30 Mayıs 2012 Çarşamba

Scott Harrison: Why Charity Shouldn't Be About Guilt

To contact us Click HERE

Several years ago, Scott Harrison had the sudden realization that his life up to that point had been a sham.

This is where Harrison began his story, as he took the stage at the Inc. 500|5000 Conference. Both his personal story and the story of what his non-profit organization charity:water does (bring clean water to the developing world) was one of the most moving talks of the conference so far and had many entrepreneurs in the audience tearful.

That feeling he described, he told the room, was the result of spending years working in the New York City club scene as a promoter.

"Budweiser paid me $2,000 a month to drink Bud," he said. "Bacardi, the same. I was paid to drink. I did drugs and gambled. I realized on that beach that I was the most emotionally, spiritually, and morally bankrupt person I knew."

What'd he do about it?

"While I was hungover during the day, I started reading the Bible. That was an interesting push and pull," he said, laughing.

It was through this spiritual awaking that Harrison decided to clean up his act. He signed up to volunteer with doctors going to Africa to provide free surgeries to underprivileged people with deformities . A year into this volunteering journey, he found the one underlying issue for so many of these deformities that he could do something about: dirty water. This was the birth of charity:water.

Harrison's visual presentation showed graphic, moving images of the devastation caused by dirty, disease-filled water. Children drinking muddy water from bottles. Mothers struggling to carry huge jugs of water. And even though the message was serious, Harrison had a knack for lightening his serious message with a joke here and there.

From an entrepreneurial standpoint, he had an early guiding principle.

"I knew from the beginning that this couldn't be about guilt. You can't guilt people to give," he said. "It had to be about opportunity. I had to find a way to get real people, selfish people like me, to invest in this cause."

Harrison revealed to the crowd the three things he set out to do with this charity--all of which, he says, most charities lack.

1. Find a way to give 100 percent of the profits to the actual cause.

2. Proof: Make it completely transparent where the money goes.

3. Build a brand.

Today, having met those three objectives, the organization has funded 4,200 water projects with over $40 million in donations. He's convinced not only everyday people to donate money, but huge brands like Saks Fifth Avenue to help out in some way. For more information about how you can donate (which Harrison encouraged the crowd to do), check out their website.

Source: http://www.inc.com/staff-blog/scott-harrison-why-charity-shouldnt-be-about-guilt-.html

ECLIPSYS EASTMAN KODAK CO EARTHLINK DST SYSTEMS

Starting up Young? Don't Drop Out

To contact us Click HERE

Want to be the next Mark Zuckerberg? Here's one way you shouldn't follow in his footsteps, writes venture capitalist Brad Feld.

College is generally considered a time to expand your horizons, learn to live on your own, have a ton of fun, and even, perhaps, learn a little something. But are your undergraduate years also the best time to getting started on building a business?

The counter-arguments to this idea seem obvious. Students are generally short of money and have no lack of other demands on their time (though, let's be honest, plenty of college kids aren't exactly getting up at the crack of dawn to hit the books or spending every waking hour working). Classes aren't generally directly relevant to entrepreneurship. But at least one expert on starting businesses feels the case for beginning your start-up life in college outweighs the downsides.

Writing on his blog recently, venture capitalist Brad Feld claimed your years getting a degree are the perfect time to start experimenting with starting a business. Why? He quotes a line he heard from a mentor-in-residence at UM Tech Transfer:

"College is like a sandbox if you are an entrepreneur," he writes. "Falling down doesn't hurt much."

This thinking takes the initial objection to college kids starting businesses—that they don’t have many resources—and turns it on its head. Students might not be swimming in cash or connections, but the very fact that they aren’t established yet in full lives with mortgages, kids and car payments is actually a huge advantage, according to Feld, who reflected on the sandbox analogy in his post:

This made me think of a brilliant phrase from Alex White, the CEO of Next Big Sound, in his TechStars Demo Day pitch. I can't remember where in the presentation it was but Jason reminded me that one of Alex's great moments was when he said something like "We don't need to raise much money because we are cheap to keep alive."

Feld also notes that this very sense of not being weighed down with much in the way of responsibilities or expectations is great for creativity and the willingness to fail:

The level of enthusiasm and optimism among the people we met with was phenomenal. Their willingness and interest in learning and trying new stuff was apparent. And their understanding that plenty of things wouldn’t work, but they wouldn’t learn if they didn't try, was front and center.

College for many (although by no means all) of us is a privileged, low-expense time when parents help out with feeding and housing us and our lifestyle expectations are modest. Why not take advantage of the time and freedom that buys you to make some of the initial mistakes and learn some of the valuable lessons entailed in becoming an entrepreneur?

Feld obviously isn't the only member of the start-up community encouraging young people to get their hands dirty early. PayPal co-founder Peter Thiel made a lot of waves earlier this year with his 20 Under 20 program, encouraging students to drop out of school to start businesses with $100,000 he'd invested in their ideas. But Feld is perhaps more unusual in not calling college a waste of time for entrepreneur hopefuls, but essentially a great practice ground for them to hone their skills while they combine study and business.

What do you think, is college a great time to start experimenting with entrepreneurship (check out our Coolest College Start-ups package for inspiration!), or should you just be studying instead?



Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/inc/channel/start-up/~3/eLzfOtwjmC4/dont-drop-out-of-college-a-vc-advises.html

QIMONDA posted business economy

King Kooker 2607 Outdoor Chef's Smoker/Oven/Stove

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Ducane 31731101 Affinity 3100 Propane Grill, Black

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InFocus IN1102 Ultra Mobile Widescreen DLP Projector, 2.75 lbs, WXGA, 2200 Lumens

To contact us Click HERE


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26 Mayıs 2012 Cumartesi

Glulam Hammer Truss

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* Congratulations to Michelle Stevens who correctly answered the question posed in last week's post. In case you missed it, the photo was of a roof pitch/dormer template. See below for another quiz this week.
Below are photos of truss assembly taken in our finishing department earlier this week. This truss is for a church and is best described as a hammer truss, although it's design differs slightly from a traditional hammer truss.
In these photos, our finishing team is assembling the truss with concealed connections. The bottom photo is a detail of one of those connections. When complete, the bolts will be covered with a wood plug, ensuring that all hardware is hidden.
I'll send a Una-Lam polo shirt to the person who comes closest to (without going over) the number of plugs needed for this entire project. Have your guesses in by 1700 EST on Monday, January 23. You can respond to this post, guess on Facebook or Google+, or RT your guess on Twitter. Please limit yourself to one guess, and Una-Lam employees (including contractors), their family members, and previous winners aren't eligible. 
Good Luck!


Would you like a tour?

To contact us Click HERE
First off, the correct answer to last week's trivia question was 6656 total plugs. That breaks down to 5592 shop installed plugs and 1064 field installed ones. No one ventured a guess this time, so I'm going to think of a slightly easier trivia question for a future week. Stay tuned!


This week, I wanted to mention that we always welcome visitors to our plant and I'm happy to give tours. If you're going to be in our area, give me a call at 607-369-9341 to schedule a visit.


If you're far away, you can always check out our virtual tour that we posted on this blog a while back. I look forward to hearing from you soon.



Why choose glulam?

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I recently asked several co-workers for their thoughts on choosing glulam for building projects. Below is a great answer from Lorraine Bryden-Miller, our CFO, who not only has nearly 40 years of experience with our team but she has installed our glulam in her own home. In fact, her sunroom is featured on our website and in our brochure.
Lorraine's sunroom
Lorraine Bryden-Miller, Una-Lam CFO
Lorraine says, "When people step into my sunroom they are taken aback by the beauty of the laminated beams and wood decking. They get a welcoming, inviting, and warm feeling entering the room. Laminated beams bring a room to life and give it character with the soft look of wood. It takes the ordinary out of a room and brings it alive with unspoken beauty."

About the installation Lorraine continues, "One thing that I was impressed with is how quickly and easily the laminated beams were constructed in place. Each beam was labeled and drilled for unexposed hardware, making the placement of each uneventful and easy."

Thank you, Lorraine. I couldn't have said it better myself.

Glulam Hammer Truss (continued)

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Earlier, I blogged about the hammer trusses we were assembling for a church project. The truss pictured previously was one of the smaller ones on the project. Below is a photo of the peak connection at four intersecting trusses. That's me standing next to the steel connection, giving perspective on its size.

This connection is for the larger trusses on the project, like the one being rotated in our finishing department in the photo below. When assembled in the field. four trusses identical to the one below will connect to the steel shown above.

Photos of Glulam for Dormers

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 You may remember our blog post from Jan 10th about the roof pitch/dormer template. Here are some photos of the actual dormers we manufactured for that project.


There were different types of dormers on this job. The first photo shows a couple of dormers being glued on our forms. The next shows one of those dormers being finished. The last photo is of a different type of dormer in our finishing department.




23 Mayıs 2012 Çarşamba

Glulam Entrance Canopies

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Last week, our team visited a new dorm under construction at SUNY Albany. We provided the glulam for the entrances to the building. This customer also required Forest Stewardship Council (FSC) material. Here are some construction photos we took of the glulam after it was installed.
The glulam and wood decking continues into the lobby of the building.This canopy shelters a side entrance to the building. When complete, the building's dumpsters will be stored under the canopy, below.



More Employee Milestones at Una-Lam

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At the beginning of March, our long time CFO, Lorraine Bryden-Miller, retired. Lorraine had worked with Una-Lam for nearly 40 years. At her retirement party, shown below, we honored her service and she shared some very funny stories about her time with the company.


At around the same time, another employee celebrated a big employment milestone. Tom Dewey, who runs our planer, works in finishing, and loads trucks, has now worked here for over 40 years.


We sincerely thank Tom and Lorraine for working with us and we appreciate the service and dedication of all of our team members.

How Do We Plane Big Glulam Arches?

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At our plant, we have a huge planer that we use on our beams and arches after they have been glued. But, on large arches with deep knees, even this planer isn't wide enough. In those cases, we have to glue and plane the arch and knee separately and then assemble them in our finishing department. On even larger arches, where shipping width is a concern, we would remove the knee block again for final assembly in the field.

The photos below show an arch with a detached knee that we had going through our plant this week.

Two arches without knees just after planing

Arch with unattached knee

Finished arch with knee

Scott Harrison: Why Charity Shouldn't Be About Guilt

To contact us Click HERE

Several years ago, Scott Harrison had the sudden realization that his life up to that point had been a sham.

This is where Harrison began his story, as he took the stage at the Inc. 500|5000 Conference. Both his personal story and the story of what his non-profit organization charity:water does (bring clean water to the developing world) was one of the most moving talks of the conference so far and had many entrepreneurs in the audience tearful.

That feeling he described, he told the room, was the result of spending years working in the New York City club scene as a promoter.

"Budweiser paid me $2,000 a month to drink Bud," he said. "Bacardi, the same. I was paid to drink. I did drugs and gambled. I realized on that beach that I was the most emotionally, spiritually, and morally bankrupt person I knew."

What'd he do about it?

"While I was hungover during the day, I started reading the Bible. That was an interesting push and pull," he said, laughing.

It was through this spiritual awaking that Harrison decided to clean up his act. He signed up to volunteer with doctors going to Africa to provide free surgeries to underprivileged people with deformities . A year into this volunteering journey, he found the one underlying issue for so many of these deformities that he could do something about: dirty water. This was the birth of charity:water.

Harrison's visual presentation showed graphic, moving images of the devastation caused by dirty, disease-filled water. Children drinking muddy water from bottles. Mothers struggling to carry huge jugs of water. And even though the message was serious, Harrison had a knack for lightening his serious message with a joke here and there.

From an entrepreneurial standpoint, he had an early guiding principle.

"I knew from the beginning that this couldn't be about guilt. You can't guilt people to give," he said. "It had to be about opportunity. I had to find a way to get real people, selfish people like me, to invest in this cause."

Harrison revealed to the crowd the three things he set out to do with this charity--all of which, he says, most charities lack.

1. Find a way to give 100 percent of the profits to the actual cause.

2. Proof: Make it completely transparent where the money goes.

3. Build a brand.

Today, having met those three objectives, the organization has funded 4,200 water projects with over $40 million in donations. He's convinced not only everyday people to donate money, but huge brands like Saks Fifth Avenue to help out in some way. For more information about how you can donate (which Harrison encouraged the crowd to do), check out their website.

Source: http://www.inc.com/staff-blog/scott-harrison-why-charity-shouldnt-be-about-guilt-.html

ECLIPSYS EASTMAN KODAK CO EARTHLINK DST SYSTEMS

Starting up Young? Don't Drop Out

To contact us Click HERE

Want to be the next Mark Zuckerberg? Here's one way you shouldn't follow in his footsteps, writes venture capitalist Brad Feld.

College is generally considered a time to expand your horizons, learn to live on your own, have a ton of fun, and even, perhaps, learn a little something. But are your undergraduate years also the best time to getting started on building a business?

The counter-arguments to this idea seem obvious. Students are generally short of money and have no lack of other demands on their time (though, let's be honest, plenty of college kids aren't exactly getting up at the crack of dawn to hit the books or spending every waking hour working). Classes aren't generally directly relevant to entrepreneurship. But at least one expert on starting businesses feels the case for beginning your start-up life in college outweighs the downsides.

Writing on his blog recently, venture capitalist Brad Feld claimed your years getting a degree are the perfect time to start experimenting with starting a business. Why? He quotes a line he heard from a mentor-in-residence at UM Tech Transfer:

"College is like a sandbox if you are an entrepreneur," he writes. "Falling down doesn't hurt much."

This thinking takes the initial objection to college kids starting businesses—that they don’t have many resources—and turns it on its head. Students might not be swimming in cash or connections, but the very fact that they aren’t established yet in full lives with mortgages, kids and car payments is actually a huge advantage, according to Feld, who reflected on the sandbox analogy in his post:

This made me think of a brilliant phrase from Alex White, the CEO of Next Big Sound, in his TechStars Demo Day pitch. I can't remember where in the presentation it was but Jason reminded me that one of Alex's great moments was when he said something like "We don't need to raise much money because we are cheap to keep alive."

Feld also notes that this very sense of not being weighed down with much in the way of responsibilities or expectations is great for creativity and the willingness to fail:

The level of enthusiasm and optimism among the people we met with was phenomenal. Their willingness and interest in learning and trying new stuff was apparent. And their understanding that plenty of things wouldn’t work, but they wouldn’t learn if they didn't try, was front and center.

College for many (although by no means all) of us is a privileged, low-expense time when parents help out with feeding and housing us and our lifestyle expectations are modest. Why not take advantage of the time and freedom that buys you to make some of the initial mistakes and learn some of the valuable lessons entailed in becoming an entrepreneur?

Feld obviously isn't the only member of the start-up community encouraging young people to get their hands dirty early. PayPal co-founder Peter Thiel made a lot of waves earlier this year with his 20 Under 20 program, encouraging students to drop out of school to start businesses with $100,000 he'd invested in their ideas. But Feld is perhaps more unusual in not calling college a waste of time for entrepreneur hopefuls, but essentially a great practice ground for them to hone their skills while they combine study and business.

What do you think, is college a great time to start experimenting with entrepreneurship (check out our Coolest College Start-ups package for inspiration!), or should you just be studying instead?



Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/inc/channel/start-up/~3/eLzfOtwjmC4/dont-drop-out-of-college-a-vc-advises.html

QIMONDA posted business economy

17 Mayıs 2012 Perşembe

Ga guman takes aim at kids getting on a school bus www.privateofficer.com

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HAMPTON, Ga. May 17 2012


Residents in a Clayton County neighborhood said a gunman was aiming for children who were getting on a school bus.

David Dillard said he yelled at a man who was in his neighbor's back yard holding what looked like a BB gun.

"About the time the school bus pulled up to pick up two kids and the guy started aiming the gun," Dillard said.

Dillard said the gunman took off running when he yelled at him, but his nephew went after the man.

As my nephew ran after him, he started shooting at my nephew with a different gun, because he had dropped what turned out to be a rifle," Dillard said.

Clayton County police said a rifle was found in the yard.

Homeowners in the Greystone subdivision in Hampton said they are on edge. They said they want to know why someone was targeting children and why police did not immediately alert the media when it happened Monday morning.

"Yeah, they should have called the media. Really, it should have been posted yesterday. I'm just going to be honest with it," homeowner's association vice president Curtis Berry said.

Channel 2's Tom Jones asked police why the media was not alerted immediately. A spokesperson said he was preparing a news release.

Neighbors said the incident is so serious, police were out in force Tuesday morning, with patrols and a helicopter overhead, to make sure children were safe as they boarded their buses.

Source:WSBTV.com



NYPD officer arrested for aiding heroin trafficking ring www.privateofficer.com

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New York City NY May 17 2012 A wiretap by the federal Drug Enforcement Administration to obtain evidence against a heroin trafficking ring uncovered a surprising suspect, officials said: a New York City police officer.

A heroin dealer, Guy Curtis, asked the officer on one occasion how to get “gunshot residue off your hands,” according to the authorities. And they said the officer, Devon Daniels, was once heard on the wiretap asking Mr. Curtis for help getting “any working revolver.”


Those requests and others were described in a criminal complaint against Officer Daniels that was unsealed on Tuesday in Federal District Court in Brooklyn. Shortly before, Officer Daniels, 30, was arrested on his way to work. The complaint accuses him of regularly misusing his authority to help Mr. Curtis, whom federal officials described as the head of a drug-dealing outfit in Queens known as Pov City.

Officer Daniels obtained a New York Police Department parking placard for Mr. Curtis, according to the criminal complaint, which was signed by Pathik R. Lotwala, an agent of the Drug Enforcement Administration.

On another occasion, the officer, driving a vehicle belonging to Mr. Curtis, hurried to the site where one of Mr. Curtis’s associates was being arrested, the complaint says. After identifying himself as a police officer and talking to the arresting officers on the scene, Officer Daniels reported back to Mr. Curtis what he had learned, the complaint says.

It suggests Officer Daniels was at the drug dealer’s beck and call.

“Yo do them plates real quick,” Mr. Curtis once said in a text message he sent to Officer Daniels, asking him to run several license plates through a national law enforcement database to get information about the owners, the complaint says. “What u need I got it,” Officer Daniels replied, before sending along a name and address of the person to whom one of the cars, a BMW 5 series, was registered, the complaint says.

The complaint does not describe how Officer Daniels, who had worked as a patrol officer in the 111th Precinct in Queens, became acquainted with Mr. Curtis. But a law enforcement official briefed on the case said investigators believed that the officer and Mr. Curtis had been friends for years.

Mr. Curtis pleaded guilty in January to federal charges of conspiring to distribute heroin. His drug operation was concentrated in Jamaica, Queens, and federal authorities have said he was once stabbed in a dispute over drug turf on Jamaica Avenue. On a separate occasion, his top lieutenant shot at a woman believed to be the girlfriend of the man who stabbed Mr. Curtis, the authorities said.

Officer Daniels came to the attention of the Drug Enforcement Administration while investigators in the Wichita, Kan., office were monitoring a dealer there who received his heroin from Mr. Curtis’s crew in New York, according to the criminal complaint.

The agency began wiretapping Mr. Curtis’s phone in April 2011, leading to the discovery of his relationship with Officer Daniels, according to the complaint.

Once, the Wichita dealer wired $3,500 into Officer Daniels’s bank account as payment for heroin, which the officer passed along to Mr. Curtis, the authorities said.

The complaint charges Officer Daniels with misdemeanors of improperly using the law enforcement databases to which he had access as a police officer. In addition to checking license plates, Officer Daniels is accused of searching a database of warrants at Mr. Curtis’s request.

The complaint does not indicate whether the officer obtained a revolver from Mr. Curtis.

Officer Daniels entered no plea at his arraignment in Brooklyn on Tuesday.

Asked by the federal magistrate judge, Roanne Mann, if he understood the accusations, the officer responded, “Yes.”

His parents put up their house in Queens to secure a bond for his release.

The Police Department has suspended him without pay, Paul J. Browne, the department’s chief spokesman, said in an e-mail. He added that Officer Daniels faced “department sanctions, regardless of the outcome of the criminal case, including termination.”

The department’s Internal Affairs Bureau was also involved in the investigation.

Source:NYTimes

Greg David on NY: The absurdly weak living-wage bill

To contact us Click HERE
Greg David - The current version of the living-wage law would only apply to five or six projects a year, so why all the fuss? Proponents want to pass a living-wage law, any living-wage law, and then expand it year by year as broadly as they can.

Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/crainsnewyork/small_business/~3/VbYx9q6p2wY/

MANHATTAN ASSOCIATES LSI LINEAR TECHNOLOGY LEXMARK INTERNATIONAL

Scott Harrison: Why Charity Shouldn't Be About Guilt

To contact us Click HERE

Several years ago, Scott Harrison had the sudden realization that his life up to that point had been a sham.

This is where Harrison began his story, as he took the stage at the Inc. 500|5000 Conference. Both his personal story and the story of what his non-profit organization charity:water does (bring clean water to the developing world) was one of the most moving talks of the conference so far and had many entrepreneurs in the audience tearful.

That feeling he described, he told the room, was the result of spending years working in the New York City club scene as a promoter.

"Budweiser paid me $2,000 a month to drink Bud," he said. "Bacardi, the same. I was paid to drink. I did drugs and gambled. I realized on that beach that I was the most emotionally, spiritually, and morally bankrupt person I knew."

What'd he do about it?

"While I was hungover during the day, I started reading the Bible. That was an interesting push and pull," he said, laughing.

It was through this spiritual awaking that Harrison decided to clean up his act. He signed up to volunteer with doctors going to Africa to provide free surgeries to underprivileged people with deformities . A year into this volunteering journey, he found the one underlying issue for so many of these deformities that he could do something about: dirty water. This was the birth of charity:water.

Harrison's visual presentation showed graphic, moving images of the devastation caused by dirty, disease-filled water. Children drinking muddy water from bottles. Mothers struggling to carry huge jugs of water. And even though the message was serious, Harrison had a knack for lightening his serious message with a joke here and there.

From an entrepreneurial standpoint, he had an early guiding principle.

"I knew from the beginning that this couldn't be about guilt. You can't guilt people to give," he said. "It had to be about opportunity. I had to find a way to get real people, selfish people like me, to invest in this cause."

Harrison revealed to the crowd the three things he set out to do with this charity--all of which, he says, most charities lack.

1. Find a way to give 100 percent of the profits to the actual cause.

2. Proof: Make it completely transparent where the money goes.

3. Build a brand.

Today, having met those three objectives, the organization has funded 4,200 water projects with over $40 million in donations. He's convinced not only everyday people to donate money, but huge brands like Saks Fifth Avenue to help out in some way. For more information about how you can donate (which Harrison encouraged the crowd to do), check out their website.

Source: http://www.inc.com/staff-blog/scott-harrison-why-charity-shouldnt-be-about-guilt-.html

ECLIPSYS EASTMAN KODAK CO EARTHLINK DST SYSTEMS

Starting up Young? Don't Drop Out

To contact us Click HERE

Want to be the next Mark Zuckerberg? Here's one way you shouldn't follow in his footsteps, writes venture capitalist Brad Feld.

College is generally considered a time to expand your horizons, learn to live on your own, have a ton of fun, and even, perhaps, learn a little something. But are your undergraduate years also the best time to getting started on building a business?

The counter-arguments to this idea seem obvious. Students are generally short of money and have no lack of other demands on their time (though, let's be honest, plenty of college kids aren't exactly getting up at the crack of dawn to hit the books or spending every waking hour working). Classes aren't generally directly relevant to entrepreneurship. But at least one expert on starting businesses feels the case for beginning your start-up life in college outweighs the downsides.

Writing on his blog recently, venture capitalist Brad Feld claimed your years getting a degree are the perfect time to start experimenting with starting a business. Why? He quotes a line he heard from a mentor-in-residence at UM Tech Transfer:

"College is like a sandbox if you are an entrepreneur," he writes. "Falling down doesn't hurt much."

This thinking takes the initial objection to college kids starting businesses—that they don’t have many resources—and turns it on its head. Students might not be swimming in cash or connections, but the very fact that they aren’t established yet in full lives with mortgages, kids and car payments is actually a huge advantage, according to Feld, who reflected on the sandbox analogy in his post:

This made me think of a brilliant phrase from Alex White, the CEO of Next Big Sound, in his TechStars Demo Day pitch. I can't remember where in the presentation it was but Jason reminded me that one of Alex's great moments was when he said something like "We don't need to raise much money because we are cheap to keep alive."

Feld also notes that this very sense of not being weighed down with much in the way of responsibilities or expectations is great for creativity and the willingness to fail:

The level of enthusiasm and optimism among the people we met with was phenomenal. Their willingness and interest in learning and trying new stuff was apparent. And their understanding that plenty of things wouldn’t work, but they wouldn’t learn if they didn't try, was front and center.

College for many (although by no means all) of us is a privileged, low-expense time when parents help out with feeding and housing us and our lifestyle expectations are modest. Why not take advantage of the time and freedom that buys you to make some of the initial mistakes and learn some of the valuable lessons entailed in becoming an entrepreneur?

Feld obviously isn't the only member of the start-up community encouraging young people to get their hands dirty early. PayPal co-founder Peter Thiel made a lot of waves earlier this year with his 20 Under 20 program, encouraging students to drop out of school to start businesses with $100,000 he'd invested in their ideas. But Feld is perhaps more unusual in not calling college a waste of time for entrepreneur hopefuls, but essentially a great practice ground for them to hone their skills while they combine study and business.

What do you think, is college a great time to start experimenting with entrepreneurship (check out our Coolest College Start-ups package for inspiration!), or should you just be studying instead?



Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/inc/channel/start-up/~3/eLzfOtwjmC4/dont-drop-out-of-college-a-vc-advises.html

QIMONDA posted business economy