Famous Entrepreneurs
Business Vocab
Business "Failures"
Fun Facts
100

This company was founded in a garage in Los Altos, California and was the first company to reach $1 Trillion in brand value. Who's garage was this?

Steve Jobs

100

This term refers to a short and persuasive explanation of your business idea, usually delivered in under a minute.

Elevator Pitch

100
A competitor to the emerging company Netflix turned down the offer to buy them out for $50 million. They eventually filed for bankruptcy in 2010

Blockbuster

100

The word Entrepreneur comes from this language, meaning "to undertake"

French

200

This person, who is known as the "Queen of Talk Shows" grew up in poverty in Mississippi

Oprah Winfrey

200

This term is used when a company has the exclusive possession or control of supply or trade in a service/commodity

Monopoly

200

This company took a risk and created a new version of their popular soft drink in 1985. They had to pull their "ground breaking" product from shelves in 79 days.

Which company was it + what was the product called?

New Coke - Coca Cola

200

This $5 billion headquarters was considered to be a waste of money until productivity rates for this company rapidly boosted.

Apple Park

300

This Japanese author and entrepreneur founded a lifestyle brand and wrote the bestseller "The Life-Changing Magic of Tidying Up" They even have their own Netflix series series and their last name has become a verb to some people.

Marie Kondo

300

The job title of the department of a business or organization that deals with the hiring, administration, and training of personnel

Human Resources

300

This Entrepreneur and inventor famously failed in 1000 experiments before perfecting the product that would change the world

Thomas Edison

300

In the United States, approximately how many how many new businesses are founded annually?

500,000

400

This famous Entrepreneur co-founded a company called X.com, which later merged and turned into PayPal.

Elon Musk

400

What word is being described:
Using borrowed capital or resources to increase the potential return of an investment

Leverage

400

In 1982, James Burke, the CEO of this Billion Dollar Company famously pulled 31 million bottles of Tylenol worldwide in response to the Chicago Tylenol Murders, which killed 7 people.

Johnson & Johnson

400

The average age of successful startup founders

45

500

This person's real identity and name is a mystery. All we know is that they are worth $130 billion. What is the pseudonym of this person? 

Satoshi Nakamoto

500

What does "MVP" stand for in design production?

Minimal Viable Product

500

This camera company, who even has a verb named after them, failed due to their reluctance to move into the digital age and stuck with their film photography

Kodak

500

This percentage of entrepreneurs in the US have no degree or higher education

5%

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