Most people look at entrepreneurship as a project. You start with an idea, then turn it into something real, build a business around it. And all is well with the world. But that’s the wrong approach.
This is the final entry in our mini-series on entrepreneurial practices drawn from our recent book, Teaching Entrepreneurship: A Practice Based Approach (with Heidi Neck and Candy Brush). Our goal was ...
Far too many entrepreneurs "take the exam before taking the course" - meaning, they start their venture without much forethought or planning. This contributes to the 50 percent failure rate for ...
Entrepreneurs transform the way we work and live, from Twitter and Zynga to Facebook and Google. In all likelihood, each one of us visits one or more of these sites daily. While these are some of the ...
Entrepreneurship development is the means of enhancing the knowledge and skill of entrepreneurs through several classroom coaching and programs, and training. The main point of the development process ...
Advances in business knowledge and technology have radically changed business systems, organizational structures and business processes. As a result, the ability to provide the right information to ...
There are two tracks to entrepreneurship: You can dive in and figure it out (hopefully) as you go, or attend a college or a university dedicated to teaching the tools needed by — and harnessing the ...
Opinions expressed by Entrepreneur contributors are their own. There are those who describe the current, faster-and-faster-moving marketplace as a fourth industrial revolution. And the best ...
The Five STAGES of a Business's (Entrepreneurship) Life Cycle: Arguable some books minimize the stages or phases of business life cycle to just three or more. For the emphasis of this write up, we ...