Second, it can be commercialized with the help of some teachers' projects in schools. These are usually technical. As long as you find a project with market potential, you can negotiate with the professor. Most professors still want to commercialize their inventions and discoveries.
Third, you can enjoy the preferential policies of the school for entrepreneurial college students. For example, there is a college student science and technology pioneer park in our school, which provides seed money and office with small funds, and is free of water and electricity network fees for one year. In addition, you can get guidance from teachers in a small area. Personally, I think the college student market is a big market with great potential. Study hard and you will find many entrepreneurial opportunities.
Extended data:
1. Make students your customers and they will tweet.
Your friends are your first customers. Living on the university campus, my friends, roommates, classmates and anyone I can talk about the company have become my first supporters. The advantage of making college students customers is that they will spread their voices on social media. They not only bought my hair band.
2. Start the campus representative program.
Many friends are in other universities and want to help Guangpin. Friends become brand representatives, sell to classmates, form clubs and donate money to local hospitals. Then tell friends at other schools. Now, our plan has come into effect in 100 campuses.
3. Use free resources such as tutors.
Whenever I have questions that I don't understand (how to create a business plan, how to create a logo, how to build a website), I will ask professors from different departments for advice. Although I didn't attend their class, they would take time out to help my business just because I am a student.