Get the Student-Run Business Going

It’s the Greatest Opportunity for Students to Learn Hands-On Skills

For the past thirteen years, I’ve had the privilege of helping launch student-run businesses — from coffee shops and cafés to full-blown pizza operations, greenhouses, bakeries, and even fine dining restaurants. And no matter the setting, one thing is always the same: the transformation in students never gets old.

This past week, I saw it firsthand as Greater Atlanta Christian School launched their Spartan Café. The excitement was electric. As soon as students stepped behind the counter to serve real customers in real time, they began to walk taller, stand straighter, and step into true leadership.

Here’s the difference: business principles in a classroom are concepts. Business principles in a café are convictions. I’ll boldly wager that the six students leading the Spartan Café learned more in their first week of operation than they would have in an entire year of concentrated business instruction.

In just a few days, I watched them problem-solve in real time (we’re out of milk, the line is too long, there’s a bottleneck), collaborate as a team (you take this station, I’ll cover that one), and design systems for success (a better schedule, a stronger training process).

And here’s the thing: it doesn’t really matter what the business is, as long as students have the chance to run it. It takes trust from administrators and freedom for students, but when the right ingredients are in place, the results are profound.

Toward the end of the week, Dr. Paul Cable, the high school principal, pulled me aside and shared this about one of his students:

“The young lady taking orders today has, in the last thirty minutes, talked and interacted more than she has in the last three years at the school. Seeing her like that — so fully engaged — is worth the entire expense of this program.”

I couldn’t agree more.

If you’re ready to see this kind of transformation at your school, let’s talk about how to get a student-run business started on your campus.

FOUR STEPS TO LAUNCHING AN ENTREPRENEURSHIP PROGRAM

  1. Select the teacher - I have a tool to help with selection

  2. Identify between eight and twelve students for the pilot class

  3. Train and certify the teacher - I have a program for this with curriculum included

  4. Start the year-long class - Follow the plan and an on-campus business will be launched mid-year

After the launch, student interest will drive the future growth of the program. For more on the process, visit our website at https://www.seedtreegroup.com/

The future of education is bright indeed!

Standing out as a Christian school while staying true to your values is more challenging than ever. At Seed Tree Group, we help schools implement a proven entrepreneurship program that empowers students to take ownership of their education, equipping them with life-ready skills and creating a distinguished school with engaged students, inspired parents, and energized donors.

Imagine your culture infused with growth mindset, grit, redefining failure, and opportunity seeking. Imagine your team acting and thinking like entrepreneurs.

Stephen Carter