CAS Blog (9/20/22)
CAS Blog (9/20/22)
Learning Outcome 2: Demonstrate that challenges have been undertaken, developing new skills in the process.
This summer some of my close friends and I decided to begin a self-owned business. We dubbed this new endeavor "WATERWORX" and it was a pressure washing service for local driveways and patios in the surrounding neighborhoods. We planned to use our individual power washing machines to tackle the different neighborhoods that we lived in and compile the profits. At first, it was a rocky start, but we managed to begin by doing some jobs for our friend's houses. We learned how to power wash by learning from the Internet and even practiced on our own driveways. However, as it turns out, it is very difficult to find interest in a teenage self-owned power washing business that was relatively new. We didn't have enough outreach to get many customers, and many of my friends wanted to call it quits and end the business before it even got its legs.
But I suggested that we refocus on the outreach aspect of the business. We began to look at creating our own website and building up our social media presence on apps such as Instagram and Facebook. I reached out to potential customers and advertised our services. We also designed posters on a computer program to put up and business cards to hand out. Our efforts worked, and we slowly gained interested people. Having a self-owned business was something I wasn't planning on doing before the summer, and it was really interesting to see what skills I learned as a result of trying something new. I most definitely learned more strategies for marketing, designing posters to appeal to audiences, reaching out to potential clients, and more. Although we considered ending the business during the start-up phase due to no interest, I'm so glad we decided to push ourselves to move on and develop new skills in the process.
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