An Easier Way for Startups to Reach College Students?
I have very good connections with student groups and student leaders in colleges all across the United States. The logic was: college students tend to be a great demographic for a lot (not all) startups. They are, in general, young, tech-savy (for the most part), educated, and have a wide social circle.
The idea would be to generate buzz and excitement for startups that we work with on various college campuses across America. I won't go in to too much detail but the result would be direct feedback from random samplings of college students, student held promotional events, and a large influx of college users using your product/service.
Please comment, advise, shut me down, whatever. If you don't think this is a good idea: why not? If you think it is a good idea, how much would you pay for it?
6 comments
[ 5.8 ms ] story [ 22.8 ms ] threadBut I do wonder. 1) how do you plan to incentivize students to provide quality feedback?
Would definitely pay money, even a monthly subscription if the students could be like an idea testing community.
As for how much, really can't tell at the moment. I guess it depends on the quality and quantity of feedback
I believe the key to this, however, lies in a good business model that pays the students for their time and input. Many students are strapped on time, but I'd be willing to wager even more are strapped on cash.
Ultimately, my concern at the moment is not whether students would be interested, but whether startups would be interested. What do you think?
Even if you pay ppl $15 to sit for an hour, it won't be worth it to you or the startups involved. Why? Because 70% of that audience would be people who would've come out of interest even if you paid them nothing. The other 30% would be ppl in it solely for the money, texting friends or on Facebook.
I trust you've seen the attention span of students during a lecture - the ratio of interested to distracted is even worse. Money doesn't necessarily trump other factors like basic interest level.