The question isn't whether Cooper High School junior Yemanekirstos Mulusew will start his own business, but when — and whether he launches it before his next birthday.
After some online research, the enterprising Mulusew bought a couple of vending machines and now is looking for office buildings where he can put them. "The goal is to get an official business before I turn 18," said Mulusew, now 17.
Adding fuel to Mulusew's entrepreneurial drive has been classroom and other programs from BestPrep, a Brooklyn Park-based nonprofit organization that offers experience-based educational programs in business, careers and financial literacy.
Up to 60,000 students will take part in BestPrep programs this year, with more than 3,000 professional volunteers visiting classrooms, mentoring students through e-mail exchanges on business and workplace skills, hosting on-site tours and leading weeklong entrepreneurial summer camps.
Mulusew's latest BestPrep activity took place last month at Classroom Plus Career Day at Cargill's Wayzata location. There, he joined classmates from (Robbinsdale) Cooper and students from (Robbinsdale) Armstrong High School, Hopkins High School and Roseville High School.
The students, many wearing business attire, learned about soft and hard professional skills and got inside information on 15 career fields, from marketing and information technology to strategic sourcing, transportation and logistics, and tax and customs, from 60 Cargill volunteers.
"It's shown me that it's more of a grown-up world," Mulusew said of what he has learned through BestPrep, including his Cargill-sponsored trip last year to BestPrep's Minnesota Business Venture summer camp. "If you say something you have to be able to get it done. You've got to stick to your word."
'Grown-up world'
In helping to prepare students for that "grown-up world," BestPrep has pursued an entrepreneurial course of its own under president and CEO Bob Kaitz. He has led the organization since its start in 1974 as a pilot project at Breck School, where he was an economics teacher and basketball coach.