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January, 2012
Browsing all articles from January, 2012
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Earlier this month, the Project placed second in the Enterprize Canada central region business plan competition. After the news release of the Waterloo Banking Project advancing to the Enterprize Canada finals in Vancouver, the Project received much media attention from the University of Waterloo and Wilfrid Laurier University.

The Cord included a brief description about the Project’s achievements at the competition and a statement from Ryan Chen-Wing, one of the directors of the Project.
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Waterloo Banking Project participated in the Queen’s Entrepreneurs’ Competition this weekend — the largest international undergraduate business plan competition in Canada, according to the QEC website. Directors of the Project, Mark Haley, Helena Cao, and Ryan Chen-Wing, competed among the sixteen teams whose business plans qualified for the competition and presented their plans to business professionals.

The QEC brings together young, bright individuals and allows them to develop their business ideas with the criticism and support they received from the judges, as well as compete for a top cash prize of $15,000. The competition is recognized internationally and has now entered its 24th year, with teams that came from Singapore, South Africa, Bangladesh, the U.S., and Canada.

The itinerary of the three-day competition included a ‘mix and mingle’ at the Delta Chelsea hotel, a speaker event, dinner at the Hard Rock Cafe, and of course first and final round presentations on Friday and Saturday.

Waterloo Banking unfortunately did not advance into the final six, however the team did not leave completely dissatisfied. The judges asked questions that identified some of the major challenges the project faces. “We answered them well,” said Ryan Chen-Wing over email from the competition, “but we were the only project whose purpose is not personal profit. Ours is an unconventional endeavour and it is important for us to deal with and dispel doubts.”

Staff of the project are looking forward to better showings at Enterprize nationals and other competitions later this term. As well the project is focused on its primary goal of establishing student-run financial services.

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A group of Waterloo and Laurier students are boosting their universities’ reputations for entrepreneurship as they work to create Canada’s first student-run financial institution. Waterloo Banking Project placed second in the Enterprize Canada central region business plan competition on Saturday 14 January and qualified to compete at the national finals in Vancouver next month.

Ryan Chen-Wing, Helena Cao, and Mark Haley delivered their 15-minute presentation on their team’s business plan to a panel of judges, students, and competitors from the other six teams in the Macdonald Institute building at the University of Guelph.
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Waterloo Banking Project at Enterprize Canada central regional competition

Waterloo Banking Project placed second in the Enterprize Canada central region on Saturday and qualified to compete at the national finals in Vancouver next month.

Ryan Chen-Wing, Helena Cao, and Mark Haley delivered their 15-minute presentation on their team’s business plan to a panel of judges, students, and competitors from the other six teams in the Macdonald Institute building at the University of Guelph. The team represented both University of Waterloo and Wilfrid Laurier University.

Judges offered feedback and advice on improving the team’s performance for the finals. They also were impressed by how much the team had achieved so far in developing plans for student-run financial services.

The top three teams advance to compete at the 12-team Enterprize Canada finals February 10-12 in Vancouver.

Thank you to staff members Tian Lei and Vinson Fong who attended the event and photographed and supported the team.

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Edit: Applications are now closed. Thanks for applying!

We at Waterloo Banking Project are hiring student staff to help establish the first student-run financial institution in Canada.

Our social enterprise startup requires a broad rang of talents and perspectives. We invite applications in all years and all programs from both Wilfrid Laurier University and University of Waterloo.

We are seeking applicants who are diligent, resourceful, and good communicators.

Applications are due Friday 6 January 2012 at 23:59.

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In October, we held our first financial education speaker event, Graduate Richer, with speaker Bradley Roulston, Certified Financial Planner (CFP).

In his talk, Bradley began by describing the reluctance many people have toward discussing personal finances with family and friends. This “Psychology of Money“, as he called it, creates a barrier which not only makes the topic of money difficult to bring up but can even lead to fights. However, it is important that we understand our finances if we want to achieve our financial goals.

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Throughout the course of this term, the Waterloo Banking Project appeared several times in Wilfrid Laurier University’s student newspaper The Cord.

In September, Laurier students learned about the project in an article where Helena Cao and Ryan Chen-Wing discussed the origins of the project and what we plan to achieve. The article also included encouraging feedback from a Laurier professor.

When Ryan Chen-Wing first stumbled across the entirely student-operated Georgetown University credit union during a research project, he was struck by the idea that such success might be mirrored in Waterloo.

“We have talented students at Waterloo and Laurier,” the University of Waterloo student commented. “If it can be done anywhere in Canada, it can be done here.”

[...]

The goal, said Helena Cao, who is the senior director of Waterloo Banking Project, is for students “to be able to carry themselves through their education with the least amount of debt that they can have.”
Easing students’ financial woes The Cord 28 Sep 2011

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