6 Advantages To Starting A Business In College
Considering starting a business while in school? Companies like Dell, Microsoft and hundreds of others started in a dorm room and so can you. Here are several reasons why you should take the leap and take control of your future while in college:


1. Campus Advisory Board – Is there a school of business on your campus? If there is, you will have access to entire advisory departments: finance, management, marketing, accounting, legal and more.  Professors are more than willing to help use their expertise and connections to see a student from their school succeed in the business world.  Start your business and don’t hesitate to ask for help. These PhD’s are often well networked and experienced.

2. Word of Mouth – Word spreads quickly on campus and it will be your cheapest form of marketing.  There is no better endorsement to buy a product or service than having a recommendation from a friend.  It’s almost like hearing “Hey, everyone is going to this party tonight, you have to be there.”  Napster music sharing service started in a college dorm room and spread like wildfire because of the students’ proximity to one another.  Use this to your advantage.

3. Technology - Colleges are a hotbed of technology and people who understand it.  Chances are your school offers WiFi, copy and fax machines, scanners, software, a high tech library, students walk around with cell phones, iPods, and laptops.  You are in one of the most well connected places on earth – take full advantage.  Everything that you need to start your business is right infront of you.  In a real bind? Make friends with the IT department and they will help you out.

4. Campus Resources – Many colleges have amazing alumni networks, incubators, and entrepreneurship clubs set up already.  If they don’t–look into creating a chapter of the Collegiate Entrepreneurs’ Organization on your campus.  The more entrepreneurial people you surround yourself with the more driven and motivated you will become.  Entrepreneurship is a long hard battle, you will need a quality support group.

5. Access to Cheap Labor – Your college or university is full of young people trying to gain new experiences and a little bit of spending money.  Need help with your business? Look no further than other college students.  Many students will do unpaid internship if you make the experience worth their while.  Find other entrepreneurial minded students and pay them a commission based salary or find someone who wants to work part time for an hourly wage.  Need web development done? Ask around campus or post a job with your Career Services Center.

6. Now is the Time – Don’t wait until you have a mortgage and kids to start your business, do it while you have some breathing room attending college.  You could be out partying 24-7 or you could make the sacrafice now.  You might even have the option of moving home after graduation and boostrapping your business from your parents basement.  Tackle the challenge of starting a business while you have a crutch to lean on.

Extracted from http://www.youngupstarts.com/
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Fail to Plan, Plan To Fail: The Importance of Goal Setting
Goal setting is a powerful tool, whether applied to one’s professional life, personal aspirations or health objectives. In fact, goal setting can make the critical difference between success and failure.
One obvious goal of many may be to simply stick to your diet and/or exericse program in the context of a busy, overscheduled daily routine, but effective goal setting goes far beyond this fairly elementary ambition.
While life may seem out of control at times and that you’re a passenger in life rather than the driver, remind yourselg that YOU hold the greatest power of all – that is the ability to design your own life. You can wake up every morning and decide to exercise, lift your own spirit through positive affirmations, and eat a nutritious breakfast, or you can choose other options that may be detrimental to your emotional and/or physical health. Ultimately, the decision is yours and yours alone.

Here are a few tips to make lifetime commitments through goal setting:

1. Don’t compare yourself with anyone except your self. This is not about winning or losing. This is about making your life better – whatever that means for YOU.

2. Focus on the present – How will you feel after your exercise session today? Will your ability to resist that danish fill you with a sense of accomplishment?

3. Imagine the results – literally. How you picture yourself is often a self fulfilling proficy. Day dream in detail about how you would like to look. Athletes picture themselves performing their event over and over again in ther minds until they finally perfect it. If you see your self as soft, sloppy, weak, tired, or stressed, this may very well become yoru reality for just thinking it. Picture yourself standing tall taking deep breaths, confidently striding forward as you approach life head on.

4. Take small steps – they DO count! It’s impossible to stop smoking, start drinking 64 oz of water, and exerising 5 days a week. Start slowly, one attainable goal at a time. Begin with taking a short walk and slowly work your way up.

5. Be patient – it make take weeks before you start noticing you have more energy, your clothes are fitting more loosely and you aren’t getting short of breath walking up a flight of steps. When you do recognize these signs of achievement, revel in the glory.

6. Put holes in your excuses. When you find your self coming up with an excuse not to exercise, go back to the reasons why you want to exericse in the first place. Put a stop to the negative self talk and obstacle formation. Grab that mental sledge hammer and break through!

7. Journal – If you do just one thing related to goal seetting, begin journaling. Tracking your progress can help you stay focused. Write down not only your goals, but what exercises you did, how you are feeling and what small changes you are noticing in your everyday life like, not being short of breath or lifting something with ease, or having less pain. Writing your goals in front of your journal would help you to review them daily.

http://ezinearticles.com/?Fail-to-Plan,-Plan-To-Fail:-The-Importance-of-Goal-Setting&id=121572