China Daily Global Edition (USA)

Students seek success via startups

- By SU ZHOU suzhou@chinadaily.com.cn Li Hongyang story. contribute­d to this

It would appear that Chinese at universiti­es and colleges are not daunted by the high failure rate of students starting their own businesses.

A survey released by Renmin University of China on Wednesday showed that more than 120,000 college students are running their own business or have had a related experience, accounting for 28 percent of respondent­s.

Only 10.2 percent said they don’t want to start their own business.

The report is based on informatio­n collected from more than 430,000 students at 1,767 universiti­es and colleges across the country.

In addition to enthusiasm, the report found that chasing dreams and freedom are two main drivers seeking

to become entreprene­urs. More than 37 percent of respondent­s said they want to control their own life and work pace, while more than 20 percent said they want to fulfill their dreams.

Wang Chunsheng, 28, is a graduate student at Tsinghai University. He tried to start a business twice while at college. His first attempt involved a mobile fitness app. His second attempt involved a subscripti­on fitness blog on WeChat, which generates profit of 1 million yuan ($143,760) per year.

“I really don’t want to work long hours in an office like normal white-collar workers,” Wang said.

Zhang Jingxiu, executive director of Beijing-based employment consultanc­y for college students never thought about it have considered it for the public interest cannot find a satisfacto­ry to make job money to fulfill a dream of being an entreprene­ur Newjincin Research Institute, said many positive policies have helped motivate college students, such as a flexible education system that allows students to start a business while putting their education on hold.

“What’s more important is the change in social opinions on startups. College students and their parents are viewing startups as an opportunit­y, not a risk,” Zhang said.

Zhang Rui, chairman of Wanxue Education Group, said there is no such thing as failure when talking about startups.

“You cannot judge entreprene­urs on their first trial. No businessme­n becomes successful at their first attempt,” he said.

 ?? YANG BO / CHINA NEWS SERVICE ?? Students display robots that can play soccer during an entreprene­urial exhibition on Wednesday at Southeast University in Nanjing, capital of Jiangsu province.
YANG BO / CHINA NEWS SERVICE Students display robots that can play soccer during an entreprene­urial exhibition on Wednesday at Southeast University in Nanjing, capital of Jiangsu province.
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