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  • Added for You - College Plus Entrepreneur Equals Less TIME

    What Are You Waiting For?
    How many times have you had a thought about something but then not acted on it? It might be a concern you had or a great new approach that inspired you. Take a moment or two to list a few for yourself....I really should talk to him about... We should expand our business in... Why did he make that decision? It doesn't make sense to me... Why don't we process these invoices in a different way... Wouldn't it be great if... If we did it this way it would be much more efficient/reliable/effective Why do we need
    nd of the world when my grades dropped a few points here and there, especially knowing that the national average age that a millionaire received in college was a C. So when my straight A’s turned into A’s, B’s, and one C, I wasn’t fazed. I knew that my slightly lower grade was just a tradeoff for being a devoted entrepreneur in college.

    I’m not sure if I ever fully got back o

    Is Your Business Phone Number Honest?
    Your business is listed in the Yellow Pages whether you buy an ad or not. Your business is listed in the Yellow Book and the other phone books, too, no purchase necessary. Yup, free listings in the yellow pages. Provided, you have a business line, in the name of your business, at the phone company. Advertising your home number as a "business" can only lead to confusion and a problem when the phone company finds out.It's as bad for your company image as having an eMail account with a free service. Spend the bucks for a real business number and a real Internet doma
    Time…oh… time… how I wish that I had more of you. Don’t you wish that you had more time, too? The one thing that all students definitely lack is, of course, time. We have to make time for homework…time for our social lives…time for our girlfriends…time for those study groups…time for those nasty part-time jobs that we all hate… And on top of all that we have to make time for building our companies. Almost seems impossible, right? Well it isn’t as long as you manage your time well. I never really did, but I at least started to at some point.

    With the proper time management, any student entrepreneur can balance their school work with their business work. Sure it takes a lot of discipline and devotion but I’m confident that it can be done with the proper desire.

    When I first started my company in my sophomore year of college, I found myself in complete disarray when it came to starting a business and concentrating on my school work. There would be days when I left class to go to business meetings and days when I decided to skip classes to work on something to do with…take a guess….my business.

    I saw myself beginning to drift more away from school as most of my hours were being spent working on my business. I was an entrepreneur torn between two worlds. World #1 trying to be a normal college student and maintain my high GPA and World #2 as a young budding entrepreneur trying to take over the world. Let me tell you, it wasn’t easy and my grades inevitably suffered.

    I knew that is wasn’t the end of the world when my grades dropped a few points here and there, especially knowing that the national average age that a millionaire received in college was a C. So when my straight A’s turned into A’s, B’s, and one C, I wasn’t fazed. I knew that my slightly lower grade was just a tradeoff for being a devoted entrepreneur in college.

    I’m not sure if I ever fully got back o

    Business Plan Tips - Advice from a VC Gatekeeper
    Just as manuscripts are screened by assistants before reaching an editor, business plans submitted to financial institutions and venture capitalists are almost always screened by someone like me, a professional analyst who gets paid to "manage risk," which is MBA-speak for finding legitimate reasons not to fund your project. In this article I provide tips on getting your business plan past me and on to the people who sign checks. That's easier said than done, as research consistently shows that only a tiny fraction of business plans ever result in financing.Before I
    ng our companies. Almost seems impossible, right? Well it isn’t as long as you manage your time well. I never really did, but I at least started to at some point.

    With the proper time management, any student entrepreneur can balance their school work with their business work. Sure it takes a lot of discipline and devotion but I’m confident that it can be done with the proper desire.

    When I first started my company in my sophomore year of college, I found myself in complete disarray when it came to starting a business and concentrating on my school work. There would be days when I left class to go to business meetings and days when I decided to skip classes to work on something to do with…take a guess….my business.

    I saw myself beginning to drift more away from school as most of my hours were being spent working on my business. I was an entrepreneur torn between two worlds. World #1 trying to be a normal college student and maintain my high GPA and World #2 as a young budding entrepreneur trying to take over the world. Let me tell you, it wasn’t easy and my grades inevitably suffered.

    I knew that is wasn’t the end of the world when my grades dropped a few points here and there, especially knowing that the national average age that a millionaire received in college was a C. So when my straight A’s turned into A’s, B’s, and one C, I wasn’t fazed. I knew that my slightly lower grade was just a tradeoff for being a devoted entrepreneur in college.

    I’m not sure if I ever fully got back o

    What is Experience Anyway?
    I learned in first grade that one plus one equals two. But, that's not the right equation when counting work experience. We often think we're building experience to help us get ahead. In reality, we're passing time. Ten years working like a cloned Bill Murray in Groundhog Day is not ten years worth of experience. Doing the same thing again and again yields an experience formula more like: ten times one equals one.<
    desire.

    When I first started my company in my sophomore year of college, I found myself in complete disarray when it came to starting a business and concentrating on my school work. There would be days when I left class to go to business meetings and days when I decided to skip classes to work on something to do with…take a guess….my business.

    I saw myself beginning to drift more away from school as most of my hours were being spent working on my business. I was an entrepreneur torn between two worlds. World #1 trying to be a normal college student and maintain my high GPA and World #2 as a young budding entrepreneur trying to take over the world. Let me tell you, it wasn’t easy and my grades inevitably suffered.

    I knew that is wasn’t the end of the world when my grades dropped a few points here and there, especially knowing that the national average age that a millionaire received in college was a C. So when my straight A’s turned into A’s, B’s, and one C, I wasn’t fazed. I knew that my slightly lower grade was just a tradeoff for being a devoted entrepreneur in college.

    I’m not sure if I ever fully got back o

    Venture Capital
    Venture capital represents financial investment in a highly risky proposition in the hope of earning a high rate of return. While the concept of venture capital is perhaps as old as the human race, the practice of venture capitalism has remained somewhat fragmented and individualized through its long history. Only in the last four decades or so has the field of venture capital acquired a certain coalescence, maturity and sophistication, particularly in the US.The origin of venture capital in its modern form may be traced to General Doriot, who established the America
    drift more away from school as most of my hours were being spent working on my business. I was an entrepreneur torn between two worlds. World #1 trying to be a normal college student and maintain my high GPA and World #2 as a young budding entrepreneur trying to take over the world. Let me tell you, it wasn’t easy and my grades inevitably suffered.

    I knew that is wasn’t the end of the world when my grades dropped a few points here and there, especially knowing that the national average age that a millionaire received in college was a C. So when my straight A’s turned into A’s, B’s, and one C, I wasn’t fazed. I knew that my slightly lower grade was just a tradeoff for being a devoted entrepreneur in college.

    I’m not sure if I ever fully got back o

    Tie Tacks - Keeping Suits Nifty One Necktie at a Time
    Italian pinstripe designer suits, a button-down collar, and French cuffs do not a complete outfit make. They need something more, and this something is called a tie tack. A necktie without a tie tack is like potato chips without potatoes. The tie tack improves not only the outfit's form, but also its function. Tale of the Tie Tack Simply put, a tie tack is a short pin with an embellished head. Chains or snaps connect the tack to shirts. Three types of tie tacks exist. The tie bar clips a necktie to a shirt's fold. On the other hand, the tie pin connects
    nd of the world when my grades dropped a few points here and there, especially knowing that the national average age that a millionaire received in college was a C. So when my straight A’s turned into A’s, B’s, and one C, I wasn’t fazed. I knew that my slightly lower grade was just a tradeoff for being a devoted entrepreneur in college.

    I’m not sure if I ever fully got back on track with my school work after I started my company in 2004. Writing down business ideas just became more important that reading poetry and studying for exams. About the only classes that I was able to stay interest in were my business classes, now they were actually fun (but I still didn’t like doing the homework).

    Looking back at my college years (well I graduated 2 months ago, so I won’t have to look too far) I definitely could’ve managed my time better. But I’d have to say that my last few semesters of college I was able to at least get halfway back on track as I started to manage my time better between business and school work.

    I began doing my school work days and sometimes weeks in advance. So for instance, I would check the syllabus for a class and see what’s due and when. Then between classes (I usually had 3 hour breaks here and there), I would spend my time doing homework way in advance so that I wouldn’t have to cram it all on the night before it was due.

    Doing this allowed me to spend my nights and weekends working on my business. I tried to schedule my business meetings for the days that I actually had off of school (makes sense, right?), usually Thursdays – Sundays, instead of blowing class for a meeting.

    On the weekends during the day I would spend my time brainstorming, making calls, making plans, and implementing ideas. Then, of course, like any college student I would go out at night and have a blast. When I went out I not only partied hard, but I made sure to netwo

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