CAT
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CAT
In fact, here's some cookies, Merry Christmas
HUZZAH COOKIES!!! thank you shocckk:D
I promise you I will check my inbox in full by Friday at the latest as I not so humbly request Christmas Day free even though my inbox is not clean…..me has much to do tomorrow
And I have a gift for you tomorrow!!!! (You and clock actually mwadhehehheheh)
*throws a box of cookies at you (affectionately) and runs away*
oh. thank you!
Hellooo :>?
Cookie^^?
(He's definitely not poisoned,Trust me:D)
:0! Thanks! Btw nice stars :3 *noms*
So… I like the Girl Scouts' approach to their cookie selling enterprise, how they're using a traditional method (within the movement) for teaching entrepreneurship while also building their brand and raising money. Really smart, and we could take a few ideas from them for the Swedish YMCA scout calendar. Using the Internet is, of course, a natural extension. Can one even sell goods today without a web shop? I'm not sure.
Anyway. If you're trying to teach entrepreneurship, wouldn't a natural first step be to encourage entrepreneurship? In this case, to let those scouts who tried building their own web shops and order forms go ahead and do that? Of course some oversight is good, to make sure that relevant laws and regulations are followed and that deliveries work as supposed – but basically this kind of entrepreneurship should be seen as a good thing. At least if you claim that one of your main activities is… teaching entrepreneurship.
Lit. revision failed miserably, I have a sandwich and a cookie now though :D
Also, someone just reblogged a post from like a month ago and they aren't even following me O.o