Now Everyone’s an Entrepreneur

By the time she was a junior, Mackenzie Burnett had put herself on course for a career in foreign policy. Her résumé was stacked with government internships, extensive service work, and a stellar academic record at the University of Maryland. Then a friend told her about Startup Shell. A bunch of students had cleared out a storage room on campus and were using it to work on personal projects at night, like 3-D mapping software. Ms. Burnett hardly seemed a logical fit. She was a government and international relations double major with zero technical skills. But it was love at first sight. "I walked into the room and had that moment that I knew everyone around me was ­really interesting and going places," she recalls. "All of these people were looking to do something that hadn’t been done before, instead of waiting for opportunities that already existed."


・ From Chronicle of Higher Education