we can help with your visa and work
permit. Send resume and letter to
HelpWanted@LiveandInvestOverseas.com.
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A Vineyard in Argentina: All That’s
Missing Is You -
Ever dreamed of having your own
private reserve of premium
wines--wines bottled with your own
custom label?
Of sharing in the fun, joy, and
romance of the whole
“owning-a-vineyard” experience?
Maybe you have but have written off
the dream as unaffordable.
It doesn’t have to be. Not once you
know about
La Vida Buena and a
part of Argentina that wine experts
are calling The Next Napa.
If you’ve a taste for all that goes
to make up the good life,
don’t miss this exceptional
vineyard opportunity.
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TODAY:
“I
think these are rugs, blankets, and
bedspreads,” writes
ever-roving correspondent Paul
Terhorst, continuing his travels in
Oman.
***
The only downside to my new
assistant, Marion, as far as I can
tell, is that she’s thwarting my
language efforts.
Before Marion, I muddled through.
Now, with Marion, I’m blissfully
and efficiently insulated from the
Spanish-speaking world all around
me.
Time to redouble my efforts. I’m
determined to learn this lingo
sooner rather than later.
Marketing Manager Harry Kalashian
offers this resource:
http://www.bbc.co.uk/languages/spanish.
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Winter In Thailand -------
Escape...full-
or maybe only part-time…to one of
the most beautiful, diverse,
exotic, and affordable places on
earth.
FROM THE MAILBAG:
“I’m interested in the
Light Leaseback program in
France that you
wrote about yesterday, and I’m
wondering: Where is the best
climate in this country in winter?”
--
Jana K., United States
Along the Mediterranean coast and
in Provence.
***
“I would love to travel the
Americas, if possible, and really
wish to learn how to earn by
writing about my
experiences. Can you help me with
this?”
--
Elliot G., United States
Indeed, we can. The best travel
writer we know, Jennifer Stevens,
has created a program to help
others follow in her footsteps.
It sounds like you possess the
primary requirements to make a go
of this: A bit of wanderlust and
the desire to tell your travel
tales.
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