Post Graduate Work
Transitioning your college business into the world beyond graduation
It's April, and you're nearing graduation. Your business
has been your life while in college, but can it extend beyond those
ivy-covered walls? It depends on the business, says David Minor, director of the
Neeley Entrepreneurship Program at the Neeley School of Business at
Texas Christian University in Fort Worth. "A lot of times,
students have businesses in college to make extra money, but
they're not ones they would consider expanding beyond the
college years." Before you burst onto the post-college business scene, spend
time evaluating your product or service, and see if there is a
realistic market outside the college environment. Do you have to
modify your offering in some way to transfer it to the outside
world? Research is key here-while you're still on campus, use
all the resources at your disposal, including entrepreneurship
centers and professors whom you can easily turn to for guidance.
"Try to find a mentor in a [similar] industry," says
Minor. This mentor can help you plan your transition to ensure
you're fully prepared for the change--and that you don't
miss anything. Content Continues Below
The student founders of GlobalComm Suppliers were all about preparation
when it came time to transition their business to the big time.
Dennis P. O'Donnell, 22, and Eric Griffin-Shelley, 23, started
selling high-end cell phones on eBay in 2003. Finding an eager
market and fielding demand from wannabe eBay sellers, they began
wholesaling the phones on a larger scale. They have since moved
almost entirely away from eBay to focus on wholesale. These childhood friends ran the business for two years from
their respective schools (O'Donnell at George-town University
in Washington, DC, and Griffin-Shelley at Villanova University in
Villanova, Pennsylvania), and in early 2004, they devised a plan to
make the business work after graduation. They took extra classes
during the summer to help free up their schedules, hired student
employees to do shipping and other mundane tasks--and kept things
static. "We held off, senior year, from expanding," says
O'Donnell. "We kept our clients happy and made [the
operation] easier to run." And near the end of their senior
year in 2005, as they prepared to make the leap, the pair secured
office space in their current King of Prussia, Pennsylvania,
location so they could immediately start growing. With 2006 sales
projected at $4 million, the strategy worked. It might help to liken your transition to that of a college
athlete turning pro, notes Justin B. Craig, assistant professor of
entrepreneurship at Oregon State University in Corvallis.
You'll be doing everything on your own, so prepare yourself
mentally and financially to leave the safety of the college
infrastructure, including the fun stuff like free broadband access,
phone lines and web space. "The playing field changes--it
really gets competitive," says Craig. "If you take this
on, and [entrepreneurship] is going to be your career, make sure
you step up. You're going into the majors."
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