5 Business Schools for Innovation and Entrepreneurship

By IBTimes Staff Reporter: Subscribe to IBTimes's

January 29, 2011 5:27 AM EST

At the Techcrunch Disrupt conference in San Francisco in 2010, Peter Thiel had a rather stunning announcement to make. The Paypal co-founder announced that his foundation would offer grants totalling $100000 to up to 20 students under the age of 20 who would be willing to drop out of school and start something new and experiment with breakthrough innovation.

Whether it was appropriate to encourage youngsters to opt out of school is matter for another discussion but what it does reinforce is the widespread notion that our university system does not allow for much focus on or encouragement to innovation. Yet, innovation in today's fast changing world is no longer an option but an imperative - not just for product design or technology breakthrough but in every aspect of business. In fact, for the transition of great ideas into successful innovative enterprise, effective and innovative management is a necessary condition.

Business education, therefore, is trying to rid itself of the stigma attached to formal education for its inability to foster innovation and creativity. A good number of B-schools are focusing on electives, specializations and in some cases even in-house incubation centers that would help groom creative leaders for the future. We take a look here at 5 prominent business schools that have an explicit thrust on innovation within their MBA or executive education programs.

1. Babson College: The Babson MBA is one that is widely acknowledged to be at the forefront of programs that cultivates the kind of entrepreneurial thinking that students can apply in start-up ventures and the corporate environment.

In 1993 they adopted a holistic and integrated core curriculum focusing on entrepreneurship for full-time MBA students. The program traces the new venture creation cycle and introduces traditional business principles within the context of entrepreneurial thought.

Follow us

Students also have an elective offering that focuses on creativity in established organizations. The course discusses factors affecting innovation, how managers promote or hinder it, and the advantages and disadvantages of established organizations in pursuing innovation.

They also offer the Entrepreneurship Intensity Track, which offers a customized elective curriculum for students who have concrete plans for starting their own venture as they complete college or shortly thereafter. Entrance to the mandatory spring course in this track involves an application or selection process during which candidates must interview with two entrepreneurship faculty members and pitch to a pool of potential mentors.

2. Haas School of Business: The Haas School at the University of California, Berkeley has a professed mission of developing 'innovative' business leaders - in its own words, "individuals who redefine how we do business by putting new ideas into action in all areas of their organizations, and who do so responsibly."

Last year, the School announced an overhaul of its core MBA curriculum with an explicit commitment to shaping leaders who would define what's next for society and for markets. Announcing the changes, Dean Rich Lyons said, "Whether it is producing more fuel-efficient autos or creating new business processes, innovative leaders are the ones who will deliver into our idea-driven economy and create opportunity from the major challenges facing us within the lifetimes of our children."

The curricular changes and new cultural emphasis are built into the model of Berkeley Innovative Leader Development (BILD), a connecting theme that runs through the entire MBA curriculum, both core and elective.

Under the BILD approach, each core course (finance, accounting, marketing, strategy etc.) was reviewed to identify elements of innovation that contribute to these fundamental capabilities.  New content on innovative leadership was added to some courses, and related content flagged in all required courses.

The BILD approach requires all students to take a series of courses, workshops and coaching sessions that develop innovative leadership skills - such as problem finding and problem solving.  They must also take an experiential course in which they apply and hone these skills in a real-life setting. 

It also includes the Berkeley MBA Leadership Development Series - a popular new suite of leadership development experiences that are offered to students as non-credit, hands-on workshops and seminars. 2010 saw workshops delivered by the likes of Marshall Goldsmith and Patrick Lencioni.

3. MIT, Sloan School of Management: The MIT Sloan Fellows Program in Innovation and Global Leadership prepares outstanding executives with the critical skills to create and lead successful, innovative organizations in the 21st century.

This article is copyrighted by International Business Times, the business news leader
Sponsor Link:
Join the Conversation
Most popular
IBTimes TV

Salvage Operation to Bring the Capsized Costa Concordia to the Surface Begins

Society
Bono, Quincy Jones, and Macy Gray Talk About the Legacy of Donna Summer

E-Newsletters

We value your privacy. Your email address will not be shared.