12 Ways Students Can Help Your Small Business Succeed

by / ⠀Entrepreneurship / January 10, 2014

QUESTION: NAME ONE SMART WAY THAT ENTREPRENEURS CAN LEVERAGE STUDENTS FOR THEIR SMALL BUSINESSES (AS INTERNS, FOCUS GROUPS, ETC.)

Greek Life

1. TAP INTO GREEK LIFE

“Sororities and fraternities are some of the most useful and least tapped into resources for small businesses. If you’re looking to target a young demographic, they’re a relatively easy group to reach and are alway looking for interesting programming and informational speakers — you can share your ideas, get feedback and maybe even find future employees in the process.”

– Alexis Wolfer | Founder/CEO, The Beauty Bean

2. INVEST IN INTERNSHIPS

“If your business lends itself well to short-term help — whether virtual or in person — then internships are the way to go. It’ll also help you get organized with a system you can easily teach an intern each semester. While the student gets hands-on experience and a behind-the-scenes look, you get to recruit new talent and get some support as well.”

– Kelly Azevedo | Founder, She’s Got Systems

3. RECRUIT CAMPUS LIASONS

“I find it hard to have college interns while they have classes at the same time. One way in which we spread the message of our company is through campus liaisons. These individuals are responsible about getting the word out about GBS on their specific campuses. In return, we give them free access to our products and VIP treatment when the speaker booked through GBS comes to their campus.”

– Lawrence Watkins | Founder & CEO, Great Black Speakers

4. MOBILIZE AN “UPVOTING” BRIGADE

“Reaching out and building brand ambassadors on campus can be powerful, but even more so is mobilizing and inspiring them to upvote related content (or your content) on social media. Just a few tweets, stumbles, diggs, votes, etc. can make a difference, so if you’ve put in the effort to make them care about your brand, create a brigade!”

– Derek Flanzraich | CEO and Founder, Greatist

5. VET POTENTIAL HIRES

“Look for interns who are seniors. They’ll be graduating in the spring and can make excellent hires. Think of internships as a vetting process – they’re opportunities to find the best students and make sure they fit well with your culture. Since they will already be working for you, you’ll have a leg up on others who may want to hire them.”

– Bhavin Parikh | CEO, Magoosh Test Prep

6. FOCUS GROUPS AND FEEDBACK

“We’ve had an exceptional group of interns over the summer that we plan to stay in contact with during the fall. Our product is geared towards their demographic and we hope to include them in focus groups on projects we have planned for the fall. Continuing the dialogue with our former interns and giving them honest feedback throughout their time with us makes the relationship mutually beneficial.”

– Caroline Ghosn | Co-Founder and CEO, The Levo League

7. LAUNCH A SAMPLING PROGRAM

“College kids love free stuff, and when they’re all together on campus, it’s much easier to get it into their hands. Get as many college students as possible to try out your product through product sampling. Once they try it and like it, they can become loyal customers. Many of Her Campus’s clients including Crystal Light and Bliss Spa have worked with us for effective campus sampling programs.”

– Stephanie Kaplan | Co-Founder, CEO and Editor-in-Chief, Her Campus Media

8. PROJECTS FOR CLASS CREDIT

“Forget the intern. Instead, hire students who will get class credit for working for you. Rather than have them show up and push paper or do meaningless tasks, you can ask them to do specific investigative research, create a new prototype or tackle a specific problem you don’t have time to solve. You’ll report back to the professor on how well they did, so they can get graded — it’s well worth it.”

– Susan Strayer LaMotte | Founder & Principal Consultant, exaqueo

9. PARTNER WITH CAREER SERVICES

“Lots of universities have schools and departments that have a career service organization that forwards their top talent to selected companies. A strategy we use is to make friends with these career service representatives and show them our culture through an office tour and cupcakes (we have a cupcake shop below!). This gets the recruiter talking about us more with their students.”

– Kenny Nguyen | Founder/CEO, Big Fish Presentations

10. UTILIZE THEIR THOUGHT PROCESSES

“Utilize as much free or cheap labor from the local colleges as you can. That demographic holds a lot of purchasing power, so take advantage of their thought processes to monetize your business. Remember that you may be older than the demographic you’re selling to.”

– Jordan Guernsey | Founder, Molding Box

11. HIRE STUDENT COPYWRITERS

“Many small businesses would benefit from maintaining more frequent blog posts, article submissions and other content writing if they could afford it. Undoubtedly, there is a student out there who is passionate and enthusiastic about your business and can produce quality content at an affordable rate. Their work will translate into real revenue especially for businesses that rely on search traffic.”

– Christopher Kelly | Co-Founder, Principal, Convene

12. PARTICIPATE IN PHILANTHROPY

“We all want a chance to give back, but it’s tough to invest time in philanthropy projects when you’re running a company. But students are often passionate about causes, making it easy to partner with someone who has more time to devote to planning but needs the resources you can provide. Find a student whose passions match your own and you can implement the philanthropy program you want.”

– Thursday Bram | Consultant, Hyper Modern Consulting

 

The Young Entrepreneur Council (YEC) is an invite-only organization comprised of the world’s most promising young entrepreneurs. In partnership with Citi, YEC recently launched StartupCollective, a free virtual mentorship program that helps millions of entrepreneurs start and grow businesses.

Image Credit: Shutterstock.com

About The Author

Matt Wilson

Matt Wilson is Co-Founder of Under30Experiences, a travel company for young people ages 21-35. He is the original Co-founder of Under30CEO (Acquired 2016). Matt is the Host of the Live Different Podcast and has 50+ Five Star iTunes Ratings on Health, Fitness, Business and Travel. He brings a unique, uncensored approach to his interviews and writing. His work is published on Under30CEO.com, Forbes, Inc. Magazine, Huffington Post, Reuters, and many others. Matt hosts yoga and fitness retreats in his free time and buys all his food from an organic farm in the jungle of Costa Rica where he lives. He is a shareholder of the Green Bay Packers.

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