2. Rushing for success, lack of market awareness and enterprise management experience are important factors that affect the success of college students' entrepreneurship. Although students have mastered some book knowledge, they lack the necessary practical ability and management experience. In addition, because college students lack sufficient marketing knowledge, it is difficult to be competent for the role of enterprise managers at once.
3. College students' understanding of entrepreneurship is still limited to a beautiful idea and concept. In the business plans submitted by quite a few college students, many people also try to attract investment with an idea that they think is novel. Such a thing did happen abroad before, but it is almost impossible today. What investors value is how high the real technical content of your business plan is, to what extent it cannot be copied, and how big the market profit potential is. For these, you must have a detailed and thorough feasibility demonstration and implementation plan, not the idea that people can pay the bill in a few words.
4. College students' market concept is relatively weak. Many college students are willing to talk with investors about how their technologies are leading and unique, but rarely involve how much market space these technologies or products will have. Even when it comes to the topic of market, most of them just intend to spend money on advertising, but they have no idea about important aspects such as target market positioning and marketing means combination. In fact, what really interests investors is not necessarily those extremely advanced things. On the contrary, those products or services with ordinary technical content but meeting the market demand are often favored by investors. At the same time, entrepreneurs should have a very clear marketing plan, which can strongly prove the possibility of profit.