The kick-off event of the University of Colorado's New Venture Challenge featured a talk entitled "How to Pick a Business Worth Starting" by local Boulder entrepreneur Paul Berberian. Held November 11 in the Courtroom of CU's Law School, the Deming Center hosted about 200 attendees including students, faculty, staff, and members of the local business community recruiting interns. We are pleased to feature a blog post covering the event by Joanne White, a member of our executive committee, co-founder of TribeVibe and blogger for Mediamum.net.
The 2009 CU New Venture Challenge began Wednesday night with a full house in the Wittemeyer Courtroom at the CU Law Building to hear Paul Berberian deliver the rousing and interactive session called, "How to pick a business worth starting."
Paul 's first slide, "how to pick a winner," set the tone for the evening. A kid with his finger up his nose, nearly up to the knuckle, brought lots of laughter. Paul continued to describe the essences of what types of businesses were worth pursuing, how to choose one that suits you, and a few hard realities of working in a startup. He talked about his failures. His personal reflections on one business experience selling plastic name tags which resulted in him marrying with a "negative dowry" was one many entrepreneurs see as a reality. Luckily, that experience appears to be humorous when it's eclipsed by successes. And Paul has had a few, to say the least.
Paul is onto his sixth business (solar panels), and admits he's the guy who wants to have lots of money raining on him. For him, that's a key aspect of the type of business he chooses. He said though, that there are other factors that weigh in for consideration when deciding on a business to launch, and that the audience should look for something that suits and fits in all areas of who they were, and what they wanted to achieve. He described the process of looking at 14 different companies over the last year or so. One example was a company that produced bulletproof vests. "I'm a pacifist," said the air force veteran, "I did that stage of my life and want to move on to other things." So, while the bulletproof vest company might have been a strong one, it didn't go further on his list to investigate.
In a highly engaging presentation, Paul invited the audience to ask questions and be interactive throughout - and they did. Numerous times Paul was asked to offer more detail on specific process, and simply to ask additional questions. Paul answered everyone, and kept a perfect balance of information, entertainment and informality so no matter where you were in your business journey, there was value in his message.
The broader message that while you have nothing is the best opportunity to go out on a limb and start a business was directly aimed at the students in the room. Paul's encouragement was a great beginning to CU's New Venture Challenge for 2009/2010. Following the presentation, everyone headed upstairs to network, enjoy some refreshments, and chat with some local startups looking for interns.
Paul Berberian was the perfect beginning to the CU New Venture Challenge and fired up the anticipation for next week's pitch evening. A number of people have registered their intent to present their budding idea at the event, being held in the ATLAS building at 6pm on Wednesday 18th November. All members of the campus, and the broader community are invited to come along, hear ideas (or present their own), and network with others to hopefully start something that could be the next big thing. As long as, according to Paul Berberian, it isn't selling plastic badges.
The 2009 CU New Venture Challenge began Wednesday night with a full house in the Wittemeyer Courtroom at the CU Law Building to hear Paul Berberian deliver the rousing and interactive session called, "How to pick a business worth starting."
Paul 's first slide, "how to pick a winner," set the tone for the evening. A kid with his finger up his nose, nearly up to the knuckle, brought lots of laughter. Paul continued to describe the essences of what types of businesses were worth pursuing, how to choose one that suits you, and a few hard realities of working in a startup. He talked about his failures. His personal reflections on one business experience selling plastic name tags which resulted in him marrying with a "negative dowry" was one many entrepreneurs see as a reality. Luckily, that experience appears to be humorous when it's eclipsed by successes. And Paul has had a few, to say the least.
Paul is onto his sixth business (solar panels), and admits he's the guy who wants to have lots of money raining on him. For him, that's a key aspect of the type of business he chooses. He said though, that there are other factors that weigh in for consideration when deciding on a business to launch, and that the audience should look for something that suits and fits in all areas of who they were, and what they wanted to achieve. He described the process of looking at 14 different companies over the last year or so. One example was a company that produced bulletproof vests. "I'm a pacifist," said the air force veteran, "I did that stage of my life and want to move on to other things." So, while the bulletproof vest company might have been a strong one, it didn't go further on his list to investigate.
In a highly engaging presentation, Paul invited the audience to ask questions and be interactive throughout - and they did. Numerous times Paul was asked to offer more detail on specific process, and simply to ask additional questions. Paul answered everyone, and kept a perfect balance of information, entertainment and informality so no matter where you were in your business journey, there was value in his message.
The broader message that while you have nothing is the best opportunity to go out on a limb and start a business was directly aimed at the students in the room. Paul's encouragement was a great beginning to CU's New Venture Challenge for 2009/2010. Following the presentation, everyone headed upstairs to network, enjoy some refreshments, and chat with some local startups looking for interns.
Paul Berberian was the perfect beginning to the CU New Venture Challenge and fired up the anticipation for next week's pitch evening. A number of people have registered their intent to present their budding idea at the event, being held in the ATLAS building at 6pm on Wednesday 18th November. All members of the campus, and the broader community are invited to come along, hear ideas (or present their own), and network with others to hopefully start something that could be the next big thing. As long as, according to Paul Berberian, it isn't selling plastic badges.

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