Guide to Starting a Business in High School For Teen Entrepreneurs

Crimson Education
Age of Awareness
Published in
9 min readApr 26, 2022

All great entrepreneurs start young. From selling homemade lemonade on the street for a buck a pop to cleaning the family car for a fiver, these are the actions of a teen entrepreneur flexing his premature business muscles. Above all the benefits starting your own business can provide, the true value it affords you cannot be quantified by monetary value or magazine features. Its true value is simply in the learnings you gain from experience, especially when you’re just a teenager.

As we grow older, most of us cease to continue with our teenage entrepreneurial ventures for several reasons. Why do we ever stop? After all, it only takes one good idea until you strike gold!

While there is a chance your first business venture might turn into a money-making machine, it’s also likely that it might not blow up as you would expect.

Although your business might strike out, you will gain invaluable experience that will help you build success in the future. So why put it off any longer?

Why You Should Start a Business as a Teenager?

There are a whole bunch of benefits to starting a business in high school. The greatest benefit of all is the enhancement of your candidacy to top US colleges.

If you’ve shown the initiative to start a business during high school, US colleges see you as an outgoing student who will not only enjoy the rigor of a world class education, but flourish with the opportunities afforded to you.

Particularly if your business displays a strong social, charitable or community initiative, you’ll be looked upon even more favorably.

A business initiative attempting to improve the world shows you have the potential to lead and change the world in some way and that you have the drive to succeed and the bravery to give it a go from a young age.

Seriously, admissions officers are going to be jumping up and down when they read your application, regardless of how successful your business venture turned out. But it’s not just about getting in to a top university. Once you’re in, you’ll gain access to resources that will help you execute on your new or old business ideas and take them to the next level!

Particularly if you gain admission into a top entrepreneurial college in the US, you’ll gain access to resources, mentoring, funding, and student networks that can help you become the next big thing! What’s more, some of these colleges even offer degrees in entrepreneurship.

Basically, starting a business in high school is just about laying the groundwork for your future success. Once you’ve gained admission into a top US college, you can get all the support you need to really fast-track your business development.

Tim’s Entrepreneurship Story

For example, Tim, originally from Kazakhstan, is absolutely crushing it since gaining admission into New York University (NYU), one of the best schools for international students and young entrepreneurs.

Since joining the Gallatin School of Individualized Study at NYU, Tim has managed to form a small team of entrepreneurs (all NYU students) and kick start a sports tech company called Fit AI, which allows athletes to track effort in the gym, minimize training fatigue and optimize their results.

And guess what, this all started when Tim was in high school!

Check Tim’s story out below:

6 Tips To Help You Start a Business in High School

Before we get into the nitty gritty and the fine print of setting up a business, I’m gonna let you in on a little secret:

No one who starts a business for the first time really knows what they’re doing.

Seriously.

Especially in the early stages, it’s not about what you know but about learning from making mistakes. Focus on what you don’t know, and on learning and growing.

This leads nicely into our first tip:

1. Know you’ll make mistakes and learn from them

The businesses that end up succeeding are simply the ones that make fewer mistakes. This is why starting a business at a young age can be so beneficial. Before you’re old, you’ll become aware of all the little mistakes you made the first time around and avoid them on your business ventures later in life. In order to make the most of this, you must proactively make time to acknowledge mistakes and allow yourself to learn from them.

Don’t take your mistakes as a negative, but as an opportunity to grow and develop as a person.

2. Work on something you’re passionate about

At the end of the day, starting a business, like any job, is gonna eat up a lot of your time. So why spend time doing something you’re not passionate about?

A business that isn’t built on passion and drive is destined for failure.

If you’re passionate about getting young women involved in STEM subjects, start thinking about ways you can do that.If you’re passionate about reducing the impact of global warming, start thinking about products to combat this.

No matter what it is you care about, start thinking of ways you can bring a product or service to market and turn it into a small business. Don’t get hung up on the minor details for now; forget about the business name or potential for success, just strive to make a positive impact.

At the core of every young business should be the desire to make the world into a better place. What makes a business flourish is passionate people working towards a common goal.

3. The idea: aim to fix a problem and fulfil a desire

When thinking up an idea for your business, remember that your product or service should either solve a problem or fulfill a desire.

If it can do both, you’ve struck gold.

An example would be a product that helps you grow a garden in a suburban setting and aids community sustainability, as thought of by a 19-year-old New Zealand genius who is now attending Duke University, which made fresh produce and sustainable living in suburban areas accessible and stylish.

Problem solved and a desire fulfilled.

Before you settle on an idea, make sure you undertake some research to better understand the market you’re thinking about entering. Look for faults in other products and services and try to fill the void.

Identify a problem and strive to resolve it.

4. Kickstarter: get you some of that funding!

The beauty of starting a business in high school is that it’s not the be all and end all. While money isn’t necessarily a requirement in the early stages, it certainly does help, particularly if your business is selling a product, not a service.

If you’re selling a service, you mightn’t need money at all, just your big ol’ brain and a mode of transport! On the other hand, you kinda need money to make a product, right?

You’ll need to build a prototype, perfect it, test it and then start producing it.

Depending on what your product is, you can definitely start prototyping on a budget. For example, if you’re selling homemade crocheted headwear, just go get some wool and start crocheting.

However, if you’re looking to develop a bike helmet with solar panels on it that doesn’t look dumb and charges your electric bike, iPhone and Tesla car while you ride, you’re probably going to need some funding.

Luckily for you, we live in a technologically advanced world where you can literally get on the internet and just beg people to fund your business!

How to fund your teenage business ventures?

The most common platform for young businesses looking for some help is Kickstarter.

In a perfect world, Kickstarter operates like this:

You create a profile → set a funding goal → post a video → share your profile and video → get money from people → achieve funding goal → start your business → make millions.

However, the world is far from perfect and there are literally hundred of thousands of campaigns on Kickstarter. So in order to get those results, you need to make your campaign stand out!

You can do so by having a strong video campaign. You need to not only sell your product, but the story behind your product.

Here are a couple of quick pointers to make your Kickstarter video campaign killer so you be gettin’ all up in that seed funding!

  • Research other similar campaigns and get an idea for what works well.
  • Tell a good story: sell the product and you. Be honest and passionate and let people know why they should care about your business.
  • Seek help for video production — the better your video, the better the campaign will perform. Simple.
  • Start promoting your campaign before you launch the Kickstarter page.

5. Take time to actively develop your entrepreneurial skills

Read… and read a lot!

It’s been shown that those who read more than six books per year are 122% more likely to be millionaires than those who read five or less. And get this, Bill Gates reads 50 books a year, and it goes without saying that he is one of the greatest entrepreneurs of all time.

It’s even a good idea to actually read about successful entrepreneurs such as Bill Gates, Warren Buffett or Steve Jobs and how they got to where they are and the habits that have helped foster their success.

While reading is great, you’ll also need to develop some more tangible entrepreneurial talents. You can do this by mingling with like-minded people at local events, networking nights, study groups or exciting educational tours.

You can even look to get in touch with a more experienced entrepreneur who can become your mentor. Someone for you to learn from, feed off and ask for advice when needed. Someone to be your Mr. Miyagi of business development; your Yoda of making bank; your sensei of strategic decisions.

6. Put in the work

This one should go without saying, but starting a business isn’t easy, especially when you’re working with the limited resources of a high school student. It’s gonna take a whole bunch of hard work. Working after school, before school and even on weekends!

You’re going to have to be giving up social time to get your idea off the ground, but it will be worth it. Besides, if you’re truly passionate about the business it should never feel like you’re actually doing work, but more like you’re pursuing a hobby.

Lastly, try to always have the business in the back of your mind. You never know when a sudden bolt of inspiration will strike and you’ll need to start working on it ASAP.

That’s all there is to it! You’re now sufficiently equipped to start your own business as a high school student. Yep, it’s that simple. So what are you waiting for? Get out there and start making mistakes!

Final thoughts

Starting a business in high school isn’t about making money. It’s about something much more valuable than that: growing and developing your entrepreneurial brain from a young age.

Sure, you’ll make mistakes, but you’ll be able to learn from them and set yourself up for a bright and prosperous future!

By the time your peers catch up and attempt to start their own business, you’ll already have years of experience under your belt and you’ll be able to scale in leaps and bounds beyond your peers and competitors.

What’s more, by that stage, you’ll also have gained admission into one of the USA’s very best universities. You’ll be the envy of all your high school chums studying back at home!

Yep, all that success thanks to that silly ol’ business you started in school.

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