Spring 2025 Management B8586 section 002

Entrepreneurial Strategy

Call Number 16639
Day & Time
Location
M 2:20pm-5:35pm
To be announced
Points 1.5
Grading Mode Standard
Approvals Required None
Instructor Jorge A Guzman
Type LECTURE
Method of Instruction In-Person
Course Description What is Entrepreneurial Strategy and who is this class for?
Strategy Formulation taught you how to identify a competitive advantage. But how do you
create a competitive advantage when you don’t have one—such as when you’re starting out a
new company or you’re entering a new market? How do you do it in the face of considerable
uncertainty, with few resources, and cognizant that your initial choices matter would? Should
one achieve it only through experimentation? Focus on execution and simple ‘go for it’? Invest
in early planning?

This course provides a strategy framework for growth entrepreneurship. It is particularly
focused on helping students create a sustainable competitive advantage and understand how
to do so in the early uncertain stages of a startup. The class is meant for all students, not just
entrepreneurs: while entrepreneurs and startups are the main actors of the entrepreneurial
story, the skill of developing entrepreneurial strategies is critical for anyone who will lead and
succeed in the innovation-driven economy of today.

Students that might particularly benefit from this class include students that
(a) Are or will be entrepreneurs.
(b) Plan to work at a startup.
(c) Plan to invest in, acquire, or sell startups.
(d) Will be a consultant around innovation or entrepreneurship to larger firms.
(e) Will develop new product lines or novel technologies at larger companies.

In short, if you know the skills to start and grow businesses will matter your career, this class is
probably for you.

What economic sectors does entrepreneurial strategy focus on?
We study how to create long-lasting companies with a strong competitive advantage in any
sector. In many cases, innovation and technological change plays a central role in creating this
opportunity. The class cases and examples include traditional venture-backed startups in the
software and hardware spaces, more recent startups using technology to solve problems that
are not obviously ‘tech’ such as emergency response and health delivery, and new companies
that take changes in the technological landscape to create great companies with traditional
products.
Web Site Vergil
Department MANAGEMENT
Enrollment 0 students (74 max) as of 9:06AM Thursday, November 21, 2024
Subject Management
Number B8586
Section 002
Division School of Business
Open To Business, Journalism
Section key 20251MGMT8586B002