My First Million
The best business ideas come from noticing what's working and doing it better, faster, or for a different audience.
Smart, capable students are increasingly dropping out of college to pursue entrepreneurship, representing a fundamental shift in how talent approaches career building.
The Reasoning
Access to information, capital, and opportunities through the internet allows talented individuals to bypass traditional credentialing. Success stories of college dropouts reduce social stigma.
What Needs to Be True
- Alternative paths to career success continue to be viable
- Employer attitudes toward college degrees continue evolving
- Entrepreneurship education and support systems expand
- Student debt and college costs continue rising relative to perceived value
Counterargument
College still provides valuable networks, structured learning, and fallback credentials that become important during economic downturns or career pivots.
What Would Change This View
Economic recession that punishes non-credentialed workers, or significant improvements in college ROI and affordability.
Implications for Builders
Build services that support alternative career paths
Create educational content and communities for entrepreneurial students
Develop tools that help non-traditional candidates demonstrate competence
Consider how to serve the 'gap year' or 'gap semester' population
Example Application
“Build platform that helps college dropouts document and showcase their entrepreneurial experience in ways that employers and investors can evaluate.”