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Entrepreneurship and Strategy
- ENT 100 - Applied EntrepreneurshipCourse DescriptionStudents work with their course instructor to identify, select and complete twelve entrepreneurship modules and assignments that support their specific entrepreneurial project. Potential modules include: customer identification, stakeholder analysis, market segmentation, lean startup, design thinking, agile methods, business-model design, business planning, or financial analysis. This highly flexible course is designed to support independent student projects, startups and Zone Education. This is an experiential applied course, and students must engage with the entrepreneurial ecosystem both within and outside Ryerson. This course is not available to Entrepreneurship Majors.Weekly Contact:Tutorial 3 hrs.GPA Weight:1.00Billing Units:1Count:1.00Custom Requisites:Not available to Business Management Entrepreneurship students
- ENT 401 - Design Thinking ExperienceCourse DescriptionThis course is a hands-on experiential learning opportunity for multi-disciplinary teams to implement agile rapid prototyping design thinking methods in a creative space. Student teams implement real-world projects in a variety of entrepreneurial contexts: new venture creation, innovation within an existing venture, social innovation and change making. The course provides a solid theoretical understanding of the major global Design Thinking methods and tools as well as experience in developing a Design Thinking Mindset.Weekly Contact:Lecture 3 hrs.GPA Weight:1.00Billing Units:1Count:1.00
- ENT 500 - New Venture StartupCourse DescriptionThis introductory course is designed primarily for non-Entrepreneurship students who are interested in starting a business of their own. Topics include assessing entrepreneurial potential, opportunity identification, market assessment, organizing, promoting, and financing the business, intellectual property, buying an existing business or considering a franchise. Students will be expected to work on developing a business plan. This course is not available to Entrepreneurship Majors.Weekly Contact:Lecture 3 hrs.GPA Weight:1.00Billing Units:1Count:1.00Custom Requisites:Not available to Business Management Entrepreneurship students
- ENT 501 - Family Business in CanadaCourse DescriptionPlanning, Succession and Control. The students study many of Canada's internationally known family-run businesses. They will learn about the challenges faced by the owners in planning and succession as well as the impact that family structure plays in determining the future of the firm. Key issues to be examined include the relationship between ownership and management, the strategic planning process, succession planning, technical and management skills, support structures, funding, leadership and the family structure.Weekly Contact:Lecture 3 hrs.GPA Weight:1.00Billing Units:1Count:1.00
- ENT 505 - Small-Business ManagementCourse Description
This course takes an interdisciplinary perspective on the challenges of managing in a small-business environment. It is designed for students who plan to join a small or medium-sized enterprise company and want to have an improved understanding of the process by which things get done in small businesses that lack the resources and capabilities of large corporations. Topics include elements of managing high growth rates, family business, outsourcing, internships and leveraging external partnerships, guerrilla marketing techniques, cash flow management, bootstrap financing, government programs, and corporate governance in a small business. This course is not available to programs within the Ted Rogers School of Management.
Weekly Contact:Lecture 3 hrs.GPA Weight:1.00Billing Units:1Count:1.00Prerequisites:BSM 200Antirequisites:ENT 555Custom Requisites:Not available to Ted Rogers School of Management students. - ENT 511 - Funding New VenturesCourse DescriptionEntrepreneurial finance is concerned with financial decisions of entrepreneurs and entrepreneurial firms, capital structure decision-making and governance issues in high risk environments, and the ways to exit venture investments. The rapid development of private equity and venture capital industries, and the general emphasis of entrepreneurship as a central driver of economic prosperity, has given rise to a set of questions that are different from the questions posed in the context of large firms with widely diversified investors. This course will address these questions using both explicit-knowledge lectures as well as tacit-knowledge experiential learning. This course is designed for students who are thinking about pursuing a career as an entrepreneur or who envision a career in the private equity, venture capital, or investment banking industries where they will be exposed to deals with small to mid-sized firms.Weekly Contact:Lecture 3 hrs.GPA Weight:1.00Billing Units:1Count:1.00Antirequisites:FIN 510
- ENT 526 - Entrepreneurial Behaviour and StrategyCourse DescriptionThis foundation course is designed to stimulate the student's interest in entrepreneurship, thereby cultivating the entrepreneurial spirit. By means of case studies, articles, videos and presentations, students will have the opportunity to learn about many prominent entrepreneurs who have demonstrated commitment, passion, risk-taking, strategic thinking and implementation, and the ability to develop core competencies as they create and grow their successful enterprises. Various topics in entrepreneurship will be introduced as a result.Weekly Contact:Lecture 3 hrs.GPA Weight:1.00Billing Units:1Count:1.00
- ENT 527 - Theories in EntrepreneurshipCourse DescriptionThis course will expose the student to many of the topics currently dominating the study of entrepreneurship. These may include theoretical perspectives on the economic and social function of entrepreneurs, psychological and cognitive aspects of entrepreneurs, the intersection of opportunities and enterprising individuals, the decision to exploit, the new venture creation process, and the relationship between entrepreneurship and strategic management. Students will be expected to read and critically analyze current and classic research on entrepreneurship, to synthesize diverse perspectives, and to contribute their own original thoughts to significant debates in the field. The course features a combination of seminars, presentations, readings, and lectures to enhance the student's understanding of entrepreneurship as an academic discipline and develop an ability to apply this research to the practical managerial challenges of the entrepreneurial firm.Weekly Contact:Lecture 3 hrs.GPA Weight:1.00Billing Units:1Count:1.00Prerequisites:ENT 526
- ENT 528 - New Venture DevelopmentCourse DescriptionStudents build on their entrepreneurial opportunities identified in ENT 601 and deepen their entrepreneurial skills to work on a New Venture Opportunity. This experiential course will help students identify potential customers, design value propositions and perform prototype testing in order to develop a potential new venture suitable for their Capstone ENT 78AB course. The new venture may be a new company, social innovation, or intrapreneurship within an existing venture.Weekly Contact:Lecture 3 hrs.GPA Weight:1.00Billing Units:1Count:1.00Prerequisites:ENT526 and ENT 601
- ENT 555 - Managing Small and Medium EnterprisesCourse DescriptionThis course is designed to examine the requirements of establishing, owning and successfully operating a Small-to-Medium Enterprise (SME). Functional management skills needed for the effective operation of a SME will be explored in detail. Fundamental considerations such as operations management, information and information systems, value chain analysis, talent management, financial planning and control systems, organization and legal issues, network management and marketing strategies will also be explored in the specific context of SMEs.Weekly Contact:Lecture 3 hrs.GPA Weight:1.00Billing Units:1Count:1.00Antirequisites:ENT 505
- ENT 56A/B - Entrepreneurial Skills DevelopmentCourse DescriptionThis is a two-semester deeply experiential and transformative learning experience for Entrepreneurship Majors. Students work in a team to develop hands-on skills within Toronto's entrepreneurship ecosystem. This group project may be a new company, social innovation, or intrapreneurship within an existing venture. Individually, students deepen their entrepreneurial skills to deliver an Individual Opportunity Portfolio and an Individual Business Plan suitable for a potential new venture during their capstone ENT 78A/B course.Weekly Contact:Lecture 3 hrs.GPA Weight:2.00Billing Units:1Count:2.00
- ENT 570 - Entrepreneurial Self-Development Part ICourse DescriptionThis is the first half of a deeply experiential and transformative learning experience for Entrepreneurship Majors. Students work in a team to develop hands-on skills within Toronto's entrepreneurship eco-system. Their group project may be a new company, social innovation, or intrapreneurship within an existing venture. Individually, students deepen their entrepreneurial skills to deliver an Individual Entrepreneurial Alertness and Opportunity Portfolio.Weekly Contact:Lecture 3 hrs.GPA Weight:1.00Billing Units:1Count:1.00
- ENT 577 - Entrepreneurial SellingCourse DescriptionStudents are introduced to the principles of sales and their application to multiple entrepreneurial contexts. Emphasis will be placed on the application of sales principles to real-world entrepreneurial situations and on building selling skills through class projects. Students will learn tactical selling skills, develop self-management skills, and study strategic selling techniques. Sales ethics will also be discussed.Weekly Contact:Lecture 3 hrs.GPA Weight:1.00Billing Units:1Count:1.00
- ENT 580 - Entrepreneur Self-Development Part IICourse DescriptionThis is the second half of a deeply experiential and transformative learning experience for Entrepreneurship Majors. Students continue to work in a team from ENT 570 to develop hands-on skills within Toronto's entrepreneurship eco-system. Their group project may be a new company, social innovation, or intrapreneurship within an existing venture. Individually, students develop, present and deliver an Individual Business Plan suitable for a potential new venture, to be developed further during their Capstone ENT 78A/B course.Weekly Contact:Lecture 3 hrs.GPA Weight:1.00Billing Units:1Count:1.00
- ENT 601 - Identifying OpportunitiesCourse DescriptionThis course examines the process of opportunity identification for both start-up and existing business environments. It is designed to cultivate the mindset and skills required for students to engage in opportunity identification activities and make them part of their daily regimen in their personal and professional lives. The entrepreneurial process begins with the pursuit of a perceived opportunity. As such, the ability to identify a valid opportunity is paramount to the field of entrepreneurship.Weekly Contact:Lecture 3 hrs.GPA Weight:1.00Billing Units:1Count:1.00Corequisites:ENT 526
- ENT 620 - Current Issues in Innovation and EntrepreneurshipCourse DescriptionThis course provides students with an opportunity to keep abreast of new topics of importance as they emerge in the field. Topics will vary from year to year and will be announced. Method of instruction will vary depending upon the topics offered.Weekly Contact:Lecture 3 hrs.GPA Weight:1.00Billing Units:1Count:1.00
- ENT 627 - Social Entrepreneurship and ChangemakingCourse DescriptionThis experiential learning course empowers students currently engaged within a social entrepreneurship or changemaking project with additional educational content and coaching. Students form multi-disciplinary teams to empower others through the positive power of entrepreneurship.Weekly Contact:Lecture 3 hrs.GPA Weight:1.00Billing Units:1Count:1.00
- ENT 630 - Leveraging the CrowdCourse DescriptionIn this course students will learn how to leverage crowdsourcing and crowdfunding in new ventures. Students will design divisible tasks, write instructions, recruit the crowd on a crowdmarket platform, publish and manage jobs, and assemble the work into a finished product. Students will also design a crowdfunding budget, promotional video, and social media strategy for their venture. The course will cover best practices for effective use of the crowd, review recent studies examining success factors, and introduce methodologies to increase effectiveness. Students will develop their ability to visualize tasks in divisible ways and to assess projects for crowdsourcing potential.Weekly Contact:Lecture 3 hrs.GPA Weight:1.00Billing Units:1Count:1.00
- ENT 710 - Making a PrototypeCourse DescriptionIn this course students will discover how to move from concept to prototype product. After an introduction to different types of prototyping and their purposes, they will, using a variety of teaching methods and tools, under the mentorship of a faculty member, learn how to build physical and digital models, potentially including 3D printing and prototype app development. This is a hands-on course, where students will have access to a variety of software and hardware tools from the UniversityĆ¢ s maker spaces. Students are expected to come to the course with specific product/service ideas they want to develop into prototypes.Weekly Contact:Lecture 3 hrs.GPA Weight:1.00Billing Units:1Count:1.00
- ENT 725 - Management of InnovationCourse DescriptionThis course is designed to illustrate how successful managers implement innovation and commercialize new technology in today's fast-paced business environment. The students will learn how entrepreneurship and innovation interrelate, the streams of innovation, innovation as a management process and leadership in managing creativity. Commercializing technology and introducing it into the marketplace will be examined in depth as an example of applying the innovation concepts learned in the course. The course will develop the student's creative instincts and improve their capacity as agents of change within their career as independent business owners or intrapreneurial managers in larger organizations. (Formerly MGT 725)Weekly Contact:Lecture 3 hrs.GPA Weight:1.00Billing Units:1Count:1.00Prerequisites:ENT 601
- ENT 726 - Creating a Business PlanCourse DescriptionThe objective of this course is to have the student become familiar with preparing a professional business plan for a new venture. The preparation of the business plan will be built upon everything that has been learned to date and will require the synthesis of this learning. The course will provide the student with the opportunity to explore and investigate a business venture of interest and the preparation of a business plan will provide an opportunity to apply what has been learned in the business program. The student will also develop an appreciation for the requirements of a successful entrepreneurial venture. (Formerly MGT 726).Weekly Contact:Lecture 3 hrs.GPA Weight:1.00Billing Units:1Count:1.00Prerequisites:ENT 601
- ENT 727 - Applied Research in EntrepreneurshipCourse DescriptionThis course is designed to provide students with the opportunity to conduct applied research in the area of entrepreneurship and enterprise development. Students must present a written proposal to an amenable faculty advisor prior to the commencement of the semester. Upon completion, an oral examination or presentation to a panel will normally be required. Departmental approval required.Weekly Contact:Lecture 3 hrs.GPA Weight:1.00Billing Units:1Count:1.00Prerequisites:ENT 526
- ENT 78A/B - Advanced EntrepreneurshipCourse DescriptionENT 78A/B is the two semester experiential-learning capstone course for the entrepreneurship major. Students will develop advanced skills in entrepreneurship, intrapreneurship and personal growth. Students gain real-world experience in starting their own companies (entrepreneurship), creating value implementing innovative projects within an existing company (intrapreneurship), and completing a stream of skills-development assignments. Formerly ENT 730 plus ENT 830.Weekly Contact:Lecture 3 hrs.GPA Weight:2.00Billing Units:1Count:2.00