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![]() “I hope I'm becoming more eccentric. More room in the brain.” Musician Tom Waits The Entrepreneurial Spirit
by
Tom Peters
Fred
Karl, designer of the Viking range and owner of that company said, "I
was a weird kid - I began designing towns when I was 12." We all know that "weird" can be good, if we don't judge others through our lens... Being weird increases creativity if we allow it to flourish. Fred Karl, founder of Viking Range, let his weirdness flourish abundantly. Karl's
headquarters for Viking is located in his home town of
Greenwood, Mississippi. Karl
has restored old buildings to house his
operations, so not only does his product, the Viking range, generate
income for the small Mississippi town, Karl is revitalizing the town
through his restoration work. He
remembered a bustling place in the
'60s that had "gone way downhill" by the time he returned there after a
tour of duty in Vietnam. The
little town of Greenwood, previously
sustained by the cotton industry, wasn't ever going to be the same. But
Fred Karl saw the possibilities and brought all his talents to bear to
create a new Greenwood. Just
like
most startups today, he had little money. Fred Karl bartered his
building design skills to obtain office space to work in. The
local
people called the new range Fred was designing his "Stove Project."
What
kept his spirit going was the encouragement from the town-support
he knew he wouldn't get if he moved to a big city. That little "Stove
Project" eventually became the big business of Viking Range. Even
in corporate America, the
entrepreneurial spirit must remain alive. That spirit can solve the
toughest of corporate problems, if only we let it. related
Talent Development Resources pages:eccentricity achievement / personal development programs achievement, growth, prosperity resources achievement articles achievement books The Inner Entrepreneur ~ ~ ~ |
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