Syllabus
Registration via LPIS
Day | Date | Time | Room |
---|---|---|---|
Tuesday | 12/05/23 | 01:00 PM - 03:30 PM | D5.0.001 |
Thursday | 12/07/23 | 01:00 PM - 03:30 PM | D5.0.001 |
Tuesday | 12/12/23 | 01:00 PM - 03:30 PM | D5.0.001 |
Thursday | 12/14/23 | 01:00 PM - 03:30 PM | D5.1.001 |
Tuesday | 12/19/23 | 01:00 PM - 03:30 PM | D5.0.001 |
Thursday | 12/21/23 | 01:00 PM - 03:30 PM | TC.4.14 |
Tuesday | 01/09/24 | 01:00 PM - 03:30 PM | D5.0.001 |
Thursday | 01/11/24 | 01:00 PM - 03:30 PM | D5.0.001 |
Tuesday | 01/16/24 | 01:00 PM - 03:30 PM | D5.0.001 |
Thursday | 01/18/24 | 01:00 PM - 03:30 PM | D5.1.001 |
Tuesday | 01/23/24 | 01:00 PM - 03:30 PM | TC.4.14 |
Thursday | 01/25/24 | 01:00 PM - 03:30 PM | D5.0.001 |
In this course, students are exposed to the most important aspects of a new business venture from an academic and practical perspective.
The course is structured along the process phases of:
- opportunity recognition/evaluation (ideation, market analysis, competition, etc.)
- strategic opportunity exploitation (strategy, business model, etc.)
- operational opportunity exploitation (finance, organization, marketing, etc.)
In workshops with industry experts and faculty members, students will get input on all these phases and develop a pitch deck for a new venture based on their own business ideas.
- Students gained first insights on how entrepreneurs spot market opportunities for new businesses, and how to exploit such opportunities.
- Students have understood business planning as the process of determining a commercial enterprise’s objectives, strategies and activities to ensure its viability from the perspective of all involved stakeholders
- Students are able to apply basic business planning techniques and they understand how these techniques relate to each other in enabling professional business planning:
- Students know how to conduct simple market analyses (market size, segmentation, trends, market growth, product life-cycle)
- Students can apply simple strategic/competitive analysis tools
- Students know the most common types of legal structures of businesses and why their choice is important
- Students know the basics of how to obtain debt and equity financing for a new or an established business
- Students can translate planned business activities into planned/projected cash flow and income statements
- Students are able to do simple breakeven analysis
- Students understand how different planning/forecasting tools (sales forecasts, cash flow forecasts, planned operations) relate to each other
Students need to attend at least 80% of the classes in order to pass the course successfully.
Please note that attendance is mandatory during the first two sessions!
- The course follows a problem-based learning approach
- Students are assigned to teams of 5-6 students and work together on a pitch deck
- They get input regarding the different elements and their interplay by lecturers and experts
- In coaching and co-working sessions they get individual feedback on their (preliminary) pitch decks
- At the end of the semester, they present their business ideas in a pitch in front of a jury
The final grade depends on:
- 40% Final pitch & pitch deck (team assignment)
- 20% Mid-term pitch deck (team assignment)
- 20% In-class participation (individual assignment)
- 10% Reflection paper (individual assignment)
- 10% In-class module checks (individual assignment)
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