Gabriel Wiesen
In a turn of sweet irony almost too good to believe, donuts cost Wiesen his first job. He wanted to help supplement his mother’s income—it was just the two of them struggling to get by—so he secured a position at the bakery counter of Morningfields, a neighborhood grocery store in Park Ridge, Ill. “I was actually so young that I had to get a special work permit certifying that it wasn’t child labor,” Wiesen says.
Owner of Beavers Donuts
Wiesen decided to major in finance for practical reasons. “My mother never graduated from college, and I witnessed the difficulties she faced and the opportunities she wasn’t afforded,” he says. “Being financially secure has always been a huge motivator for me.” His senior year schedule highlights this inner drive: Wiesen held a full-time job at DePaul in the Office of the Treasurer, attended classes at night and spent the weekends working on his first business, an events promotion and marketing company he co-founded with three friends.
The venture took off. “We were booking talent, venues, staffing,” Wiesen recalls. “Our ultimate goal was always to open our own bar or nightclub.” Unfortunately, the company struggled to stay afloat during the recession. “Eventually, things came to an end,” Wiesen says. “But it was good to go through the rise and fall of a company while I was young. It helped me gain an understanding of what to do differently in the future.”
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