2012/2013 KAN-CM_SU5B Entrepreneurship: Innovation, Enterprise, Success
English Title | |
Entrepreneurship: Innovation, Enterprise, Success |
Course information |
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Language | English |
Exam ECTS | 7.5 ECTS |
Type | Elective |
Level | Full Degree Master |
Duration | Summer |
Course period |
Summer
NOTE: The course chedule is at the moment ONLY avilable at www.cbs.dk/summer |
Time Table | Please see course schedule at e-Campus |
Study board |
Study Board for MSc in Economics and Business Administration
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Course coordinator | |
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Main Category of the Course | |
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Last updated on 04-06-2012 |
Learning objectives | |||||||||||||||||
At the completion of the course students will have the skills to:
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Prerequisite | |||||||||||||||||
Students should, through prior coursework, have had some formal exposure to any of the following: strategy, marketing, finance, general business, international business, or economics. | |||||||||||||||||
Examination | |||||||||||||||||
Entrepreneurship: Innovation, Enterprise, Success | |||||||||||||||||
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Course content | |||||||||||||||||
Entrepreneurship is an integrative discipline which requires students to be immersed in subject areas such as marketing, operations, finance, production, management, etc., all the skills, concepts, information, and requisites necessary for the creation, growth, management, and harvest of the venture. Through lectures, class discussion, and case studies of various new ventures, students will amass a store of knowledge, of the necessary and sufficient requirements, to enable them to produce a business plan for a feasible and realistic venture. The course’s development of personal competences: The student will demonstrate, in the business plan, a grasp of the issues in differentiating and explaining his/her business, and presenting a feasible economic business model. |
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Teaching methods | |||||||||||||||||
Entrepreneurship is an integrative discipline which requires students to be immersed in subject areas such as marketing, operations, finance, production, management, etc., all the skills, concepts, information, and requisites necessary for the creation, growth, management, and harvest of the venture. Through lectures, class discussion, and case studies of exciting new ventures, students will gain knowledge of the process of converting one of their ideas into an opportunity to build a new, and sustainable, venture. |
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Expected literature | |||||||||||||||||
Assigned are approximately 300 pages from the textbook and about 300 pages of articles and cases.
Selected chapters from the following text: Timmons, Jeffry, Spinelli, Stephen. New Venture Creation e-book (selected chapters) Irwin/McGraw-Hill– to be available for download from McGraw Hill. The e-book can be bought by students via https://create.mcgraw-hill.com/shop/#/catalog/details/?isbn=9781121179448 Supplemental articles (from Academy of Management Journal, Harvard Business Review, etc.) and cases (from Harvard, Stanford, Babson, etc.), that will be posted online or distributed in class: Bhide, The Questions Every Entrepreneur Must Answer 3-hour Business Plan, Blue Rock Capital Bhide, Bootstrap Finance The Financial Perspective: What Entrepreneurs Should Know Lassiter, Learning from High-Potential Ventures Sahlman, The Basic Venture Capital Formula Hellman, A Note on Valuation of Venture Capital Deals Cases (representative – others to be added): ZipCar Th!nk Maktabi Chemalite |
Last updated on 04-06-2012