"Early indications are that frustrated Americans are considering a home-based business in greater numbers than at any time in the nation's history," reports veteran marketing executive
Bert Dean. "And a great deal of the big spike in this entrepreneurial interest is being driven by the astonishingly large and unbelievably swift increases in gas prices on the heels of
Hurricane Katrina."
Dean asserts that more and more middle-class Americans simply cannot afford to drive their automobiles all over the place, seven days a week, as they did prior to this year's rampant oil
price increases. "It was already pretty tough on a lot of people before Katrina hit New Orleans and the Mississippi-Alabama Gulf Coast," according to Mr. Dean. "And even though the
ridiculously high 'at-the-pump' prices are a minor irritation compared to the loss of human life and structural devastation at Katrina's point of impact, this development is, nonetheless,
directly affecting millions upon millions of Americans like never before, as it relates to personal finances."
Home-based businesses can offer struggling consumers a unique opportunity to build substantial part-time incomes with extremely low start-up costs. "And sometimes," adds Mr. Dean," these
home-based business opportunities can lead to excellent, financially rewarding full-time careers."
Dean stresses that, since many business development strategies in a lot of the more lucrative home-based businesses are focused on the Internet and the telephone, obscenely high gasoline
prices have little or no bearing on the cost of doing business. "If your 'commute to the office' consists of a 35-foot walk from the bedroom to the den, you're not going to worry that
much about four-dollar-a-gallon gas," projects Dean.
For a limited time, Bert Dean is offering a free home-based business "personal profile" analysis for anyone interested in finding out which home-based business opportunity might best fit
each individual's background, interests, and lifestyle.