There you go... you have validated my point. Not everyone has a credit card limit to throw at a business venture. (By the way... credit is a path of raising investment capital also. Not everyone has a credit line. Would you believe there are people who don't do credit at all?) You also have to be able to market yourself to recap your investment. You know how... and I am not saying you do not know how. I am saying that you are over simplifying the whole business picture. It cannot be solved by throwing plastic money either unless you have the whole business package. That is my point. (By the way... you implied you were successful at your free lance venture. No need to be insulted. My intention was to say that you were successful at achieving these goals. Insulting would be to say that is why you left that venue. I don't believe that at all.)
And on the subject of a credit card... why don't we let people decide for themselves how much debt they want to assume. Some creative business management my provide other avenues. Let's not condemn anyone because they don't raise 3K for enterprise just because that is something others may choose to do. I actually have no idea what your finances were... that is true. It wasn't a statement of the KGB... but we will bring them in if you find it needful! We have ways of getting you to relax Mr. Corfield! HEH, HEH, HEH. -----Original Message----- From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] On Behalf Of Sean Corfield Sent: Monday, November 07, 2005 11:52 AM To: [email protected] Subject: [CFCDev] Cash flow and running a business (was: Factory Pattern On 11/7/05, John Farrar <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: > You have what we call investment capital. You have no idea what my financial situation was when I went freelance so it would serve you well not to make such wild assumptions. > Paying for things requires more than a decision... it requires resources! Two words: credit card :) ---------------------------------------------------------- You are subscribed to cfcdev. To unsubscribe, send an email to [email protected] with the words 'unsubscribe cfcdev' as the subject of the email. CFCDev is run by CFCZone (www.cfczone.org) and supported by CFXHosting (www.cfxhosting.com). An archive of the CFCDev list is available at www.mail-archive.com/[email protected]
