Friday, September 12, 2008

Small U.S. College Ranks Number 1 in Entrepreneurial Education

Babson College in Wellesley, Massachusetts, is a hatchery from which business students emerge ready to start their own businesses.

U.S. News and World Report magazine has ranked Babson's undergraduate school as the Number 1 educational institution for entrepreneurs in the United States for 12 years. In its rankings of graduate schools, the magazine has given the tops-in-entrepreneurship award to Babson's master of business administration (MBA) program for 15 years.

While rankings may be limited in predicting student satisfaction, the number of years Babson programs have been lauded for entrepreneurship study is a sign that this school knows business. (With tuition at a hefty $48,000 a year, Babson attracts a dedicated brand of student to its classrooms. There are 1,850 undergraduates and 1,500 graduate students on its campus near Boston.)

"We live entrepreneurship in everything we do, both in the classroom, in student experience and the way the college is run," Dennis Hanno, Babson's undergraduate dean, told America.gov.

Any student can take a business idea from infancy to full-blown operation on campus as part of his or her course work. A student also can get a loan from the school to start a business, with the stipulation that the profits go to charity.

Some students live in an entrepreneurial dorm called the E-Tower, where they develop business plans, run companies and soak up the atmosphere of living with other business-minded students. The men and women who live there have created a Web site to tout their businesses.

All Babson students are eligible to participate in an integrated yearlong program that addresses what it is like to be an entrepreneur. They can select from courses that include entrepreneurial and creative thinking, global and multicultural perspectives, or ethics and social responsibility. Students choose from 25 community projects to do real-world consulting.

From the first day of class, the students are challenged to think about startup ideas and to consider what ideas work and how they can bring profits. That has been the experience of Alexey Ossikine, 20, a junior at Babson who comes from Russia, where his family has a real estate development business.

Ossikine and his student-partner, Alexander Debelov, started Crelligence Media LLC, a company that enables filmmakers to create commercials and get paid based on their films' online popularity. The Crelligence Web site brings together freelance filmmakers and organizations that want a film made to advertise a product or service. The organizations seeking commercials pay for any successful campaign, based on the number of times a film is viewed online or an action is taken by a viewer.

Ossikine's background is not unusual at Babson, where 28 percent of the incoming freshmen for the 2008-2009 academic year come from 45 countries other than the United States. Babson's MBA program enrolls 41 percent international students.

Shiva Shanker, 21, a senior from New Delhi attends Babson and focuses on finance and entrepreneurship. He will look for jobs after college in both the United States and India, and he hopes to get financial experience before he launches his own business.

Shanker said one idea he would like to pursue in India is that of creating a microcredit venture. "We would provide funding for people who can't get loans through traditional banks,'' he said. "These would be very small loans to business people in poorer areas.''

On campus, Shanker is a member of the Babson Emerging Markets (BEM), a student group that is analyzing a series of countries - such as Vietnam, Russia and Brazil - to identify their future growth industries.

Babson provides students with another opportunity: helping developing nations nurture their own talent. Every January for the last eight years, Babson students have spent two weeks in Ghana teaching secondary school students during the day how to become entrepreneurs and working with local businesspeople in the evenings.

"There is a campuswide environment that creates an entrepreneurial mindset," Hanno said. "No matter what you go on to do, you will have an idea how to be an innovative and creative leader."

While students regularly try business startup ideas, only 1 percent of graduates immediately head down an entrepreneurial path, according to Hanno. But the kernels of the entrepreneurial culture are firmly planted.

"We don't think of entrepreneurs as starting businesses. It's about creativity," Hanno said. "Our belief is that entrepreneurship is just as important to accountants as [it is to] someone who goes and starts a business."

UW-MADISON'S ENTREPRENEURSHIP PROGRAM RATED AMONG NATION'S BEST

(Media-Newswire.com) - MADISON - The Wisconsin School of Business at the University of Wisconsin-Madison has one of the nation's top programs in entrepreneurship, according to a survey just published in the Princeton Review and Entrepreneur magazine.

The school's Weinert Center for Entrepreneurship was ranked 13th in the nation on a list of "Top 50 Entrepreneurial Graduate Colleges in the U.S." Among public schools in the ranking, Wisconsin placed seventh.

Now in its sixth year, the Princeton Review and Entrepreneur magazine rankings are based on a survey of more than 2,300 undergraduate and graduate schools about their offerings in entrepreneurship for the period from December 2007 through June 2008. This is the first year Wisconsin has been ranked in the survey.

As part of the survey, schools were asked to answer questions relating to three basic areas: academics and requirements, students and faculty, and outside the classroom. The questions were refined and the results validated with the help of an advisory board comprised of professionals in the area of entrepreneurship education.

"Wisconsin has a strong heritage of generating ideas and technologies that will drive the future," says Michael Knetter, dean of the Wisconsin School of Business. "Our business school is focused on bringing students from across campus in close contact with local companies and startups, and building those integral networks for successful new businesses."

The Weinert Center for Entrepreneurship was established in 1986 and provides a variety of programs and services relating to entrepreneurial management and development. At the graduate level, it offers a career specialization in entrepreneurial management in the school's full-time Wisconsin MBA program.

"Wisconsin has a history of being at the front of entrepreneurship education," says Dan Olszewski, director of the Weinert Center. "This high ranking is recognition of the success and accomplishments of our students and alumni."

The center also works to bring students together with researchers at UW-Madison, one of the world's leading research universities, to explore potential commercialization of technological opportunities. UW-Madison was recently awarded a prestigious $5 million Kauffman Foundation grant to further expand entrepreneurship on campus.

The Wisconsin School of Business was recently recognized by the Milwaukee Journal-Sentinel for its leadership role in bringing entrepreneurial opportunities to the state of Wisconsin.

McGuire Entrepreneurship Program Lauded Again

The University of Arizona's McGuire Entrepreneurship Program is again recognized among the best in the country, according to the latest Princeton Review/Entrepreneur magazine review of "Top 50 Entrepreneurial Colleges."

In the review of graduate programs, McGuire is ranked No. 1 among public institutions and No. 4 among all institutions; in the undergraduate review, McGuire comes in at No. 2 among public universities and No. 5 among all institutions. The program, housed in the UA's Eller College of Management, has been ranked in the top five of both categories since the rankings began in 2002.

The news comes on the heels of the 2009 U.S.News and World Report survey of the "Best Business Programs," which placed the McGuire Entrepreneurship Program at No. 5 among entrepreneurship programs nationwide, and No. 2 among public institutions. Earlier this year, the Financial Times global rankings named McGuire No. 6 in the world in entrepreneurship for the second year in a row.

"The McGuire Center for Entrepreneurship was one of the first university-based entrepreneurship programs in the country," said Paul Portney, dean of the Eller College of Management. "It's gratifying to see the ongoing hard work of nearly 25 years continue to pay off in the form of recognition by our peer schools."

The McGuire Center for Entrepreneurship was founded in 1984 with the support of UA alumnus Karl Eller. Since then, the program has continuously evolved to meet the needs of emerging entrepreneurs. The heart of the one-year program, which is available to all UA students, is the Idea Path curriculum, which guides students through a step-by-step process to bring venture ideas to fruition.

Through an arrangement with the UA Office of Technology Transfer, many of the ventures developed in the program are based on UA-developed technologies. Since the program began, its more than 1,200 graduates have launched hundreds of ventures.

New infor 2008, the program is working with partner organizations around Southern Arizona to engage with "angel" investors – individuals who invest private capital into startups – who will meet with students at key points throughout the year to offer insight and advice on their specific ventures.

Belmont's entrepreneurship program ranked as one of best in the country

Belmont University has ranked in the top 25 schools for its entrepreneurship program.

Entrepreneur magazine and The Princeton Review surveyed 2,300 schools for the ranking. Belmont ranked 23rd in the undergraduate category.

"Belmont made the commitment to create a quality program in entrepreneurship, and I am proud that we have been able to make so much progress in only five years," says Jeff Cornwall, director of Belmont's Center for Entrepreneurship and holder of the Jack C. Massey Chair in Entrepreneurship. "To be singled out from the hundreds of universities across the country is a testimony to the support we have gotten from the students, alumni, faculty, staff and administration of Belmont and the Nashville business community."

The schools were evaluated on academics, requirements, students and faculty and outside the classroom experience.

"Schools that made the ranking are an excellent research starting point for prospective entrepreneurship students," says Amy Cosper, vice president and editor in chief at Entrepreneur.

The survey results appear in the October issue, which hits newsstands Sept. 23.

Belmont's program also received the National Model Undergraduate Program of the Year by the U.S. Association of Small Business and Entrepreneurship earlier this year.

UM Center for Entrepreneurship seeks video pitches for startup proposals

Don’t worry about the white paper. You can make your pitch by vodcast.

Southeast Michigan entrepreneurs and industry experts will serve as judges of “1,000 pitches,” a competition launched last week by the University of Michigan Center for Entrepreneurship.

Contest organizers seek the eponymous 1,000 pitches via streaming video from UM employees or students with a startup proposal for a business or nonprofit organization by Oct. 5.

Proposals should be no more than three minutes long, and will undergo two sets of reviews. First will be a group of student judges and then a set of focus group panels with business-community experts, said Thomas Zurbuchen, professor of aerospace engineering and director of the Center for Entrepreneurship.

Winning pitches in each of seven business categories — environmental, health, technology, local business, global business, social entrepreneurship or “green campus” proposals for UM — receive $1,000 in seed money for their proposals. The Center expects to announce winners in mid-October.

Awards are sponsored by Ann Arbor-based RPM Ventures, MacBeedon Partners L.L.C., and Arboretum Ventures Inc., as well as MPowered Entrepreneurship, the organization for student entrepreneurship at UM.

Social Entrepreneurship is Hot, but Finding Funding Still a Challenge

Social entrepreneurship programs are sprouting all over on college campuses right now, appealing to idealistic student entrepreneurs who want to build ventures that make both profit and a social difference.

But students seeking to start socially responsible ventures face a double whammy when they emerge from college and are seeking funding, according to a recent Business Week article.

They face the normal problems with luring outside investors that young adults face — simply that investors tend to want to back entrepreneurs with a track record. But second, it’s hard as it is for socially responsible entrepreneurs, even those with other ventures under their belt, to find investors willing to take a chance on ventures sacrificing some profitability for the social good.

Some angel-investor networks and other investor groups like Investors’ Circle and Good Capital focus solely on investing in ventures with so-called triple bottom lines — those that measure success based on their economic, environmental, and social impact. But these groups get hundreds and hundreds of pitches, selecting few.

To help make these student-led enterprises more successful, some entrepreneurship programs are adding courses to teach students with socially responsible endeavors how to better pitch them to investors, such as conducting interviews and market research to gauge the venture’s social impact.

It seems like there will be more opportunities for socially responsible ventures to raise money, as more socially-responsible angel groups and venture funds emerge – and as consumers increasingly factor goodwill into their purchasing decisions. But there’s still the issue of creating a venture that is profitable enough for investors to want to invest and still creating social value. That seems like a hard balance to strike.

What can student entrepreneurs who want to start socially responsible ventures do to make themselves more appealing to investors? Ever thought about starting one?

7th Annual Student-Run Forum on Entrepreneurship and Innovation

WELLESLEY, Mass., Sept 12, 2008 /PRNewswire-USNewswire via COMTEX/ -- Babson College, the world leader in entrepreneurial education, will host the 7th annual Babson Forum on Entrepreneurship & Innovation (BFEI), Thursday, October 2, 2008.
BFEI is the largest student-run entrepreneurship-focused event at the F.W. Olin School of Business at Babson College. BFEI's goal is to raise awareness of key opportunities and challenges facing entrepreneurs in an increasingly complex and global business world.
The day-long event includes a number of expert panels on a variety of topics including: Product Design and Creation, Green Entrepreneurship, Biotechnology Entrepreneurship, Corporate Entrepreneurship, Social Entrepreneurship, Entrepreneurial Franchising, Technology Entrepreneurship, and Venture Capital & Private Equity.
Keynote speakers include: Jon M. Huntsman, Founder & Chairman of The Huntsman Corporation, Isaac Larian, Founder & CEO of MGA Entertainement (Bratz Dolls), Florine Mark, President and CEO of The WW Group (Weight Watchers). Kevin Rollins, former CEO of Dell, Inc., Kevin Colleran, Director of National Sales at Facebook, Inc., Ruthie Davis, Founder & Creator of Davis by Ruthie Davis shoes, and Bob Shapiro, Former CEO of The NutraSweet Company, will also present along with 30 other extraordinary entrepreneurs.
The Babson Forum concludes with an Idea Expo and Networking Reception with speakers, panelists, venture capitalists, and private equity professionals. Participants will also learn how to take their "Big Idea" to the next level, and have the opportunity to enter the $30,000 Babson Innovation Competition. Interested entrepreneurs should register to submit their big idea by Sept. 14th at: http://www.babsonforum.com/2008/competition/
U.S. News & World Report magazine has ranked Babson's MBA program #1 in Entrepreneurship Education for 15 consecutive years.
To register and for more information and a complete schedule of the day's activities, go to the Babson Forum website: http://www.babsonforum.com.
Babson College in Wellesley, Mass., is recognized internationally as a leader in entrepreneurial management education. Babson grants BS degrees through its innovative undergraduate program, and grants MBA and custom MS and MBA degrees through the F.W. Olin Graduate School of Business at Babson College. Babson Executive Education offers executive development programs to experienced managers worldwide. For information, visit http://www.babson.edu.
This news release was issued on behalf of Newswise(TM). For more information, visit http://www.newswise.com.