Summer Businesses for High School Students? 184
An anonymous reader asks: "A friend and I are going into our final year of high school, and given a variety of factors (the relative paucity of technology jobs for HS students, etc.), would like to start our own business. We'll probably have about $1000 in capital, but (in effect) start out with no other resources other than our own skills (technical and otherwise). We have no constant access to a car, which means on-site tech support is effectively out. We'd like to start something in the technology field (IT, software design, hardware construction - we can solder, web design, etc.), but are open to any suggestions. We'd also like some sort of business we can start this summer, but can continue to maintain. What do you suggest as a business idea for the summer->longer term?"
First you need a good business plan (Score:3, Funny)
Step 1: Steal Underpants
Step 2:
Step 3: Profit!
Rince, and repeat.
Re:First you need a good business plan (Score:4, Funny)
When dealing with stolen underpants, repeated rinsing is most definitely a good idea!
OP: Mow lawns. No joke. (Score:5, Interesting)
Bought a used lawn mower, cleaned it up and sharpened the blade with a file. Estimated cost : 100 total.
Got an electric weed-eater for about $40 new w/ a 100' heavy duty extension cord.
Other crap : eye protection, ear protection, maybe a second mower and trimmer because there are two of you.
Total cost, roughly your entire $1000 budget.
Get started by printing out 1 page flyers to put on people's doors in neighborhoods (nice neighborhoods.) Each place you do will take you about 2 hours max with two people, and will pay $40, and needs to be done every two weeks. You can do like 4 each day tops, and if you do a GOOD job you will have awesome repeat business. Totally a cash business, so no taxes.
It takes some time to build up a client base, but once you two do a good job you will have more business than you can imagine. $800 free and clear every week on a full schedule, possibly more. That's $400 a week per person free and clear, $1600 a month.
It is hot, sweaty, dirty, demeaning work - which is why you will have so many people eager to have you do it for them. If you aren't too proud to sweat you will make more doing this than doing 'computer work' - esp. now.
Maybe you will find something that you can do with your $1000 start up fund, something that will net you $5,000 apiece in three months without access to a car
Re:OP: Mow lawns. No joke. (Score:2, Interesting)
If you live near a college campus (and you get that beater truck), you can buy and sell dorm fridges.
Print up flyers offering beer money ($10-20) for used units as Spring move out time comes. Cruise the alleys in the off-campus student housing area and pick up any you see left out for trash pickup. These can be for spare parts. Rent a garage for $50 a month if you need storage space. Clean them out and check and fix any that you can. Sell them in the Fall for $50-70 each (vs. $100+ new).
Re:OP: Mow lawns. No joke. (Score:5, Informative)
Furthermore, if you want to account for your time in order to impress a potential employer in the future, you had better have your ducks in a row; there are ways of finding out. Otherwise, you will have to lie and say you spent the summer doing nothing. That might be dodgy given the fact that 30-40 people around your neighborhood will testify that they hired you, and hundreds more saw your flyer.
Maybe you are OK with working under the table like the thousands of carpenters and the like who try to get paid in cash, but if you ever want to do work for the federal government either as an employee or contractor, they will probably want to know every job you had for the past 10 years, so you then have the choice of perjuring yourself or admitting that you owe back taxes, neither of which is particularly great news to the employer.
Finally, you should consider that finances are a vital part of running a business; the accounting and tax work you will do will be useful experience for later on when you start the next great software company or whatever you end up in.
Good luck!
Re:OP: Mow lawns. No joke. (Score:2)
My current employer never asked me if I mowed lawns in high school.
Taxes - you REALLY want to do them ? (Score:2)
So you want to do your own taxes/accounting. Accounting I might believe, but taxes - no way. First off - read the rules... Oh wait - I don't have time to read feet of small print annually to determine if I am allowed to deduct expenses, or if they are capital expenses so
Easy (Score:5, Funny)
2) Use clothes and phat car to get hot women
3) Pimp out hot women
4) Profit, motherfucker. Profit.
Re:Easy (Score:5, Insightful)
1. Electricians helper.
Find a local guy in the neighborhood who has a sign plastered on his truck, work cheap, watch and learn...return on investement 3,000%
2. Plumbers helper;It may be stinky but they make good $$$$
3. Carpenters helper...See # 1 above
Why no Computer ideas?
easy
1) you are no Bill Gates or Michael Dell. They never asked a bunch of timewasting web browsers for job advice, they just did it. Same with Steve Jobs
2) Those three jobs will teach you the meaning of the word work... a very important thing to know.
3) you may develop a life long part time career
Where do you live? (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:Where do you live? (Score:3, Funny)
Re:Where do you live? (Score:5, Funny)
How does one put "jerking off" onto a resume tactfully? What if you have to tell the interviewer about your responsibilities and problem-solving skills? "I, uh, was really struggling for a few minutes as the porn mag didn't do anything for me, so I really tried hard to think of that girl at school, and badaboombadabing problem solved. BTW, I'm already a member of the prestigious Gallon Club."
Re:Where do you live? (Score:2)
"Business Development"
More info needed. (Score:3, Insightful)
2. What's your skillset?
3. What's your dream job? What's "beneath you?" What can you not stand to do?
I don't want to crush your hopes, but you may find it very difficult to do something meaningful. You might consider finding the Entrepeneur's Club at a local college / University and hooking up with them. They may be able to find investors for you if you can present a viable business plan.
Good luck. You'll need it.
okay, here's a freebie. (Score:4, Interesting)
first off, blaze (with accent.)?
it's blase. (with accent.)
here's the idea i am sure could make somebody a ton of money.
instead of refilling and rehabbing toner cartridges, do it for lcd projector bulb cartridges. almost all the time, you have to buy a new one- for a good chunk of change. a little googling found me a place or two where you can buy solely the bulb. clean the cartridge, and replace the bulb (being careful of course not to get oil on anything) and charge 1/2 to 2/3 of what a new projector bulb costs.
if i were mechanically inclined, i would do this. it's a growth industry. here at work, thanks to doofuses who can't remember how to turn off a projector, we can chew through a unit, at $330 per, in 6 months. and i know college professors aren't the only group of clueless projector users out there.
Re:okay, here's a freebie. (Score:2)
If they can't even work a projector, what makes them think they can teach?
Re:okay, here's a freebie. (Score:3)
I suppose that was meant to be funny, but "remembers to turn off the projector" is not actually high on my list of desiriable traits in in a teacher. I look for things like "really understands the topic", "able to communicate his/her knowledge", and, for bonus points, "shows enthusiasm for both teaching and learning." Those skills are precious and rare. Schools lucky enough to have such teachers should stop griping about projector bulbs and pay some whiny IT guy $5/hr to follow them around and turn off the
Re:okay, here's a freebie. (Score:2)
In what third-world state is $5/hr at or above minimum wage? I can't even remember a minimum wage lower than $6.50/hr. It's $7.10/hr now and I expect it to go to $7.30 or so depending on inflation in January.
Re:okay, here's a freebie. (Score:3, Interesting)
Don't count on moving here, though: Oregon's full.
Re:okay, here's a freebie. (Score:2)
I fill my own gag but I don't have to stand in the rain either, gas stations here in the civilized world have giant overhead things.
Re:okay, here's a freebie. (Score:2)
Re:okay, here's a freebie. (Score:2)
Re:okay, here's a freebie. (Score:2)
Nope. Old State law, partially safety driven, partially jobs oriented. Nothing to do with unions. (What union do gasoline attendants belong to, anyay?)
Re:okay, here's a freebie. (Score:2)
In any case, I believe he means "passe".
Start a lemonaid stand... (Score:5, Funny)
Oh wait, it's not 1999. Forget I said anything.
Re:Start a lemonaid stand... (Score:2)
From the lemonade-stands-are-so-blaze dept.
For what it's worth, my first thought was also that they should start a lemonade stand but then I realized they would have to compete with all the IT people that were "surplused" when their jobs went overseas.
Semi-OT. I just saw Lou Dobbs tear Mark Andreessen about his company exporting jobs to India. Ouch.
First things that come to mind... (Score:4, Informative)
Rent a box from somewhere, and harass friends, family, and neighbors if they know anyone who could use a web presence. You provide the hosting, set up domains and stuff, and if they need it, some basic web design.
There's even a few packages out there that have a very simplified markup structure (ie. _underline_ and *bold* and stuff) that means your potential clients can edit pages directly.
Your costs are monthly fees to your host, and one-time fees for domains and such. Income is monthly hosting fees from clients, and one-time or recurring fees for web design, graphics, and maybe even some freelance coding for special features and whatnot.
Re:First things that come to mind... (Score:3, Insightful)
Please don't start up a hosting company.
Many, many students do this at the start of each summer break. They flood the market with $1/month hosting plans offer GB of disk space and bandwidth trying to recoup the $20/month reseller account they're running.
Then when the break is over and they're back at school suddendly they have no way to support those $1/month customers. (Who incidentally want 24/7 support regardless of what they are paying).
On the other hand, web design for companies or web codin
Re:First things that come to mind... (Score:5, Funny)
> Please don't start up a hosting company.
Followed by a link to reseller accounts for starting a hosting company!!!!
Re:First things that come to mind... (Score:2)
Re:First things that come to mind... (Score:3, Funny)
CMFH - Code Monkeys For Hire (LLC) (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:CMFH - Code Monkeys For Hire (LLC) (Score:3, Interesting)
Fool-proof plan (Score:2)
There's little money left in comp industry.. (Score:5, Informative)
1: Everybody can make a website.. Notice I didnt say good
2: Anti-crapware like the new AOL discs
3: Real software issues on MS systems always require a reinstall-Use vendor wipe disc
4: If its a hardware issue, you cant repair motherboards and the like. On dell/gateway crap, it's "Buy New Machine"
5: You're just HS students. I'm 22 and people look down at our age group as consultants. The "Consultant" is supposed to be 30-40 after numerous lay-offs and fires (from idiotic companies that lie to get out of unemp.)
Yeah, at 22, I'm jaded enough to be a consultant. I've not seen it all, but close.
Re:There's little money left in comp industry.. (Score:2)
Re:There's little money left in comp industry.. (Score:5, Interesting)
2 and 3. There is still money to be made repairing PC's. People that tell you the only way to repair a Microsoft product is to wipe and re-install generally do not know what they are doing. If the first response I got from a consultant was wipe and re-install, I would look for another consultant. Most experianced techs can repair a Windows PC without wiping it.
4. Hardware issues can be fixed. Power supplies can be replaced. I have often replaced caps on a motherboard, or disabled a built in device on an expensive board then installed an add-on replacement. For example, we had a lightning strike in the area, lightning surged through an unprotected hub and took out 9 computers. On 8 of the computers I was able to disable the on board lan, install a NIC card and get them back on-line. The 9th PC and the hub was toast. I also find many hardware issues to simply be bad fans, faulty memory or such. Always troubleshoot. Customers appreciate it if you look at thier machines before you tell them they need to be replaced.
5. Ok, you're high school students. You will need to try harder and prove you have your stuff together. Dress neat, be well groomed, be polite, and act professional. First impression's count for a lot. If you give a bad first impression you probably will not get a chance to make any proposals.
Finally, the consultant is not supposed to be any particuler age, but should be a professional, who can help the customers bottom line.
Re:There's little money left in comp industry.. (Score:4, Insightful)
Why did this not get modded up?
Excellent advice in response to the often seemingly bleak future of IT.
If I could add anything to this, it's that the industry has (obviously) totally changed since just 3 years ago. What appeared to be a "great field" to get into, is still a great field, but it's just not as easy as it once was. In reality, this is when it gets better.
Now, it's even more important to specialize than it was just a few years ago. Before, all of the skills that you mentioned you had were great, because they were pretty generic and you could just about fit anywhere. But you can't be the best at everything. Find something you really enjoy doing, learn everything you can about it through practice and experiments. Once you can prove to someone who knows something about your field that you're a viable investment, you'll be paid to prove it again and again.
Re:There's little money left in comp industry.. (Score:2)
Throw in three spyware packages, a virus or two, some cross linked files, some lost clusters, overload the registry with crap, install 63 of the little trial games that comes with your PC Gamer magazine, 71 little java applets in their
Have you considered mowing grass? (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:Have you considered mowing grass? (Score:3, Insightful)
become the neighborhood handymen (Score:2)
you'll learn a valuable skill: getting in the door is the hardest part of any business.
before you know it you'll have all of the neighborhood kids working for you painting houses, fixing printer jams, setting up wireless ethernet connections, mowing lawns, helping old ladies carry their groceries home, etc.
you c
Re:Have you considered mowing grass? (Score:5, Funny)
Second Parent (Score:2, Troll)
Re:Have you considered mowing grass? (Score:4, Funny)
You mean, running around at night watering all the lawns you mowed during the day?
Re:Have you considered mowing grass? (Score:2)
Re:Have you considered mowing grass? (Score:2)
No, I think he means the um.....other grass. Quite profitable if distributed in a dense urban area, so no need for these silly legal lawns.
How to buy a house in 4 years (Score:2)
The lesson is that the American dream is still alive - if you work like a M-
Re:How to buy a house in 4 years (Score:2)
Uh... if the cousins were never employed by a company drawing a taxable wage, then they couldn't draw unemployment. They lived with family so they we're sucking on the government's teet there either. They would have had to pay sales tax, just like anyone else. So unless you're counting usage of the roads...
Sure, they broke the rules by not paying taxes, but that says to me that a re-thinking of the tax system is in order.
If we went to a flat 10% sales tax (0% on the basics: food, medicine, clothes, an
Re:How to buy a house in 4 years (Score:2)
1. People would barter for things even more than today to get around it.
2. Rich people would pay a lower percentage of their total earnings as tax while middle and lower income earners would pay a higher percentage of their earnings as tax (really, really poor people wouldn't pay much tax if they can only afford the basics).
Wow, I think it couldn't get any broader. (Score:5, Funny)
And little money. Check
And you're young. Check
And don't have much of an idea on what to do. Check
I hate to be the first one to tell you, but million dollar ideas aren't sitting around waiting to find you on slashdot. It's going to be up to you and your friend to decide what's best here. As a consultant I can tell you, with no idea what you want to do, you really should hire a consultant if you want this to be anything more than you making webpages for people you know over the summer.
You're going to be fighting an uphill battle, most businesses won't talk to you based purely on age and lack of business experience. The one thing I would suggest if you do this, do it right and get insurance, because if you're handling something worth thousands, you don't want to be held liable if you break it.
Re:Wow, I think it couldn't get any broader. (Score:2)
1. Get story submitted on /. for their solutions to your need for content for your next round of GET RICH QUICK spam.
2.Spam the hell out of people touting the new GET RICH QUICKER!!! scheme.
3.PROFIT!!!
A suggestion... (Score:5, Insightful)
They just want to know basic stuff, how to use their computer, how to copy files, create folders, etc really basic stuff.
Our business doesn't have the space or the resources to make this happen. But it would be simple to do and something that high school kids could pull off with a little investment of money.
You could check out an auditorium at a city library, they often have facilities for such things, including screens and projectors. You could hook a laptop up to it and do your demonstrations there.
Q&A's, how to, basic stuff. May have to pay a few bucks to use the facilities, but long as you balance the costs:profit, shouldn't be a big dent.
What kind of customers can you expect? The older generation, elderly retired people are new to computers still, they don't learn quickly, have surplus income to spend and have the time and interest to attend such a training class on general computer use.
They're really into geneology and email correspondance. Little else, so although it's not the best use of your tallents, it should be rewarding finacially and equally rewarding improving some old farts quality of life.
How to get the word out. Basic cheap marketing that targets your market. The Newspaper, they're one of the few audiences that still read it. Cheap too. Putting flyers up at senior centers, veterans hospitals, etc. anywhere old people hang out. Charge a minimal fee at first, just to gauge what your expected turn-out will be, jack the price up a bit afterwards once the word-of-mouth starts within their communities.
Should work out well, I do this stuff on the side on a one-on-one basis (since I have a car) and the money is pretty good. I usually charge $175 an hour, but if you're going to have more bodies in an auditorium, shoot for 30$ a person, something basic that everyone can afford.
Good luck, better than working at McDonalds all Summer (although working there would really give you a reason to go to college).
Re:A suggestion... (Score:2)
The boss suggested that price, and after a few years of doing this on the side, his advice paid off.
"Why so much?", it sets a precedence, if you do it for 35-50$ people will start to take advantage of you. They call you out to do BS tasks at that point "Fix my mailbox" "Install the new AOL 9.0 for me". They start to look at it as a tech support housecall. Gets old quickly, then it chews up all your free time having to run around and do this and
Re:A suggestion... (Score:2)
Re:Teach old people how to use computers (Score:2)
"I charged $20/hr. I couldn't charge more than that because it was a blue collar town, but I made a decent living."
and this one
"And the experience has proven invaluable because now I charge $65/hr. to do the same thing, and people don't even blink. They keep asking me to come back."
These are the same people, no? Are they not blue collar anymore?
paucity: n, Smallness of number; fewness. (Score:3, Funny)
I'm sorry kids. (Score:5, Funny)
I'd probably be selling it on a late night television infomercial with Tony Robbins and that other guy with the shiny teeth.
Ask a local business (Score:2)
Don't waste your time trying this. (Score:3, Insightful)
I would not trust my 500 cables to a couple of kids that have nothing other than beer money to loose.
This is easy. (Score:2)
I AM GLAD YOU ASKED (Score:5, Funny)
I have an excellent opportunity for you. I am the ASSISTANT COLONEL VICE FINANCE MINISTER of a corrupt third-world dictatorship, and I am trying to embezzle foreign aid money. I have diverted FORTY-SEVEN MILLION UNITED STATES DOLLARS ($47,000,000) from the International Petroleum Reserve Slush Fund to a separate expense ledger sub-account within my country's incomprehensibly complex banking system.
Unfortunately, my country's laws require me to find a RANDOM STRANGER ON THE INTERNET to complete this transaction. If you have the IQ OF BREAD MOLD, this could be you! I need to transfer the money into a U.S. bank account, rather than an account in an actaul banking haven. We would split the money as follows:
Now, to begin the transaction I simply need $1,000 from you as an EMBEZZLEMENT TRANSFER FEE. For reasons I can't explain, because I'm making this up as I go along, I am unable to pay this amount myself, though it amounts to FIVE THOUSANDTHS OF ONE PERCENT of my profit.
Simply withdraw your money in small bills and FLUSH IT DOWN THE TOILET and my operatives will remove it from the sewer system and deposit the money into your account. I TRUST IN THE NAME OF THE LORD JESUS H. FUCKING CHRIST that you are a trustworthy person who will do the right thing.
Sincerely,
COLONEL DOGUM GUNUN KUTLU OLSUN
Re:I AM GLAD YOU ASKED (Score:2)
eBay? (Score:4, Informative)
Here's my advice to high-school students looking to be entrepreneurial during a summer: find a way to make or import something interesting and sell it on eBay. You don't have a lot of overhead and actually wind up with real-world experience of building and/or supporting a product.
Re:eBay? (Score:2)
Freelance Barnyard Masterbaters (Score:2)
That 1000 dollars will keep you equipped with gloves and waders for the whole summer, so everything else is pure profit!!!
I'm Surprised nobody mentioned Open Source (Score:4, Interesting)
1) So, given it takes money to make money, $1000 isn't going to net you much in ROI.
2) Instead, write something gratis that other people will use, and will give you something to put on your resume after college.
3) Open up a sourceforge account to organize your project. Do all the project planning work out in the open - project goals and descriptions, requirements, specs, docs, code. In the future, you can point people to this as a sample of your early work (keep it updated). Have a GUI (I don't recommend Web apps for something like this - too much infrastructure), write it in C++ (what I suggest), Java, or VB, depending on your talent and audience (and resources - Gnu C++ and Java are free).
4) People don't use 80% of software they buy - so make that 80% open-sourced 'infrastructure' libraries and such, and the remaining 20% closed-source plug-ins or specialized customizations (and a good installer - people tend to buy stuff that has a good installer).
5) If someone wants a feature or a bug fixed, see if they will pay for support.
6) Leverage other people for the product.
7) Learn how to market your product. Just see it as an experiment - don't be shy, be outgoing, and specifically, be clever.
Do some market research: go and figure out what someone wants to do that they can't do now, or that the software to do is expensive. How? Ask them!
The criterion for your research should be - you should have a representative sample of the population nearby, they probably should be a small business (since individuals don't pay much and usually need more prettiness-per-unit-usefulness than a small business solving a specific problem would need), they should have some general-purpose computers that are underleveraged (people do one or two applications on them (mail, word/excel/quicken, and Minesweeper) and don't really use them to their full potential).
Consider what target audiences you have around you: small, non-chain restaurants (specifically their back office); professional practices, like small dentist/physical therapist/massage therapists/chiropractor offices; the corner bodega - they might have a cash register, but no computer tracking of stock so they never quite know what their inventory is or how much to buy - sell them that. House painters/plumbers/small general contractors. Churches/Synagogues/Mosques.
Find something some group of the people above do that's tedius, and see if you can make it trivial. Don't be afraid to ask a lot of people, and say 'no' if it looks like too much - even if they will pay you. Do _not_ get in over your head.
KISS - keep it simple, silly. Bang-for-the-buck is the keyword for this sort of development. You are trying to make their lives better/easier/smarter, and they might need 'just one thing'. Consider the first spreadsheets - they merely edited columns of numbers and added them up correctly, and saved and read them to a file. This saved an _enormous_ amount of time for people who had to do this stuff day-in-day-out. Almost nothing subsequently has had as profound an impact on their lives as taking the grunt work out of moving raw numbers around with pen-and-paper.
-J
Re:I'm Surprised nobody mentioned Open Source (Score:2)
I know most people on here despise marketing and advertising, r
As a 19 year old... (Score:4, Informative)
But I was in your position a few years ago (I was a Freshman in highschool, not a senior). Here's what I did (in 2000):
The local science fair had a web design contest. I had been doing web design for about a year, mainly for my own amusement and knowledge. I also had a close friend who did the same, and since we needed teams of 2, we formed a web design team. We made a web page (one we actually wrote, didn't use Dreamweaver) according to the specs of the contest, and totally blew away the judges. They thought it was the most amazing thing ever. They both gave us their business cards, told us to contact them, we did, and bingo, $12 an hour work for each of us. We were psyched.
Eventually our client fell out from beneath us and never contacted us back, but we got paid for the work we did, so all was good.
Another science fair story: the magnet high school program I attended required everyone to do a science fair project every year. Since I was(am) a decent programmer, I always did stuff in the computer science category. I loved the stuff, and the category was small so I was always almost guranteed to win. I did a project on Artificial Intelligence one year, and OpenGL another and Massive Parallel Rendering a third year. All the judges loved it, and a lot offered me jobs. I already had a well paying job at the time, so I passed on them, but I got my name out there.
Those are my opinions and experiences, take them for what their worth from someone in your shoes a few years ago. Keep in mind, as well, that all of this cost me nothing (in fact, it all made me $$$ as 1st place at the web design contest got me money, and so did 1st place at science fair, not to mention the actual jobs).
Good luck!
-Vic
Re:As a 19 year old... (Score:2)
You must've missed their main problem. They have no ideas.
slashquote (Score:2)
computer related stuff, and not (Score:2, Informative)
computer related:
1) consider an internship somewhere. Less exciting as an idea than starting your own, but it can also lead to contacts, give you experience, etc. All sorts of businesses need computer-smart people, don't just think of ones that sell computers or w
I'm appalled... (Score:4, Insightful)
OK, first things first: You should be commended for wanting to work and (lack of car, funds and details aside) for wanting to pursue an entrepreneurial path.
Some thoughts...
Re:I'm appalled... (Score:2)
Repair amps (Score:3, Interesting)
Place an add in you're local music weekly, there's big demand for this. But just make sure that you make it clear that you're not liable for more than the cost of the repair, and don't promise that you can fix everything.
Also don't go cash up front, take a crack at it first, the best case scenario is that someone won't pay for the repair, you have the amp as collateral, worst case you can pawn it for more than you would have gotten anyway. You'll meet some interesting people, have some fun, and get a chance to chill out a bit before college.
Old amps are pretty easy to work on and there's a lot of poor musicians who can't afford to buy a new one, or have it professionally repaired, they're pretty willing to take a small risk to save a buck.
So my conclusion, forget about high tech, there's lot's of competition, find a niche and work it for all it's worth.
If you guys have any artistic talent (Score:2)
Grow marijuana (Score:4, Funny)
For $1000 you should be able to improvise a small hydroponic operation....focus the money on the lights....you can even just use compact fluorescents for the mother plants for cloning, and keep the HIDs for flowering time.
You can probably turn $5000-10000 profit over the summer (~90 days).
Good luck.
-psy
Windoze technical support (Score:4, Insightful)
Get some practice with the main virus scanning tools, anti-spyware cleaners, and other basic windoze utilities. Learn how each version of windoze does things like dial-up, and how the local cable or ADSL provider like user machines to be set up. Then print up some nice flyers and go around to all the computer stores in town and ask them if they'll promote your "summer job" business of doing all the crap work helping (l)users set up their systems and get on the internet.
Draw up a list of jobs you will do, a time estimate for each one, and the price you will charge for each job. Something like installing Norton Anti-Virus should take about an hour, and you should charge something around US$10 or $15. Installing a free firewall, with basic configuration should cost $10. Helping with an ADSL installation maybe $20.
Make sure you are up front that the person with the machine is going to be buying the software, like a commercial virus checker, and your fee will be on top of that. Add $5 if you are the one to run to the store and buy the software for them. Don't get tempted to try pirating commercial software, enough people will then be wary of you, and the recommendations will fall off. Make sure you explain how some of the software is free for personal use, like AdAware and ZoneAlarm, but some effective virus scanners cost $40 or $90.
Have your own collection of freeware utilities, on both a USB key and a CD, and maybe even a floppy with necessary drivers. You would be surprised how many old machines are out there still running win98 or NT, and don't have USB ports or a working CD drive. The owners don't care, since they have 33.6k dialup, AOL, and Word97. They don't really need much else, but the trojans and email virii are hurting their systems and they need somebody cheap to help them out, and the computer shops tend to want to charge large amounts per hour for basic installations.
By the end of the summer, you will have learned you never want to work in technical support again, and you will probably blow your hard earned cash on a high powered rifle and a case of hunting ammo.
the AC
Re:Windoze technical support (Score:2)
Of course I'm now unemployed again, because I got laid off... but don't let that stop you.
Re:Windoze technical support ... tax??! (Score:2)
But I also have plenty of objections to becoming Big Bubba's girlfriend.
Learn the value of work first... (Score:2, Insightful)
Since you get paid at the end of the day and the jobs are very menial and degrading these types of places attract many drunks, ex-cons, and drug abusers. They're generally nice enough people who have made terrible decisions and can't get a regular job. They're often continueing to make terrible decisions.
Spend afew days observing
Am a HS student doing exactly that (Score:2, Insightful)
Networking. (Score:4, Insightful)
And then you get to the paying for education, and then the trying to pay off student loans, and find someone to give you money for your time.
Although it sounds like a good idea to try to make money now, you may actually want to look at things that might help you to make more money later. So pick what you like to do, and go talk to people who work for companies that work in the field, or have jobs of the type that you want. You probably won't get to do it, but it doesn't mean that you can't get an internship, and learn something.
Hell, it might be that all you learn is that you really hate the field, and that's the best thing that you can learn early. You might learn that you don't want to work for that type of company.
But you also start building your resume, and gaining experience. You meet people, who can tell you later in life when there's a position that you might be interested in. And you have so many more people whom you can use as references for that first real paying job.
As for transportation -- public transit. It's not glamorous, but the bus is your friend. Or, look for stuff within walking/bike distance. Hell, even a public library or local government might be willing to take you in, if you're interested in working there.
3 Months (Score:3, Insightful)
* APOTAS == attractive people of the appropriate sex
** meet == screw
Hire an attorney (Score:2, Funny)
set up PVRs (Score:2, Insightful)
here's an idea... (Score:3, Funny)
Ebay.. or oil changes (Score:2)
Another one is to walk around offering to do oil changes on cars in people's driveways. Buy a GOOD jack and jackstands, a torque wrench to properly tighten the drain bolt, brand name filters and oil. Most peop
Go to work (Score:4, Insightful)
Unless you're dead set against it, why not just get a bullshit food service or retail job? Remember, you're in high school. This is the summer. One of the last ones you're going to get.
Think of it like this:
I was blessed with amazing jobs I got through family contacts my last two years of high school, but I worked in a grocery store my sophomore year. It didn't really teach me anything, and the pay was right around minimum wage, but I also got invited to some pretty cool parties I would have missed if I didn't know my coworkers. I was actually rather sad when school started again and my extracurricular commitments forced me to quit.
Hell, to this day I'm thankful for that job. The people I worked with there are, by a wide margin, the largest group of people who didn't leave town after graduation. Gives me people to hang out with when I have to go home to visit the parents.
I work in IT, and make a pretty damn good living now with great job security, but I still look back on wasted high school summers fondly. Unless you are the type who is just miserable in high school, then maybe you would too.
Re:Go to work (Score:3, Insightful)
I spent 5 years (my last year in HS, and all through college) working at the big grocery store in my little college town and although the pay wasn't great I scored one quality cont
enjoy your summer (Score:2, Insightful)
Horse shit (Score:3, Funny)
2. Sell the 'proceeds' from the stables as fertilizer
3. Profit!
4. When busted for not paying tax on the fertilizer, point out taxes were paid on sale of the hay the horses ate and exclaim, "We're getting taxed at both ends!"
A sampling of summer jobs (Score:3, Interesting)
2. Landscaping. -1 redundant, 'nuf said.
3. Document prep: I used to do wordprocessing on my rare and ubermodern Atari. That morphed with time and tech into desktop publishing, a universally needed and generally badly done activity. Pros: Once you get some design principles down, not too hard to float above the scum. Cons: everyone thinks they're a designer, and only the good get paid well; as well, the client will always revise things at the last minute.
4. Databases for small business. It blows me away how many retail and service businesses use crappy data management. I did this in Filemaker because it's good at interfaces (incl. web-based) and flexible form queries (good for users, challenging for developing) as well as cross platform and cheap (at the time). Perfect for that segment, fast to develop in so good cash. Nowadays I'd do it in MySQL with a browser interface when possible, ymmv. Pros: only a few of these contracts needed over a summer, so you can market F2F, and it's a great ladder up to other IT as it often requires some basic networking too. Cons: clients can really take you for a ride through feature creep and not knowing what they really need.
5. Oh, I can't bring myself to admit to this one.
6. Tutoring. -2 Redundant.
7. Sell stuff over the 'net. Set up a website with shopping cart, go nuts marketing (short of spamdammit). Good way to do this is to find a distribution problem (eg. partner with some local craftspeople who're good but not getting their stuff out there). Or work ebay, work it hard, hit all the estate sales. Pros: flexibility, no F2F with nutty clients, decent $ opportunity. Cons: risk of a serious bomb.
8. Sell souvlaki on a nude beach. OK, you may not have the opportunity to do this, but hey! what a great entrepeneurial summer job that was. Mind you, I cashed a good portion of my profits on the all-too-available cold beer supplies at same beach. Pros: who cares if it doesn't go on your resume...
setting up open-source groupware (Score:4, Interesting)
I just got done installing dotproject open-source groupware for Opera Columbus. After some tough negotitation, I won the contract (no contract really, they just hired me). They already have hosting with another provider. The provider wanted X to developed web-based project management; I serisouly undercut them with an application suite that was already ready. I had to do some user training, but that's about it for the hard part.
What I recommend is taking very little of your $1000, buy some cheap web hosting, and setting up some open source groupware. Spend a little bit more of that $1000 on printing manuals or throwing together a nice presentation -- charts and graphs, with binders, etc. Physical things, such as paper, will show people that you have an investment in what you are doing, and aren't just talking. They will have it to refer to later when they can't remember what you said. It shows stability and lastingness, that you will be there.
Be selective with the open sources packages, find the stuff that's 1. finished, 2. polished, and 3. easy to use for a non-techie. I highly recommend dotproject [dotproject.net]; the only problem is that it lacks printing.
Then, setup free demo accounts for users. Give them 30 or 60 day trials. Expect to spend some time training. Offer to do the initial setup, such as user accounts, etc. The people who use it and like it will gladly pay for the setup.
You can charge either
1. recurring fees for stuff you host. If you chose this, be prepared to go the extra mile for support when the thing crashes in the middle of the night.
- or -
2. a larger, one-time setup fee for setting it up on their hosting providers. Be sure to specify rates for future support of the application if you do a 1x set up fee. Here is where you clean up when they need you.
Pick a minimum price you want, and always present something higher. That gives you room to negotiate. Geeks hate negotitaion, business people love it. Be prepared for it. Be prepared to walk away from deals where they want too much; those people are users and they will expect you to work for them 24/7 for way too little money. It's just not worth it.
Re:setting up open-source groupware (Score:2)
Go find customers who are ready to buy. (Score:3, Informative)
- installing parts I sold
- setting up peoples new computers
- migrating peoples data to new computers
- teaching them how to USE their computers
- general tech work
Of course I had to make sure that the general manager was OK with that, and he was cool with it as long as I wasn't constantly pimping myself. I usually let people ASK if I knew anybody who could do such and such and I'd say "I know *just* the guy". I'd ask for THEIR contact info, and I'd call them after hours (or before if I was working 1-9 like I did often.)
I charged $25/hr, with a 1hr minimum. I'd go through their computers and make sure they were running good, THEN I'd start teaching them. I made thousands and thousands of dollars this way. It could be hard work but I'd take the stuff that other area consultants wanted $75/hr to work on, or just plain wouldn't do.
It gave me a good base, and you know, I STILL do lots of that stuff on the side, but these days I charge $45/hr and most of the work is web design work that I bid per job, flat rate. Yeah, I'm cheap, but I'm not out to make a killing. I'm out to make a *living*.
The OTHER thing I used to do alot was to find a computer shop online that would wholesale parts to me, and I'd price out uber-cheap computers that were custom built. Then, I'd advertise it in the paper at a really good price, cheaper than most places. Very little profit margin, if any. If they ordered, I'd buy the parts, build it, and deliver. Then if they wanted extra help with it, no problem. $25/hr.
If you want to figure out how to get customers to spend money, go to a pet shop. See those cute fish for 10 cents? Bowl, $5. Pump, $10. Food, $3, rocks, $2. There, now you just made $20 on a 10 cent fish.
The moral of my story? People are sheeple. You need to learn how to lead them into buying from you, but it has to be their idea. Wanna sell $20 of fish supplies? Find the cutest 10 cent fish you can, and sell the heck out of them.
Technical Youth (Score:2, Informative)
Mod XBoxes and PS2s (Score:2)
Set up a home business modding peoples Xboxes and PS2s over the summer. You're the right age to know a bunch of people who will have them, and will probably have a couple hundred bucks they could throw your way if you hotrod them.
Charge them the cost of the modchip (cheap, like $30) the cost of a hard drive, and 100 bucks for yourself.
Just don't run afoul of the authorities when you do all this, they will think you're cyber-ter
Re:A few quick ones (Score:2, Interesting)
Another new industry is take the trouble out of ebaying things. People drop of their stuff they want to sell, and you photogaph, list, pack, and ship it. You'll need a paypal account, digital camera, knowledge of how ebay
Re:Mow Lawns (Score:2, Interesting)