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expatreneurship

the act of pursuing small business ownership in a foreign country

This guy's as American as they come but has started multi-million dollar companies in Vietnam, Canada and Nicaragua. He's pretty much the Michael Jordan of expatreneurship.

by TheExpatreneur December 29, 2015

2πŸ‘ 1πŸ‘Ž


corner boys

Boys growing up in urban areas whose circumstances compel them to sell drugs on the corners.

Michael, Namond, Duquan and Randy are the main four corner boys portrayed with devastating brilliance by in season four of The Wire

by TheExpatreneur January 19, 2015

58πŸ‘ 7πŸ‘Ž


bro rep

Often used in Crossfit, a 'bro rep' refers to the situation where a friendly scorer allows for a questionable repetition to count instead of giving a 'no rep'.

He definitely didn't go low enough on the last squat but I could tell he was tired so I gave him a 'bro rep'.

In the official competitions, 'bro reps' aren't in play.

by TheExpatreneur May 25, 2014

15πŸ‘ 1πŸ‘Ž


Woke business strategy

Business strategy that brands itself in some way, shape or form as resisting Trump and/or GOP policies.

Adidas and Gucci, though not necessarily by choice, have now adopted a type of woke business strategy, following companies like Dicks' Sporting Goods (who quit selling handguns in response to school shootings) and Nike (who featured controversial societal critic, Colin Kapernick.

by TheExpatreneur February 7, 2019

5πŸ‘ 1πŸ‘Ž


box

Slang for a crossfit gym.

I've been to boxes all over the world and this my favorite box.

That box is way too crowded. I'd just as soon go to a globo gym.

by TheExpatreneur May 25, 2014

11πŸ‘ 11πŸ‘Ž


Ganga-preneur

A marijuana enthusiast looking to make a dollar and a cent in the industry.

My buddy just moved to Denver to open his own shop. He knows pot from a business side and the scientific side. He's a natural Ganga-preneur

by TheExpatreneur August 14, 2014

3πŸ‘ 1πŸ‘Ž


secret sauce

the competitive advantage of any business that you'd rather not bullhorn to every Tom, Dick and Harry, usually because it's not in sync with your company's mission statement

TOMS Shoes loves talking about their 1+1 Model of giving, but the real secret sauce to their early success was the way they exploited (err utilized) thousands of free college-age interns who wanted TOMS on their resume.

by TheExpatreneur December 29, 2015

12πŸ‘ 3πŸ‘Ž