Executive Summary
Club purpose, student venture studio thesis, flagship business, and reviewer audiences.
Business Plan Request
Approved access includes both the original 14-page club plan and the new 25-page professional plan. Reviewers can compare the earlier club draft with the upgraded venture thesis, market logic, revenue model, funding pathway, bylaws, and implementation calendar.
Professional Plan Structure
The new plan explains what the club is trying to build, how it will operate responsibly, and how students will convert business theory into measurable work. The original plan remains in the approved pack as the earlier reference version.
Club purpose, student venture studio thesis, flagship business, and reviewer audiences.
East Bay student, club, youth program, family, and community partner demand.
Six realistic business areas that are low-cost, learnable, useful, and advisor-reviewable.
Bootstrapping, sponsor support, grants, angel mentorship, VC literacy, and corporate innovation exposure.
High-level phased cost categories, revenue logic, margins, reserves, and measurable operating metrics.
Officer roles, doubled responsibilities for a small team, approvals, conduct, privacy, and safety controls.
Business Proposition
The club should not chase random fundraising projects. It should build a practical venture portfolio where students can learn customer research, delivery, pricing, and investor-style communication.
Flagship
A student-run micro-agency offering event pages, QR signups, sponsor packets, flyers, recap media, and outreach support for clubs, teams, youth programs, and local community groups.
Simple marketing and customer feedback help for small East Bay businesses and family services.
Paid or sponsored sessions teaching younger students business basics, media, budgeting, and presentation skills.
Small pre-order and event-sale experiments that teach inventory, pricing, cash controls, and margins.
Student-produced founder interviews, sponsor spotlights, showcase recaps, and venture storytelling.
Checklists, staffing, sponsor tables, budgets, and post-event reports for school or partner events.
Funding and Economics
The plan separates what students need at formation from what becomes useful only after pilots, proof, and sponsor confidence.