Business Insider Australia / Bubble Tea Club
When Pamela Yip and Jenny Le lost work during the pandemic, they decided to start a business.
They couldn t get their favorite bubble teas at home, so started selling DIY kits online.
Bubble Tea Club surpassed $1.5 million in sales in its first year. The venture could soon go global.
It would be quite reasonable to expect people to need a little downtime between losing one job and finding another, especially in the middle of a pandemic.
Yet within a week of losing all her marketing clients many of whom were hospitality venues Pamela Yip would go on to launch a new business from scratch with friend Jenny Le.
Australian best friends Pam Yip, 28, and Jenny Le, 26, have revealed how losing their jobs during the coronavirus pandemic sparked their multi-million dollar bubble tea empire.
Little Flower students ‘bloom’ while cleaning neighborhood, saving planet
(Left to right) Little Flower students Kristina Pham, Vivian Le and Jenny Le who along with fellow junior Nicole Orbe-Muñoz founded The Planeteers environmental club clean leaves and debris from a baseball field at the Hunting Park Recreation Center, located directly across from the archdiocesan high school in Philadelphia, April 24. (Gina Christian)
By Gina Christian • Posted April 27, 2021
Students at an archdiocesan high school are rolling up their sleeves – and using their business skills to “love their park,” along with their community and the planet itself.
Volunteers from Little Flower Catholic High School for Girls in Philadelphia spent last Saturday morning removing fallen leaves and debris from the city’s Hunting Park Recreation Center, located across the street from the school’s main entrance. The sprawling grounds, which span dozens of acres, include a swimming pool, a