The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Program grows young entreprene­urs

Youth Entreprene­urs after-school classes teach core values.

- By Arlinda Smith Broady abroady@ajc.com

Twins DeAndre and Darion Nelson showed talent for anticipati­ng chart-topping tunes, getting kids onto the dance floor with their deejaying skills and pulling in hundreds of patrons to their teen parties. But what they thought was a successful hobby turned out to be a financial drain.

“We’d have all these people at the parties and be counting all this money at the end,” said DeAndre Nelson. “After we looked at how much we put into it, we realized we were losing money.”

Unable to fit entreprene­ur classes into their schedule, the South Gwinnett High students joined Youth Entreprene­urs, an after-school club that condensed those lessons. The national nonprofit has programs in Gwinnett, DeKalb and Cobb counties as well as Atlanta Public Schools — its largest footprint.

“We’re not a sit-and-get kind of program,” said Ana Rector, area

director for Youth Entreprene­urs East Region. “All learning is hands-on instead of a lecture format.”

In a “Karate Kid” kind of way, some of the 26 activities in the yearlong curriculum don’t at first appear to have much to do with the lesson. But once one of the core values (responsibi­lity, being principled, seeking knowledge, respecting rights and freedoms of others, finding fulfillmen­t in your work, making your own opportunit­ies, exercising sound judgment or creating a win-win focus) is applied to the exercise, a light bulb goes off.

“It’s learning in reverse,” said Rector.

One exercise is a card game called Pit, designed to simulate open-outcry bidding for commoditie­s. YE uses the game to teach students about trade and simple negotiatio­ns, and focuses on the economic principle of comparativ­e advantage.

“We use this to explain the concepts of internatio­nal trade, bidding, teamwork and many other things,” said Rector.

Within a few sessions, the Nelsons realized that they were putting too much money into promotion — eating away at the bottom line.

“We weren’t keeping good records or budgeting,” said Darion Nelson. “We know we have more to learn, but we’re already ahead of people 10 to 15 years older than us.”

By November, their business, Youngest Doin It, was born. Besides promotions, the two have a line of T-shirts they sell online and at parties and a sneaker-customizat­ion service where they turn footwear into works of art.

By cultivatin­g students’ sense of personal responsibi­lity and confidence in their capabiliti­es, the YE curriculum develops skills to run a business. The program is in 188 schools in 16 states. YE has produced more than 30,000 alumni nationwide.

In May, the program hosted its first chance for the top 100 YE high school students across the country to compete for $20,000.

The Nelsons were awarded $2,500 in the Youth Entreprene­urs Summit Big Idea National Competitio­n. Seniors this year, they plan to attend Georgia State majoring in business and marketing.

“We want to keep doing this, but move to the next level with adult concerts and eventually own our own club — a chain of clubs,” said the twins, finishing each other’s thoughts. They plan to train others to take over the youth segment and branch out with franchises.

While their passion and energy seem right in line with others their age, statistics show as a trend youngsters aren’t pursuing self-employment.

Data compiled by the Bureau of Labor Statistics show that self-employment rates are higher for older workers than for younger workers. The self-employment rate among workers ages 65 and older was the highest (15.5 percent) of any age group; in contrast, the rate was much lower for their counterpar­ts ages 16 to 24 (1.9 percent).

But the self-employment rate in general has trended down during the past two decades. In 1994, it was 12.1 percent; by 2015, the rate had declined to 10.1 percent.

To help turn those numbers, Partnershi­p Gwinnett launched the student version of its annual entreprene­ur contest. Earlier this month it awarded two Gwinnett County Public Schools students top honors in the inaugural Amazing Student Entreprene­ur competitio­n.

Mya Swaby, a Brookwood High School junior who owns ContraBand Clothing, earned first place in the competitio­n and was awarded $500. Her apparel company designs and produces “augmented reality” clothing. In augmented reality, real-world objects are “augmented” by computer-generated perceptual informatio­n. For example, virtual-reality goggles might make you feel as if you’re flying when you are actually sitting in a chair.

Akeyjah Charles, a senior at South Gwinnett High School and the owner of The Key Images, earned $300 for second place. Her photograph­y service company specialize­s in portrait, advertisin­g and event photograph­y.

The competitio­n encourages young entreprene­urs in high school and college to introduce a student-only business model.

“It’s more important for a community to grow talent than to attract business to relocate,” said Adam Forrand of Partnershi­p Gwinnett. “Small business is the engine that drives economic developmen­t. Small service providers and product creators of today will be the Home Depot and NCR of tomorrow.”

Cindy Quinlan, a Brookwood High School teacher who serves as the lead for the Entreprene­urship Pathway in Gwinnett County Public Schools, said this opportunit­y demonstrat­es what happens with curiosity, passion and drive.

“It keeps students engaged and shows the relevancy in their school work,” she said. “There’s more rigor and depth in their classes such as language arts as well as the entreprene­urial classes. So that makes one plus one add up to three.”

‘It’s more important for a community to grow talent than to attract business to relocate. Small business is the engine that drives economic developmen­t.’

Adam Forrand with Partnershi­p Gwinnett

 ?? ALYSSA POINTER / ALYSSA.POINTER@AJC.COM ?? Twins Darion and DeAndre Nelson were awarded $2,500 in the Youth Entreprene­urs Summit Big Idea National Competitio­n. The seniors plan to attend Georgia State majoring in business and marketing.
ALYSSA POINTER / ALYSSA.POINTER@AJC.COM Twins Darion and DeAndre Nelson were awarded $2,500 in the Youth Entreprene­urs Summit Big Idea National Competitio­n. The seniors plan to attend Georgia State majoring in business and marketing.

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