• Home
  • News
  • Personal Finance
    • Savings
    • Banking
    • Mortgage
    • Retirement
    • Taxes
    • Wealth
  • Make Money
  • Budgeting
  • Burrow
  • Investing
  • Credit Cards
  • Loans

Subscribe to Updates

Get the latest finance news and updates directly to your inbox.

Top News

Here’s How to Qualify for a Payment From a Google Data Settlement

April 9, 2026

20 High-Paying Remote Jobs You Can Get Without a Bachelor’s Degree

April 9, 2026

Eva Longoria’s Playbook for Stuck Entrepreneurs

April 9, 2026
Facebook Twitter Instagram
Trending
  • Here’s How to Qualify for a Payment From a Google Data Settlement
  • 20 High-Paying Remote Jobs You Can Get Without a Bachelor’s Degree
  • Eva Longoria’s Playbook for Stuck Entrepreneurs
  • What the Nvidia–Huawei Rivalry Means for AI
  • Here’s When Apple’s New Foldable iPhone Is Set to Launch
  • Co-Workers’ Dog Side Hustle Made $456K in Year 1: Houndsy
  • Buc-ee’s Opens Its First Ohio Location. See Which States Are Next.
  • Burger King Wants to Hire 60,000 New Employees. Here’s Why.
Thursday, April 9
Facebook Twitter Instagram
Micro Loan Nexus
Subscribe For Alerts
  • Home
  • News
  • Personal Finance
    • Savings
    • Banking
    • Mortgage
    • Retirement
    • Taxes
    • Wealth
  • Make Money
  • Budgeting
  • Burrow
  • Investing
  • Credit Cards
  • Loans
Micro Loan Nexus
Home » How I Built a $20 Million Company While Still in College
Make Money

How I Built a $20 Million Company While Still in College

News RoomBy News RoomAugust 3, 20251 Views0
Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn WhatsApp Reddit Email Tumblr Telegram

Entrepreneur

At 22, I’ve built two multimillion-dollar companies, raised $1.5 million while taking finals and convinced Miami University to pay me $200,000 to stay enrolled. While my classmates were buried in textbooks and partying, I was burning through sleepless nights and betting on ideas that seemed insane to everyone around me … until they started to work.

Before those bets turned into a repeatable strategy, it was easy to write me off as just another kid playing entrepreneur. Early twenty-somethings are constantly told to play it safe: Graduate, get the first decent job you can find, stash away 10% of your paycheck, and start slowly building wealth over time. Well, I did the opposite: I ignored all conventional wisdom about how young people should approach money and treated my early twenties like a one-time window to build real leverage.

I didn’t stumble into that mindset. I earned it the hard way.

Related: How 15 People in Their 20s Built Million-Dollar Businesses

Your biggest advantages aren’t what you think

When I was 19, I borrowed hundreds of thousands of dollars to launch Step Up Social (now Candid Network) with no credit score, no assets and no real backup plan. You could say I was reckless, and I wouldn’t disagree with you in theory, but I would add that the riskiest time to take a swing is also the safest. Had it all gone up in flames, what were they going to take? My dorm room furniture? My favorite sneakers? When you have nothing to lose, you can afford to take the kind of risks that would terrify someone with a mortgage and family.

That freedom is an incredibly precious window of opportunity, and I believe it’s the single most overlooked advantage young entrepreneurs have. Everyone talks about surface-level elements like youthful energy or fewer responsibilities, but the real edge is asymmetric risk tolerance. Every year you wait, you accumulate more to lose: relationships, reputation, lifestyle expectations.

The second thing I learned is that diversification protects existing wealth, but what you need to focus on to create new wealth in your early twenties (or anytime!) is concentration. The world tells you to keep your options open? I closed mine — deliberately. I could have spent college doing internships at different companies, building a broad network and exploring various career paths, but instead, I spent four years going deeper into social media marketing and workforce development than anyone my age. That obsessive focus made me better at those things than anyone else my age, which gave me a clear edge when I launched companies in both spaces.

Related: Why Your 20s Is the Perfect Time to Start a Business

The negotiation framework that paid me $200,000

Traditional career advice also gets negotiation wrong. Most people think negotiation is about being aggressive or having leverage, when it’s actually about understanding what the other side values and delivering it better than their next-best option.

When I negotiated with Miami University to cover my tuition and pay me for additional work, I didn’t lead with what I wanted, but focused on their need for credible student entrepreneurs to showcase their program to donors and media. I knew I could provide that more authentically than any marketing agency because I was actually building companies on campus. I gave them what agencies couldn’t — real credibility — and that alone was worth the $200,000 they paid me to stay enrolled.

Most young entrepreneurs undervalue what they can uniquely provide, but the best opportunities always come from thinking like a solution provider, not a supplicant. This works whether you’re negotiating with universities, clients or investors, and it works whether you’re 21 or 99 years old.

All of this comes down to a different kind of math. The standard path grows linearly: $60K job, 3% raises, maybe $200K if you’re a standout by your thirties. Entrepreneurship doesn’t follow that curve. You might make $0 for two years and then $500K in one, so while the average return is not dissimilar to that of the traditional job-seeker, the distribution is completely different. Most people can’t stomach those early zeros, but young people can.

If you’re 22 and living on ramen for two years while building something, that’s just an extension of college. If you’re 34 with a family, that same scenario is understandably impossible for you to replicate.

Related: What’s the Biggest Lesson to Learn As a Young Entrepreneur?

The compounding effect nobody mentions

Wealth doesn’t come from predictability, and the biggest mental shift I had to make as a young entrepreneur just starting out was to get comfortable choosing optionality over certainty every time I could.

Instead of optimizing for certainty and steady progress — which leads to building income, not real wealth — the model that twenty-somethings should follow is one that sees them chase optionality and asymmetric outcomes while they can still afford to. Because the biggest advantage of starting wealth-building early isn’t compound interest on investments, but compound learning on business skills.

Every deal I pitched at 19 made me better at raising money at 21. Every bad hire I made in college taught me how to build stronger teams later. Every mistake I made early on saved me from making bigger ones when the stakes became impossibly higher. These experiences stack up, transfer across every business you’ll ever build and can speed up your growth in ways no traditional job ever could.

Don’t expect it to be easy, because it’s not. I gained 80 pounds my first year, slept three hours a night and took on projects that could have crushed me if things went wrong. But that’s exactly why choosing the uncomfortable path can be so rewarding.

If you ever question betting on yourself as a young entrepreneur, consider that the traditional path will always be there, but the asymmetric opportunities won’t. In that sense, your early twenties aren’t just a good time to start, but they’re the best shot you’re going to get.

At 22, I’ve built two multimillion-dollar companies, raised $1.5 million while taking finals and convinced Miami University to pay me $200,000 to stay enrolled. While my classmates were buried in textbooks and partying, I was burning through sleepless nights and betting on ideas that seemed insane to everyone around me … until they started to work.

Before those bets turned into a repeatable strategy, it was easy to write me off as just another kid playing entrepreneur. Early twenty-somethings are constantly told to play it safe: Graduate, get the first decent job you can find, stash away 10% of your paycheck, and start slowly building wealth over time. Well, I did the opposite: I ignored all conventional wisdom about how young people should approach money and treated my early twenties like a one-time window to build real leverage.

I didn’t stumble into that mindset. I earned it the hard way.

The rest of this article is locked.

Join Entrepreneur+ today for access.

Read the full article here

Featured
Share. Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn Tumblr Email

Related Articles

Here’s How to Qualify for a Payment From a Google Data Settlement

Burrow April 9, 2026

20 High-Paying Remote Jobs You Can Get Without a Bachelor’s Degree

Make Money April 9, 2026

Eva Longoria’s Playbook for Stuck Entrepreneurs

Make Money April 9, 2026

What the Nvidia–Huawei Rivalry Means for AI

Investing April 9, 2026

Here’s When Apple’s New Foldable iPhone Is Set to Launch

Make Money April 9, 2026

Co-Workers’ Dog Side Hustle Made $456K in Year 1: Houndsy

Make Money April 9, 2026
Add A Comment

Leave A Reply Cancel Reply

Demo
Top News

20 High-Paying Remote Jobs You Can Get Without a Bachelor’s Degree

April 9, 20261 Views

Eva Longoria’s Playbook for Stuck Entrepreneurs

April 9, 20262 Views

What the Nvidia–Huawei Rivalry Means for AI

April 9, 20262 Views

Here’s When Apple’s New Foldable iPhone Is Set to Launch

April 9, 20262 Views
Don't Miss

Co-Workers’ Dog Side Hustle Made $456K in Year 1: Houndsy

By News RoomApril 9, 2026

Key Takeaways Bapu and Wilson raised $160,000 on Kickstarter to help bring their side hustle…

Buc-ee’s Opens Its First Ohio Location. See Which States Are Next.

April 8, 2026

Burger King Wants to Hire 60,000 New Employees. Here’s Why.

April 8, 2026

Here’s How Much It Pays Workers

April 8, 2026
About Us

Your number 1 source for the latest finance, making money, saving money and budgeting. follow us now to get the news that matters to you.

We're accepting new partnerships right now.

Email Us: [email protected]

Our Picks

Here’s How to Qualify for a Payment From a Google Data Settlement

April 9, 2026

20 High-Paying Remote Jobs You Can Get Without a Bachelor’s Degree

April 9, 2026

Eva Longoria’s Playbook for Stuck Entrepreneurs

April 9, 2026
Most Popular

How to Get Free Wendy’s Fries and Frosty Tuesday for Michigan Dunk

April 7, 202612 Views

The Leadership Skill That’s Quietly Fading in the Age of AI

April 6, 20264 Views

Fires Break Out in Southern California, Scorch Over 2,000 Acres

April 4, 20264 Views
Facebook Twitter Instagram Pinterest Dribbble
  • Privacy Policy
  • Terms of use
  • Press Release
  • Advertise
  • Contact
© 2026 Micro Loan Nexus. All Rights Reserved.

Type above and press Enter to search. Press Esc to cancel.