Exorbitant student loans constitute just one reason why young people eager to experience the world may want to reconsider college, says Ed Basler, a veteran entrepreneur.

There is now $1.2 trillion worth of college debt in the United States and the average borrower will graduate $26,600 in the red, according to The Institute for College Access and Success (TICAS) Project on Student Debt.

โ€œNone of this guarantees a job or even that a college grad will be job-ready,โ€ says Basler, CEO of E.J. Basler Co., (www.ejbasler.com).

โ€œAfter four weeks of business school I, the son of a businessman, had realized that the professor had no real-life experience running a business and that I wouldnโ€™t learn the practical principles necessary to succeed. But I stuck with business school for two years until I dropped out, and I havenโ€™t had any regrets 40 years later. Hands-on experience trumps a degree all the time.โ€

Factor in the fact that necessary business skills evolve faster than the time it takes to earn a degree and the overall lack of preparation for the real world provided by college and the choice to save time and money is a no-brainer, says Basler.

Business owners and hiring managers should see past the college degrees of potential employees, or lack thereof, and focus on the content of an applicantโ€™s skills and character, says Basler, who offers, in his own words, the following tips for hiring.

  1. Do not accept any bad attitudes. A bad attitude spreads like the flu, and if you donโ€™t stop it, itโ€™ll make your whole team sick. Good attitudes will spread too, so look to hire people with a positive nature. Is the prospective hire full of complaints about previous employers? Donโ€™t be surprised if you become the next target of such whining. No one is indispensable. I have interviewed people who were clearly bright and skilled. Yet, afterward, I felt like telling them not to let the door hit them on the way out. Iโ€™ve never regretted my decision to insist on good attitudes.
  2. Hire friends very cautiously. They can become your best employees. Often, however, they are your worst, and theyโ€™re hard to fire. Hire family members even more cautiously. Let them know the ground rules and expectations up front. And treat them like the rest of your employees. I hear horror stories all the time from business people who are suffering because of family involvement. But it can also work very well โ€“ it has worked out well for me.
  3. Hire not only for skills but also for potential. Leaders can be made if trained and motivated properly. Iโ€™ve seen many a young person with no previous experience or knowledge of my business learn a trade or skill and prosper and excel. Many times, itโ€™s even an advantage to start from the beginning with someone who does not have the baggage of bad habits or practices from a previous employer.
  4. Put people in the right positions. Test them for their personality and skill sets. There are many tests โ€“ one good one is the Meyers Briggs and the DISC profile. Itโ€™s hard, sometimes, to understand where people fit, which is why we try to use testing to learn about their particular skills.

โ€œA college degree is a generic qualification and is by no means the ultimate criteria by which you should hire talent,โ€ Basler says.