Great idea worth pursuing Erin,
Keep developing this line of thought. Global perspective helps, as we know that countries that do not suppress women thrive. John Wood of Room to Read serves primarily young women, and he would have a view on this as well. Andrew Youn in Kenya serves mostly women head of households as well. Is there a paper or case in this subject?
Kellogg pioneered a course on Women Entrepreneurship 5-6 years ago. After 2 years the enrollment fell very low- too low. Supposedly the professor was fine- that may or may not be true. Kellogg has pioneering women entrepreneurs and funders to entrepreneurs:
1. Sona Wang
2. Betty Chow
3. Venita Fields
4. Julia Stamberger
5. …… and on…
Kellogg is the #1 school for women MBAs according to WSJ, and the entrepreneurship program at Kellogg is even with Marketing in its caliber. Thus, the evidence here may show some discrepancy between what women MBAs say they want and what they really want. Most women here seem to be getting what they want from the entrepreneurship offerings as they are offered. That said, just yesterday, Prof. Rogers and I talked about writing a case series on women entrepreneurship. Adding a global view would further strengthen the case.
A friend, advocate and alum, Nancy Sullivan, would have her views on this. She runs Tech Transfer at UIC now. It would be worth investigating for the global aspect.
Scott
Great idea worth pursuing Erin,
Keep developing this line of thought. Global perspective helps, as we know that countries that do not suppress women thrive. John Wood of Room to Read serves primarily young women, and he would have a view on this as well. Andrew Youn in Kenya serves mostly women head of households as well. Is there a paper or case in this subject?
Kellogg pioneered a course on Women Entrepreneurship 5-6 years ago. After 2 years the enrollment fell very low- too low. Supposedly the professor was fine- that may or may not be true. Kellogg has pioneering women entrepreneurs and funders to entrepreneurs:
1. Sona Wang
2. Betty Chow
3. Venita Fields
4. Julia Stamberger
5. …… and on…
Kellogg is the #1 school for women MBAs according to WSJ, and the entrepreneurship program at Kellogg is even with Marketing in its caliber. Thus, the evidence here may show some discrepancy between what women MBAs say they want and what they really want. Most women here seem to be getting what they want from the entrepreneurship offerings as they are offered. That said, just yesterday, Prof. Rogers and I talked about writing a case series on women entrepreneurship. Adding a global view would further strengthen the case.
A friend, advocate and alum, Nancy Sullivan, would have her views on this. She runs Tech Transfer at UIC now. It would be worth investigating for the global aspect.
Scott
The Global Entrepreneur Fellow from the Kellogg School travels to one of the Kellogg School's partner campuses outside of Evanston, Illinois and reports on items and features they observe regarding entrepreneurship. ... full info
Global Entrepreneur Fellow from the Kellogg School
Global Entrepreneur Fellow
Great idea worth pursuing
Erin, Keep developing this line of thought. Global perspective helps, as we know that countries that do not suppress women thrive. John Wood of Room to Read serves primarily young women, and he would have a view on this as well. Andrew Youn in Kenya serves mostly women head of households as well. Is there a paper or case in this subject? Kellogg pioneered a course on Women Entrepreneurship 5-6 years ago. After 2 years the enrollment fell very low- too low. Supposedly the professor was fine- that may or may not be true. Kellogg has pioneering women entrepreneurs and funders to entrepreneurs: 1. Sona Wang 2. Betty Chow 3. Venita Fields 4. Julia Stamberger 5. …… and on… Kellogg is the #1 school for women MBAs according to WSJ, and the entrepreneurship program at Kellogg is even with Marketing in its caliber. Thus, the evidence here may show some discrepancy between what women MBAs say they want and what they really want. Most women here seem to be getting what they want from the entrepreneurship offerings as they are offered. That said, just yesterday, Prof. Rogers and I talked about writing a case series on women entrepreneurship. Adding a global view would further strengthen the case. A friend, advocate and alum, Nancy Sullivan, would have her views on this. She runs Tech Transfer at UIC now. It would be worth investigating for the global aspect. Scott