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Bad Biz: Your Guide to Starting a For-Profit College
Contributor(s): Devaso, Corin (Author)
ISBN: 1090642814     ISBN-13: 9781090642813
Publisher: Independently Published
OUR PRICE:   $9.49  
Product Type: Paperback
Published: March 2019
Qty:
Additional Information
BISAC Categories:
- Business & Economics | Education
Physical Information: 0.39" H x 6" W x 9" (0.56 lbs) 168 pages
 
Descriptions, Reviews, Etc.
Publisher Description:

Have you ever wondered how corrupt businesses evolve and thrive? Are you curious about the inner workings of a nefarious enterprise? Have you been scammed or hurt by a predatory business?

Bad Biz is an educational satire that'll show you how bad businesses become successful, and how they get away with their schemes and scams. There are a lot of books written from the perspective of the good guy, but Bad Biz is written from the perspective of the corrupt tycoon. Imagine yourself as a fly on the wall listening to a fictional profiteer guiding a nefarious entrepreneur.

This book is satire, so the author is writing from the perspective of a fictional bad biz owner. You'll gain a keen understanding of how for-profit colleges scam vulnerable people, cheat taxpayers, increase student loan debt, and devastate communities.

This book is satire but the situation is very real.

For-profit colleges (and some non-profit institutions) have been scamming students for decades, leaving hundreds-of-thousands of students with massive debt and no degree nor job training to show for their expense and time. This widespread fraud has devastated communities and families...and it continues unchecked and rarely challenged by the politicians elected to protect our youth.

Please help new and prospective students by sharing this book on social media by using the hashtags #CollegeFraud and #CollegeScam in your next post. And if you would like to be bold and take it a step further, tag your state senator on the post or share the link for this book with your state's department of education and/or senator.

With average graduation rates dangerously low at these particular colleges (anywhere between 15% and 35% graduation rates), the scam cannot continue any longer.