Abstract
Entrepreneurship education has long been framed as a crucial component of the entrepreneurial university and its corresponding economic impact. The predominantly commercial focus of academic entrepreneurship, however, potentially limits theorizing about how academic units not otherwise involved in entrepreneurship contribute to the entrepreneurial university. Following recent calls for scholars to conceptualize transversal approaches to entrepreneurship education, this paper examines the design and delivery of lean social launch (LSL), a socially oriented derivative of the emerging lean launch method. We find that by broadening the context in which opportunities are identified and value is created, LSL attracts individuals who might not otherwise participate in entrepreneurial activities. Further, LSL provides participants with pathways to social and commercial value creation and serves as a venue for socially focused entrepreneurial identity play, an important antecedent to entrepreneurial behavior. Implications for the conceptualization of the entrepreneurial university and its policy and programmatic supports are explored.
Plain English Summary
Socially oriented entrepreneurship education approach attracts diverse students and expands the impact of entrepreneurial universities. How might we expand the impact of entrepreneurial universities? In this paper, we present a case of using socially oriented entrepreneurship education, called the lean social launch (LSL), that bridges the teaching and impact missions of the universities. Our analysis shows that the method’s focus on addressing social problems, emphasis on feasible solution development, and requirement for continual engagement with community partners attracts and empowers diverse student groups that might not otherwise participate in entrepreneurship education. Further, these courses help students develop an early-stage entrepreneurial identity and provide pathways to create real social impact in their communities. We also discuss several management and policy challenges associated with course delivery, the most surprising of which is the difficulty of working with other entrepreneurship support programs to support and scale student enterprises.
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Notes
The emergence of the third mission in the entrepreneurial university literature may be contrasted with the emergence of the third mission among U.S. land grand universities, including supporting agriculture experimentation stations and cooperative extension programs, that support the development and productivity of the American agricultural sector. See McDowell (2001) for a discussion of the rise and decline of the concept within this context.
https://www.nsf.gov/news/special_reports/i-corps/about.jsp (Accessed May 3, 2022).
Though one of the co-authors (Hayter) was involved in all LSL modalities, thus ensuring adherence to the underlying lean launch curriculum, the other co-authors made significant contributions to the design and delivery of the course.
Also discussed in Sect. 4.4 below, all courses were marketed by program coordinators within their respective departments, at which time they students were informed of its relatively unique format and that the course could serve as alternative to a course required by their degree program. For example, undergraduate students in a leadership-oriented minor program took our LSL derivative in fulfillment of a social entrepreneurship requirement. However, these students also had access to other sections of the same course but taught in a more traditional lecture format.
Value creation is a crucial component of the underlying lean launch methodology manifest in the perceived “value proposition” of a specific product or service. The extent to which a product or services matches market demand is termed product-market fit (Shepherd & Gruber, 2021), the ultimate success of which is proxied by sustained sales. Product-market fit may be achieved over time as individuals iteratively develop a better understanding of the target market segment and simultaneously adapt their product or service based on this enhanced understanding. One of the key challenges to social value creation is in the reliability and validity of impact measures (Morris et al., 2021).
Before client discovery interviews begin, teams construct a “value chain” to visually illustrate their hypothesized solution and how it functions. Early illustration is usually too abstract which leads to general responses from interviewees (e.g., “I like the concept” or “I think it is a good idea.”). However, participants were coached by instructors and involved community partners to provide greater specification and subsequently used these illustrations to illicit detailed feedback, especially related to why their solution might not work, and what approaches might work better.
For an example of a socially-oriented derivative of a business model canvas, see https://stanford.edu/dept/gsb-ds/Inkling/The_Impact_BMC/index.html.
These programs may also require students to complete an internship and/or senior capstone course. However, students are generally not required to “create” or “evaluate,” as illustrated by Bloom’s taxonomy (Anderson & Krathwohl, 2001).
Student grades are comprised mostly of a team score based on the quality of their client discovery, go/no-go determinations, evidence in support of their decision, and collective professionalism. The remaining grade proportion is comprised of a peer review score whereby individuals are evaluated by their team based on their responsiveness, reliability, and relative team contribution.
While our sample includes data from delivery of LSL at four different universities, data from this section are derived primarily from a public research university in the Southwest region of the United States.
For example, among the top five universities in the USA in terms of the number of engineering graduates, including Georgia Institute of Technology, Texas A&M-College Station, Purdue University, Arizona State University, and University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, 75.6 percent are male and 47.7 percent white. See https://datausa.io/profile/cip/engineering#demographics (Accessed May 24, 2022).
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Borman, B., Dalal, M., Hayter, C.S. et al. A transversal reconceptualization of entrepreneurship education: applying insights from the lean social launch framework to the entrepreneurial university. Small Bus Econ (2023). https://doi.org/10.1007/s11187-023-00859-y
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DOI: https://doi.org/10.1007/s11187-023-00859-y
Keywords
- Entrepreneurship education
- Entrepreneurial university
- Social entrepreneurship
- Lean startup
- I-Corps
- Academic entrepreneurship