Chapter 264 - 264 264 Dont You Think We Are a Shell Company
Chapter 264 - 264 264 Dont You Think We Are a Shell Company
?Chapter 264: Chapter 264: Don’t You Think We Are a Shell Company? Chapter 264: Chapter 264: Don’t You Think We Are a Shell Company? Since last night, Zhou Shuyan had been constantly talking about “husband and wife,” which caused Lu Youxi’s mindset to subtly change without her realizing it.
After parting with Zhou Shuyan, Lu Youxi went straight to the internet café.
“Boss, how did the talk with the school go?” Pei Jingyuan asked.
Since the establishment of their company, Pei Jingyuan and Ji Deyi had completely turned the place into their office.
They would come over as soon as they had no classes.
“We’ve reached an agreement, and the same goes for the restaurant I’ll be starting. It’s a partnership with the school,” Lu Youxi said with a smile.
“Woah, so not only the internet café’s manager but even the restaurant’s staff will be Jing University students?” Pei Jingyuan exclaimed, “I’ve always wondered, will people come? Those are Jing University students we’re talking about. They can make a decent amount tutoring, and it’s easier work. Would they come do manual labor? Being a net manager is one thing, but wait staff in a restaurant—I’m afraid many wouldn’t want to.”
“Those who are willing to come, will come. If I can’t find anyone, I’ll recruit externally,” Lu Youxi said, laughing. “Those who are really struggling at home won’t be choosy about work. Take me, for example, if I hadn’t made money from stock trading, I wouldn’t have even been able to afford tuition. I would’ve come to work at the restaurant.”
“Yeah, where are there so many jobs that are just right?” Ji Deyi chimed in from the side. “Don’t look at Jing University students and think they’re something special. They have no competitive edge until they graduate. Especially freshmen and sophomores who haven’t learned much yet. Companies hiring interns wouldn’t go for them. With tons of graduates able to work full-time, how could companies do charitable work by hiring students, then arrange work hours around their class schedules? There just aren’t that many good things out there.”
“Then there’s tutoring,” Ji Deyi continued. “At first, I really looked for this kind of work, thinking that I was a Jing University student—with my background, from elementary to high school, who couldn’t I teach?”
“But only when I actually started looking did I realize that parents who are serious about their kids’ studies have a lot of faith in a teacher’s experience. They all want those with experience, those who have taught successfully. Those teachers have certificates galore, they’re formal education graduates, they know how to teach children. Plus, teachers from schools run their own tutoring classes in private. The competition is fierce in the home tutoring market, and it’s not our turn to play.”
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