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Friday, June 19, 2015
People Who Started a Business Over 40 - Business Insider
Photo by AP
http://www.businessinsider.com/people-who-became-successful-after-age-40-2014-9
By Business Insider
Many people I have run into over the age of 40 start the conversation talking about retirement. They count the years they have left, do some elaborate calculation on how much money they have and start the rotting process. Ray Kroc said this statement “Either you are green and growing or ripening to rot!” Ray Kroc was the founder of McDonald’s and guess how old he was when he started…52!
I took that to heart when I worked there. I also started my business when I was in my 40's. Here are a few people who also started their business when they were over 40.
Stan Lee created his first hit comic title, "The Fantastic Four," just shy of his 39th birthday. In the next few years, he created the legendary Marvel Universe, whose characters like Spider-Man and the X-Men became American cultural icons.
Getty Images
Gary Heavin was 40 when he opened the first Curves fitness center in 1992, which ended up becoming one of the fastest-growing franchises of the '90s.
Frederick M. Brown/Getty
Vera Wang was a figure skater and journalist before entering the fashion industry at age 40. Today she's one of the world's premier women's designers.
Photo by Charles Sykes/Invision/AP
Samuel Jackson has been a Hollywood staple for years now, but he'd had only bit parts before landing an award-winning role at age 43 in Spike Lee's film "Jungle Fever" in 1991.
Frazer Harrison/Getty
Henry Ford was 45 when he created the revolutionary Model T car.
AP Photo
Jack Weil was 45 when he founded what became the most popular cowboy-wear brand, Rockmount Ranch Wear. He remained its CEO until he died at the ripe old age of 107 in 2008.
Rick Wilking/Reuters
Rodney Dangerfield is remembered as a legendary comedian, but he didn't catch a break until he made a hit appearance on "The Ed Sullivan Show" at age 46.
YouTube/The Ed Sullivan Show
Momofuku Ando cemented his spot in junk food history when he invented instant ramen at age 48 in 1958.
Flickr/ Ogiyoshishan
Charles Darwin spent most of his life as a naturalist who kept to himself, but at age 50 his "On the Origin of Species" changed the scientific community forever in 1859.
AP Photo, File
Julia Child worked in advertising and media before writing her first cookbook when she was 50, launching her career as a celebrity chef.
Jon Chase/AP
Jack Cover worked as a scientist for institutions like NASA and IBM before he became a successful entrepreneur at 50 for inventing the Taser gun.
Christopher Furlong/Getty
Tim and Nina Zagat were both 51-year-old lawyers when they published their first collection of restaurant reviews under the Zagat name, which eventually became a mark of culinary authority.
Joe Corrigan/Getty
Ray Kroc spent his career as a milkshake device salesman before buying McDonald's at age 52 in 1954. He grew it into the world's biggest fast-food franchise.
AP Photo
Taikichiro Mori was an academic who became a real estate investor at age 51 when he founded Mori Building Company. His brilliant investments made him the richest man in the world in 1992, when he had a net worth of $13 billion.
Katsumi Kasahara/AP
Wally Blume had a long career in the dairy business before starting his own ice cream company, Denali Flavors, at age 57 in 1995. The company reported revenue of $80 million in 2009.
Flickr/Richard Dalton
Laura Ingalls Wilder spent her later years writing semi-autobiographical stories using her educated daughter Rose as an editor. She published the first in the "Little House" books at age 65 in 1932. They soon became children's literary classics, and the basis for TV show "Little House on the Prairie."
Wikimedia Commons/Public Domain
Harland Sanders, better known as Colonel Sanders, was 62 when he franchised Kentucky Fried Chicken in 1952, which he would sell for $2 million 12 years later.
AP Photo
Anna Mary Robertson Moses, better known as Grandma Moses, began her prolific painting career at 78. In 2006, one of her paintings sold for $1.2 million.
Arthur Z. Brooks/AP
Harry Bernstein spent a long life writing in obscurity, achieving notoriety at long last at age 96 for his 2007 memoir "The Invisible Wall: A Love Story That Broke Barriers."
Mel Evans/AP
V
isit www.honorservicesoffice.com to start your business today!
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