For every 100 times
we hear about entrepreneurship, we hear about intrapreneurship only five times.
Not exact matches
People today are entering the startup realm with far more formal education and experience in
entrepreneurship than ever before, and they're doing so from many of the following schools whose degrees in
entrepreneurship you might not have
heard about yet:
Entrepreneur: We're
hearing more conversation
about the intersection of
entrepreneurship and economic development, especially in emerging markets.
Some people might be surprised to
hear you speak so passionately
about entrepreneurship, considering that both Built to Last and Good to Great focused on giant public companies.
Over the past five years, I've
heard those answers — or some variation of them — from more than 250 students in my
entrepreneurship courses at Princeton University and from many of the more than 100 entrepreneurs I've counseled
about their startups.
As soon as she
heard about the House of Genius mission — building community around
entrepreneurship — she knew we had to bring it to St. Louis.
Rally organizer Vanessa E. Beary, a doctoral candidate at the Harvard Graduate School of Education, said she
heard about the missing students after submitting her dissertation —
about using
entrepreneurship to strengthen education in developing countries — early last week.