Out of his own interest, a fresh graduate named Li Xiaohui runs a video
game shop on taobao.com. And fully occupied with his job, his parents
help him manage the store.
"I didn`t think too much of starting my own
ffxiv gil business from this shop. But it operates well and earns me 2,000 ($303) to 3,000 yuan ($454) a month at the most," Li said.
On
account of the difficulty in finding a satisfactory job, many college
students are willing to start online shops to get over such period. A
survey launched by social
ff14 gil
survey center of China Youth Daily indicates that 66.9 percent of the
interviewees encourage graduates to keep online stores as starting
enterprises, while 12.3 percent, disagree.
A low starting line
Due to the lack of funds, Ning Meng, a student in Jilin University chose to be a clothing surrogate.
"We send orders to manufacturers and they will deliver clothes to purchasers. We can get the margin in between," Ning said.
"Opening such a shop needs funds, and
FF14 Power leveling
there is always hidden dangers behind it. If other store keepers place a
substantial order, they will have a lower offer. Then it will leave me a
small profit," Ning added.
Have an advantage
A college
student in Shanghai named Liu Heng is a master of online shopping. He
thinks that university students have unparalleled
FFXIV Power leveling advantage in managing such businesses – network resource and abundant time.
"I
learned a lot about business in KAB entrepreneur courses," Liu said.
"Brain storm and search engine will help you solve most of the problems
in starting your own business."
"College students have much
on-line shopping experience, so they are aware of what their peers need.
That`s the advantage they have," Lu Jing, a member in KAB entrepreneur
club in Southwestern University of Finance and Economics told reporters.
Lack of time
Yan
Jingjing, a junior in Beijing Forestry University (BFU) describes her
career as "agony". Yan used to have an online accessory shop, which is
popular
cheap ffxiv gil
among buyers. But numerous curriculums pushed her to deal with the
business at night every day. Finally she shut down the shop for lack of
time.
The investigation displays that 69.7 percent of the
graduates surveyed believe they underestimate the difficulty of running a
shop; 57.8 percent think lack of experience would lead them to legal
prosecution; 53.3 percent feel it would delay studying and 48.3 percent
fear losing confidence in anything else if they fail once.
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