Please note! Course description is confirmed for two academic years, which means that in general, e.g. Learning outcomes, assessment methods and key content stays unchanged. However, via course syllabus, it is possible to specify or change the course execution in each realization of the course, such as how the contact sessions are organized, assessment methods weighted or materials used.

LEARNING OUTCOMES

At the end of this course, students

  1. Are able to describe and discuss basic entrepreneurship and innovation tools,
  2. Are able to explain the central entrepreneurship frameworks about opportunity recognition, effectuation and business models,
  3. Are able to apply those frameworks to a real case

Credits: 3

Schedule: 27.10.2022 - 08.12.2022

Teacher in charge (valid for whole curriculum period):

Teacher in charge (applies in this implementation): Arne Kroeger

Contact information for the course (applies in this implementation):

Ass. Prof. Dr. Arne Kröger (arne.kroeger@aalto.fi)

CEFR level (valid for whole curriculum period):

Language of instruction and studies (applies in this implementation):

Teaching language: English. Languages of study attainment: English

CONTENT, ASSESSMENT AND WORKLOAD

Content
  • valid for whole curriculum period:

    The following topics will be discussed in this course:

    • Basics of entrepreneurship
    • Creativity, Idea Development & Innovation
    • Venture Opportunities
    • Business Models
    • Case Study Module: Corporate Entrepreneurship
    • Venture Funding (incl. Impact Investing)
    • Venture Growth (incl. Growth Strategy Implementation)

  • applies in this implementation

    Objectives, relevance for practice and lecture topics

    At the end of this course, students i) are able to describe and discuss basic entrepreneurship and innovation tools, ii) are able to explain the central entrepreneurship frameworks about opportunity recognition, effectuation and business models, iii) are able to apply those frameworks to a real case.

     

    Launching an enterprise has several advantages, such as being your own boss, realizing your own ideas and experiencing greater autonomy in general. However, entrepreneurship is more than founding an enterprise. It is a particular way of thinking and an approach of solving problems and can, therefore, also be practiced in large corporations (corporate entrepreneurship).

     

    This course investigates the entrepreneurship process in a consecutive order. It starts with the venture idea which emerges from receiving it from someone else (e.g., via open innovation), accidental discovery or the desire to start a business. The theory of effectuation developed by Saras Sarasvathy (2001) offers an approach how wanna-be entrepreneurs can generate a venture idea. Having created a venture idea, entrepreneurs enter into the process of developing a business opportunity (Vogel, 2017). Peter Vogel (2017) provides a comprehensive overview of attempts to conceptualize the development of business opportunities and develops his own framework that ends with the exploitation of business opportunities. A key contributor for the successful exploitation of a business opportunity is a business model. One of the first conceptualizations of the business model construct is provided by Raphael Amit and Christoph Zott (2001). This article can therefore be seen as a key article for understanding the sources of value creation that determine the success of a new venture. Furthermore, entrepreneurs need funding for growing their enterprise.

Assessment Methods and Criteria
  • valid for whole curriculum period:

    Group assignments

    Grade of intermediate group assignment

    30%

    Individual assignment

    Grade of the final Multiple Choice-Exam

    70%

    Total:

     

    100%

  • applies in this implementation


    Didactic approach and organization

    Like the metaphor of the three blind men feeling an elephant, this course combines different lenses on entrepreneurship: i) a scientific, more abstract lens, ii) a lens on entrepreneurship tools that entrepreneurs can use and iii) a lens on the practices of actual enterprises. Aggregating those lenses aims to demonstrate that entrepreneurship is more holistic than a cookbook of recipes.

    The course comprises a lecture and a case module. The course will take place in MyCourses and will be complemented by Zoom lectures. It contains individual and group work and individual and group assignments and will build on a variety of methods: front teaching (Zoom), video self-study, group work (including peer evaluation), and audience response system.

     

    Lecture module

    4.1 Paper Discussion 

    Please prepare the article of Sarasvathy (2001) for the lecture on 17.11.! This is extremely important for your ability to participate in the lecture on the 17.11.!

    The article of Sarasvathy (2001) has gained a lot of traction in entrepreneurship research and practice because it suggested a new approach to starting a business. It therefore gave impetus for effectuation research and is the most frequently cited effectuation article in the entrepreneurship literature. A description of how this article fits into the big picture of this course is provided in the section 1. Objectives, relevance for practice and lecture topics.

    In the lecture on the 17.11.2022, we will the students will be randomly assigned to a break-out room and discuss 2 alternative cases which are based on the principles of causation. Afterwards, they will review the sections 1. Processes of Causation and Effectuation, 2. the Rudimentary Theory of Effectuation Processes in Business, and 3. the Propositions for the Role of Effectuation Processes in Businesses with their peers and solve another case which applies the principles of effectuation. Both frameworks will be compared afterwards. Furthermore, 5 MC-Questions on the Sarasvathy article will be discussed. The final exam will also contain MC-Questions on Sarasvathy.

    4.2 Video self-study:

    The videos for self-study will be available in MyCourses in the section “Materials” from the first lecture on. They explain the essential knowledge of entrepreneurship and innovation management. The corresponding slide deck is also available in MyCourses in the section “Materials”. Consecutive watching of the videos is recommended. Students will have several opportunities to ask questions about the content of the videos. It is highly appreciated if students e-mail their questions to the lecturer two days before the lecture.


    4.3 Group work (including peer evaluation):

    For the group work, all students will have the same submission deadline and are required to read two scientific articles. This task addresses the learning outcomes ii) and iii). The this purpose students need to familiarize with the two central concepts of Entrepreneurship of Venture Opportunity and Business Models. One approach to familiarize with a concept is to read an article and write an essay about it in which of the content of article is transferred to a real case. Another approach is to read an article and an essay and to judge the transfer of the content of article to a real case. The group work will cover both approaches.

     

    The article of Vogel (2017) summarizes the most important opportunity recognition frameworks about in the entrepreneurship literature. The article of Amit & Zott (2001) is the most frequently quoted business model article because it gave impetus to the debate on conceptualizing business models. A description of how these articles fit into the big picture of this course is provided in the section 1. Objectives, relevance for practice and lecture topics.

    The group work will follow four consecutive steps.

    Step 1: Team formation

    Students are asked to form groups of min. 3 and max. 5 students themselves and to indicate their team formation in the Group Choice Module in MyCourses  01.11. at 23:59 pm.

    The groups will perform different tasks (see below for further details). They can connect with each other via MyCourses (General Discussion Module on the course homepage) and work on the tasks online or in face-to-face meetings. 

     

    Step 2: Development phase

    Each group will be randomly assigned to one of two cohorts: Venture Opportunity or Business Models

    Depending on the assigned cohort, the groups are supposed to answer one of the following questions:

     


    Cohort


    Article


    Task


    Venture Opportunity


    Vogel, P. 2017. From venture idea to venture opportunity. Entrepreneurship Theory & Practice, 41(6): 943-971.


    Please illustrate the “Venture Opportunity Development and Exploitation stage” (as outline in Vogel, ETP 2016) for a freely chosen enterprise in Finland.


    Business Model


    Amit, R. & Zott, C. 2001. Value creation in e-business. Strategic Management Journal, 22: 493-520.


    Please explain the framework “Sources of value creation” (Amit & Zott, SMJ 2001) for a freely chosen enterprise in Finland.

     

    Depending on the assigned task, each group will prepare an essay of 1500-2000 words + 5 PPT slides (excl. cover page and references) in which the essay is visualized. 


    The structure of these essays should be:

    • 300-400 words summary of the framework
    • 300-400 words summary venture’s operations
    • 900-1200 words elaboration of the question (apply the framework to the venture’s operations)

    The 5 PPT slides (excl. cover page and references) should include min. 1 PPT Slide explanation of the framework and 1 PPT slide case description.


    Afterwards, each group uploads the essay and the PPT slides – if possible in 1 document – in a PDF format in MyCourses in the section “Assignments” (max. size of the file is 10 MB).


    Upload format: "Group Name_Cohort_Case.PDF“, example: 1. Group_Venture Opportunity_ResQ.pdf.

    The deadline for uploading the essay and presentation is: 17.11. at 23:59 pm.


Workload
  • valid for whole curriculum period:

    The course contains individual and group work and individual and group assignments and will build on a variety of methods: front teaching, video self-study, group work (including peer evaluation), development of multiple choice questions, and audience response system.

  • applies in this implementation




        Assessment of the course

        The final grade will be calculated as follows:

         


        Group assignments


        Grade achieved in the development round


        30%


        Individual assignment

         

        Final MC-Exam


        70%


        Total:


        100%


        Passing the exam is a requirement for passing the course!

      DETAILS

      Study Material
      • applies in this implementation


        Literature

        Compulsory literature (uploaded in MyCourses in the section “Materials”)

        • Amit, R. & Zott, C. 2001. Value creation in e-business. Strategic Management Journal, 22: 493-520.
        • Sarasvathy, S. D. 2001. Causation and Effectuation: Toward a theoretical shift from economic inevitability to entrepreneurial contingency. Academy of Management Review, 26(2): 243-263.
        • Vogel, P. 2017. From venture idea to venture opportunity. Entrepreneurship Theory & Practice, 41(6): 943-971.

         

        Recommended complementing literature

        • Zacharakis, Andrew, William Bygrave, Andrew Corbett, 2016. Entrepreneurship, 4th Edition. Wiley.
          For the chapter Creativity, Idea Development and Innovation.
        • Bessant, John R., Tidd, Joe 2015. Innovation and Entrepreneurship, 3th Edition. Wiley.


        Titles of relevant journals in the field

        • Entrepreneurship Theory & Practice
        • Journal of Business Venturing
        • Entrepreneurship & Regional Development
        • Academy of Management Journal
        • Academy of Management Review


      Substitutes for Courses
      Prerequisites
      SDG: Sustainable Development Goals

        4 Quality Education

        8 Decent Work and Economic Growth

      FURTHER INFORMATION

      Further Information
      • valid for whole curriculum period:

        Teaching Language : English

        Teaching Period : 2022-2023 Autumn II
        2023-2024 Autumn II

        Enrollment :

        This courses is only for BIZ and Exchange students. Registration via Sisu ends at the time when the first lecture starts. The max. number of students is 495.

      • applies in this implementation


        Navigation in MyCourses

        MyCourses is an essential part of this course, and students are required to use it frequently.

         

        Course Homepage

        •  Table with submission deadlines
        • Group choice module
        •  General Discussion Forum
        • Final MC exam will be posted here
        • Results of the final MC exam will be posted here

         

        Section Materials

        • Course Articles
        • 4 lecture Videos in which the essential knowledge is explained
        • Lecture Slides
        • Self-Study Videos

         

        Assignments

        • Assignment “Development Phase”: essays and presentations and assessments
        • Assignment “Evaluation Phase”: assessments


        Practicing Exercises

        • Practice Questions (Basics, Creativity & Innovation, Opportunities)
        • Practice Questions (Business Models) 
        • Practice Questions (Venture Funding & Venture Growth)

        Details on the schedule
        • applies in this implementation

          Lectures, Formats, Content & Submission Deadlines


          Lecture date


          Format


          Content

          27.10.


          Zoom lecture

          (13:15-16:00)


          • Practicalities
          • Basics of Entrepreneurship
          • Creativity, Idea Development & Innovation

          03.11.

          10.11


          MyCourses, self-study, group work


          • Watching and understanding the videos about the essential entrepreneurship and innovation management knowledge
          • Preparation of intermediate assignment (group work)

          17.11.


          Zoom lecture

          (13:15-16:00)


          • Discussion of the causation and effectuation principles
          • audience response system questions on those principles
          • Opportunity to ask questions about the videos

          24.11.


          MyCourses, self-study, group work


          • Presentation and feedback of presentations à max. 20 minutes
          • Exercises on Venture Funding and Venture Growth Module
          • Opportunity to ask questions about the videos and the exam

          01.12.


          Zoom lecture

          (13:15-16:00)


          • Presentation and feedback of presentations à max. 20 minutes
          • Exercises on Venture Funding and Venture Growth Module
          • Opportunity to ask questions about the videos and the exam

          08.12.


          MyCourses

          (13:15-14:20)


          • MC-Online Exam

          12.01.2023


          MyCourses

          (13:15-14:20)


          • Re-exam in MyCourses ( No separate registration necessary)


          Deadlines


          Tasks to Pass the Course


          01.11. at 23:59 pm


          Indicate team formation in Group Choice Module in MyCourses


          17.11. at 13:15 pm


          Read article of Sarasvathy (2001)

          17.11. at 23:59 pm


          Submission of essays: 1500-2000 words + 5 PPT slides (excl. cover page and references)


          24.11. at 23:59 pm


          Submission of Evaluations: Review criteria + Grades on the essays and presentations + 3 suggestions for improving the presentation


          01.12. at 13:15 pm


          Presentation of the Essay from the Development Round


          08.12. at 13:15 pm


          Final exam in MyCourses

          12.01.2023 at 13:15 pm


          Re-exam in MyCourses (No separate registration necessary)