Panel Co-Moderator: 5th Annual Deshpande Symposium for Innovation

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Panel Co-Moderator: 5th Annual Deshpande Symposium for Innovation

Many thanks to my BU Questrom School of Business colleague Ian Mashiter and U. Mass Lowell Symposium / Innovation Hub Director Tom O’Donnell for allowing us to host a panel on International Entrepreneurship. Along with another BU colleague, Rakesh Pandey, we co-moderated a panel with 5 guests.

Abstract is below as well as the guests’ bio. We both sincerely appreciated so many of the attendees’ questions, too.

Global business connections and interactions continue to grow. Part of preparing students for this new work environment, it is important that they learn how to communicate with and build business partnerships with people around the world. This includes working on virtual teams with people they may never come in contact with face-to-face.

Additionally, the education teaching model has significantly evolved through different approaches: a) On-campus: The way international entrepreneurship is taught to graduate students and executives who maintain residence in the US for multiple weeks at a time b) Off-campus: Programs where we bring undergraduate and graduate students into the field to meet with startups about their business strategies or separately to study and experience entrepreneurship and innovation in international settings. c) International teaching: Programs where we teach entrepreneurship courses overseas to a set of students at other schools or companies arranged for us.

The proposed panel will discuss case studies of experiments at different universities building these global business communication courses and their experiences.

Bruce Kingma, Syracuse University
Saumil Shah, Ahmedabad University
Buck Goldstein, University of North Carolina
John Friar, Northeastern University
Bob Mauro, Boston College

 

From Deshpande web site: Co-founded by the Deshpande Foundation and the University of Massachusetts Lowell in 2012, the Deshpande Symposium on Innovation and Entrepreneurship in Higher Education brings together academics, policy planners and practitioners to discuss best practices in integrating entrepreneurship throughout their college and university communities. This annual conference, held at the UMass Lowell Inn & Conference Center, draws together national speakers and those at the forefront of innovative strategies in higher education.

What began as a small gathering now boasts a powerhouse lineup drawing from all facets of where the worlds of academia and business intersect. Past speakers have included entrepreneurship visionaries such as University of Michigan President Mary Sue Coleman, who has co-chaired the national Advisory Council on Innovation and Entrepreneurship, Professor Vladimir Bulovic, an entrepreneur and associate dean for innovation at Massachusetts Institute of Technology, MIT professor Donald Sadoway, who was named one of Time magazine’s “Top 100 Most Influential People in the World”, Dr. Subra Suresh, President of Carnegie Mellon University and Jeff Hoffman, serial entrepreneur and co-founder of Priceline.

This past year’s event offered over twenty-eight panel discussions and drew hundreds of faculty, administrators, students and business people to discuss an array of topics, including entrepreneurial culture and ecosystems, innovative entrepreneurship curricula, research commercialization, startups and emerging trends.

Leaders from universities, business incubators, foundations and other organizations including the UNC Chapel Hill, MIT, UMass, Carnegie Mellon University, California Institute of Technology, Arizona State University and the National Science Foundation have convened at the Symposium to explore ways to foster a culture of innovation, embed entrepreneurship in the curriculum, accelerate technology commercialization and establish partnerships with businesses and the community.

Organizations such as VentureWell, the Burton D. Morgan Foundation, the Lemelson Foundation, Cengage, the Commonwealth of Massachusetts Executive Office of Housing and Economic Development, the Massachusetts Technology Collaborative, the University of North Carolina Chapel Hill, ASU, Babson College and the University of Massachusetts President’s Office have provided financial support for the event in past years.

We hope you will join us at this year’s Symposium!

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About Author

Greg Stoller is actively involved in building entrepreneurship and international business programs at Boston University's Questrom School of Business. He teaches courses in entrepreneurship, global strategy and management and runs the Asian International Management Experience Program, and the Asian International Consulting Project.

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