Most college
students wish to be employed as soon as they graduate. The more daring ones
have a business idea they would love to give a try before thinking of
employment.
Those who dare
go into business, I have bad news for you: Unless you come from a rich
family, raising capital is going to be a problem. Many dreams go unfulfilled
because there are few venture capitalists and angel investors with millions to
throw around.
If you
are business-minded, you should start thinking of ways to raise capital.
You have no collateral, so banks are mostly out of bounds. Most grants and
money from philanthropists is hard to access because of gate-keepers. Friends
and family will probably think your idea is too idiotic to give much thought.
But if you
believe in your idea(s), nothing should stop you. Focus on
gaining business knowledge. Read about all the possible sources of
funding and requirements and start working towards fulfilling them.
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Think of
possible partnerships with a friend or a family friend who is amenable and
start working on the idea. Investors prefer tangible and scalable ideas, not
abstract dreams. Write down the idea, have a business plan and raise
whatever little amount you can and start the business.
Think of the
cheaper and affordable ways you can start your business, including saving
for it or getting a job to raise the capital. You can then start implementing
it on phases.
While in
college, you can teach yourself self-discipline: learn to forego that beer, the
expensive shoes, and save for the business. No miracle person will fund
you. You have to get the business off the ground before an investor
can spot you.