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Entrepreneurship – Book-Smarts or Gut Instinct?

January 26th, 2009 @ 10:30 am

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In my role as President of Stacy Blackman Consulting, advising on the MBA admissions process, I speak daily to clients trying to articulate their goals.  Turns out, “entrepreneurship” is a very popular career path.  When I hear this as a goal, I ask key questions: “What do you want to do?”,  “What problems will you solve?”,  “What will you do better than an existing company?”  Most of these prospective students don’t know.  Often, they just want to be entrepreneurs because it sounds…cool.  I remind them that entrepreneurs have to empty their own wastebaskets and set up their own computers – if you are not passionate about what you are doing, it can get old pretty fast.  All of this brings me to ponder the question:  “Can entrepreneurship be taught?”  I wanted to share some of my thoughts in this blog.  Today I will write about my personal experience as an entrepreneur and an MBA, and will follow up over the next couple of weeks with additional thoughts.  I would love to hear your opinions as we contemplate this question.

The Beginning
Ten years ago, as a second year MBA student at Kellogg, I started my first company.  It was an online gift registry called Webwisher.com, and since then has been acquired, merged and acquired again, ending up as part of the www.theknot.com.  My partners and I had spent our MBA summers in traditional jobs at big companies such as Goldman Sachs and Ford, and none of us had planned to start a company straight out of business school, if at all.   We joined together inspired by the web’s ability to solve what we felt was a problem for many –gift giving.  At first, before the idea really gained momentum, we just had fun gathering together with bagels on Sunday mornings and drafting our plan.  While business school was a relatively safe place to take a leap and work on our business plan, it still took some amount of courage and a willingness to assume risk to turn down that full time offer from McKinsey, as one of my partners did, or to consider graduating without a formal job offer to help pay back sky high business school loans.  In retrospect, flying to New York, Austin and San Francisco to ask people for millions of dollars, was (if I do say so myself…) gutsy.  When I think about what contributed most to our success during that time, it was not knowledge of marketing, finance or operations.  It was our passion, our genuine excitement over our idea and our moxie.

B-School’s Role
Surely, my partners and I leveraged a lot of our business school classes and resources to launch WebWisher.com.  We took a business plan class that allowed us to work on our business and earn a course credit.  We also met with professors of finance, marketing and strategy to help us refine our plan.  We met with classmates and alumni who made valuable introductions and advised us in many important ways.  At relevant times we dove into our textbooks and class notes, so that we could implement best practices when it came to tasks such as running financial models and structuring market research.  Business school was incredibly helpful when I started my first company, and still is, now that I am running an entirely different company.   It’s safe to say I am a full-fledged entrepreneur, and I would recommend business school to anyone who aspires to start a new company.  The network, the resources, the coursework…all of it has been invaluable.  But interestingly, I never took a class called “How to be an Entrepreneur”.   In my next post, I’ll dig deeper to answer the question that I face every time I speak with someone new looking for the best school for someone like them, someone who wants to be a free-spirited, high-flying entrepreneur.  Can, and for that matter, should, entrepreneurship be taught?

 
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  •  
    1

    artfog

    01/26/09 | Report as spam

    RE: Entrepreneurship ? Book-Smarts or Gut Instinct?

    Being an entrepreneur that also went to a top business school, I found this post very interesting. I think it very much depends on ones personality. Business school may give you a safety net to start a company as in Stacy's case. I actually founded my first company before business school where I had to rely on my common sense and gut instinct. I went to business school to learn the skills that I realized I didn't have.
    Bottom line, just like you can't teach someone without musical talent to be a musician, I don't think entrepreneurship can be taught.

  •  
    2

    shal83

    01/26/09 | Report as spam

    RE: Entrepreneurship ? Book-Smarts or Gut Instinct?

    Hi Stacy,

    I read with great interest your post and I am
    also a regular follower of your blog and I find
    it very useful for preparation of B school. I
    am an entrepreneur, started a company in
    electronic waste management; failed miserably,
    and now work as a strategy consultant but also
    have started a luxury limousine service.

    What I question is - if someone like me already
    has a decent idea and contacts and experience
    in entrepreneurship, would the 2 years at MBA
    be justified in terms of loss in time and
    opportunity. I agree, I would get good brand
    name, some credibility but still not sure if
    its worthwhile?

    Would love to hear your thoughts.

    Kaushal
    Prospective MBA applicant for the class of 2012
    dugar.k@gmail.com

  •  
    3

    shal83

    01/26/09 | Report as spam

    RE: Entrepreneurship ? Book-Smarts or Gut Instinct?

    Hi Stacy,

    I read with great interest your post and I am
    also a regular follower of your blog and I find
    it very useful for preparation of B school. I
    am an entrepreneur, started a company in
    electronic waste management; failed miserably,
    and now work as a strategy consultant but also
    have started a luxury limousine service.

    What I question is - if someone like me already
    has a decent idea and contacts and experience
    in entrepreneurship, would the 2 years at MBA
    be justified in terms of loss in time and
    opportunity. I agree, I would get good brand
    name, some credibility but still not sure if
    its worthwhile?

    Would love to hear your thoughts.

    Kaushal
    Prospective MBA applicant for the class of 2012

  •  
    4

    Stacy Blackman

    01/26/09 | Report as spam

    RE: Entrepreneurship ? Book-Smarts or Gut Instinct?

    Hi Kaushal,
    I guess I would question why you want the MBA. I am sure there is a lot you could gain, but of course it is expensive and would delay your plans. So you would need to weigh the potential benefits against these drawbacks. The benefits go beyond credibility and brand name...you would learn important business skills - perhaps skills that would have helped you to be more successful in your last entrepreneurial attempt. You would also expand your network and point of view. So lots to gain, but that does not mean it is indispensable!
    Good luck.

  •  
    5

    Janet Krenn

    01/27/09 | Report as spam

    RE: Entrepreneurship ? Book-Smarts or Gut Instinct?

    I think entrepreneurship MBAs should be reserved for individuals who have no to limited business background (and there are many of them) but have great ideas.

    Running a business is something that is learned. Whether you learn how to run a business through coursework or through experience as a worker-bee, no one pops out of the womb knowing how to be an entrepreneur.

    With that in mind, I think it's a matter of where you start. If you start with practical experience, the next logical step would be generating ideas. If you have ideas without experience, get the MBA. If you have neither, God bless.

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  • Blogger Thumbnail Stacy Blackman Stacy Sukov Blackman is president of Stacy Blackman Consulting, where she consults on MBA admissions. She earned her MBA from the Kellogg Graduate School of Management at Northwestern University and her Bachelor of Science from the Wharton School at the University of Pennsylvania. Stacy serves on the Board of Directors of AIGAC, the Association of International Graduate Admissions Consultants, and has published a guide to MBA Admissions, The MBA Application Roadmap. more »

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