According to a survey released Tuesday, young people are less willing to undertake before, but they are still more willing to consider one day leader company than their elders.
It is quite paradoxical: while entrepreneurship training are booming, the number of high school students vocational programs and students who plan to one day create a business is the lowest since 2009, according to a survey released Tuesday.
They are 34% intend to create or take one day business, as the Moovjee / CIC OpinionWay barometer conducted in January on a sample of 1,022 professionals and students high school students. However, they were 45% in 2009 and 43% in 2011 and 37% in 2013, according to the survey on the image of entrepreneurship among young people.
Compared to 2009, they are almost as many (96% in 2015 against 95% a six) to feel that it is difficult to start a business by being a student or at the end of his studies. The entrepreneur-student status recently created to help project leaders under 28 years is not enough to reassure young people and encourage them to take the plunge.
Short of cash , young people rely on their enthusiasm and ability to work
Among the assets that they do not have and could help them start a business, youth are 73% (as in 2011 and 2013) against 77% in 2009, to cite financial means. Instead, they rely on their enthusiasm (43%) and work capacity (49%) to realize their ideas.
By extrapolating to the size of the population surveyed, which represents 3.1 million young, they would still be 1 million to want to start a business one day, and 660,000 by age 30, says the survey released on the eve of the Salon des entrepreneurs. And their entrepreneurial remains much higher than that of their elders, since only 25% of the total population envisaged, against 34% of young people, as pointed out Moovjee, an association that supports young people to consider the creation and business takeovers during or at the exit of their training as a professional option.
“Examples of success is often what is needed to get started,” says Peter, a law student who would like to be your own boss, but do not know where to start. Certainly inspired by the great success of Ticket for Change, social enterprise designed precisely to encourage young people to engage in entrepreneurial solidarity adventure from Matthew Dardaillon, just 23 years old at the time, one of the participants in the Tour launched, presenting his own project: “Dare, at worst it works!”. . A mantra to keep in mind for the young undecided
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