Find us elsewhere
Join Now Member Login

How much business education/training is needed?

 
New Topic
Post Reply
Follow Topic
Page of 2 Next »
  • Author
  • Message
 
RocketScientist

posts: 10

Apr 15, 2008 2:56 AM ET    Quote  Report Abuse
Points: 0   Vote
I wanted to get a feel as to how important is it to educate oneself in business and entrepreneurship and how much? I`ve taken some business classes at a local community college: 
 
-Introduction to Business
-Introduction to Entrepreneurship
 
I plan to take several more classes including
 
-Business Law
-Principles of Management
-Principles of Marketing
 
And perhaps I`d throw in there a business math class and and some accounting classes. This community college offers a tremendous number of business classes (34 different class in all).
 
Also in my area there is the Silicon Valley Small Business Development Center that offers classes, training, and mentorship to help people develop their small businesses. My business partners and I are planning to avail ourselves of this opportunity as well.
 
So I was just wondering how much education and training other people have had?
 
winston2

posts: 122

Apr 15, 2008 1:31 PM ET    Quote  Report Abuse
Points: 0   Vote
I just read an article in the Entrepreneur Magazine that most successful entrepreneurs did not have a collage degree. Though I think it will never hurt you to get all the education you can it will not always make a difference in your success. If you really want to start a business I would get all the accounting I could, experience in the field you want to work in and pray for a lot of luck.
RocketScientist

posts: 10

Apr 15, 2008 1:47 PM ET    Quote  Report Abuse
Points: 0   Vote
I just read an article in the Entrepreneur Magazine that most successful entrepreneurs did not have a collage degree. Though I think it will never hurt you to get all the education you can it will not always make a difference in your success. If you really want to start a business I would get all the accounting I could, experience in the field you want to work in and pray for a lot of luck.

Thanks for your input. I`m not looking to get a business degree. I already have two engineering degrees. I`m in the process of starting an LLC with three others. The vision for our company is a high tech company that spans across many industries. Our first project is a sputtering machine used in the semiconductor industry. We have sort of have one customer lined up already.

I was just planning of taking several business classes to learn as much as I can. I`m the kind of person that likes to immerse myself in whatever I want to learn. Websites like startupnation.com really help as well. I can across my readings that people who have training and/or some business education are much more likely to have successful business. I`m sure that there are some that buck that trend and succeed anyway without much formal education and training.


EngineersCanSell

posts: 163

Apr 15, 2008 2:27 PM ET    Quote  Report Abuse
Points: 0   Vote
Hey RocketScientist,

Shoot me a PM if you want to talk - some of my biggest customers are sputtering target customers - while I can`t give you names, I can talk abstractly about the market if that would help you.  I`m also an engineer with 2 degrees that then got a Carnegie Mellon MBA - looking back, your plan might make more sense (and cents!)  Some of it depends on if you`re strictly looking for book knowledge or contacts too.  I`d be happy to talk about that too.

CampSteve

posts: 1216

Apr 15, 2008 3:36 PM ET    Quote  Report Abuse
Points: 0   Vote
Well, you don`t have to be a rocket scientist to be an entrepreneur.  (Sorry, I couldn`t resist.)

My actual point though is that the willingness to learn, grow, fail, etc. is often more important than business book smarts.  And that entrepreneurial spirit is also something to study.  I have absolutely no formal business training but I`ve learned a lot about business from my own experience or other entrepreneurs` stories.  I believe success is more dependent upon your approach than how much knowledge you gain before going in.
RocketScientist

posts: 10

Apr 15, 2008 7:54 PM ET    Quote  Report Abuse
Points: 0   Vote
Hey RocketScientist,

Shoot me a PM if you want to talk - some of my biggest customers are sputtering target customers - while I can`t give you names, I can talk abstractly about the market if that would help you.  I`m also an engineer with 2 degrees that then got a Carnegie Mellon MBA - looking back, your plan might make more sense (and cents!)  Some of it depends on if you`re strictly looking for book knowledge or contacts too.  I`d be happy to talk about that too.


I`ll drop you a PM soon....

tgroup

posts: 111

Apr 16, 2008 9:21 AM ET    Quote  Report Abuse
Points: 0   Vote
Hey RS-

I have a Doctorate in business with a specialty in small business management. I`ll tell you that my level of education has VERY little do with my success in business. My motivation in getting the degree was to to be able to teach, not to make me a better business person. The only things that really helped me came from when I had professors who had actual real-world experience as an entrepreneur. The ones that I had (and there were lots) who were packed with book knowledge but little or no real-world experience didn`t help much at all. It`s good to get an education but it only goes so far.

Good luck,
Ron

KevDev

posts: 96

Apr 17, 2008 2:01 PM ET    Quote  Report Abuse
Points: 0   Vote
RS:

You should be congratulated, because you have already done more to educate yourself than 80% of all entrepreneurs, and have increased your chances of success immeasurably!

My only suggestion: experts - accountant, attorney, insurance, lender.

Good luck!



-------------------------

Find out what a business plan is all about and get started on your plan with this introduction. FREE!
Business Plan Basics!

You wouldn`t build a house without a blueprint.
Why build a business without a plan?
Build Your Business Plan!
CraigL

posts: 9051

Apr 18, 2008 1:05 AM ET    Quote  Report Abuse
Points: 0   Vote
You might want to check out this topic:
"Formal Business Education -- Do You Need It?"

There`s no doubt in my mind that you MUST have a solid sense of what makes a product, what makes a market, what are customers, and what is sales. You don`t have to learn that in school, you can learn it selling just about anything.

The advantage to a formal business education is that you get to learn stuff about accounting, handling money, and a sense of how legalities are associated with doing business.

Of all the things I`m seeing that come in to play with a small startup, the two most important seem to be process analysis and strategic thinking. Understanding how important it is to have solid, understandable, documented processes means also understanding why those processes matter to any business.

As for strategic thinking (versus tactical thinking), that`s the core difference between an executive and an employee. Being a startup entrepreneur also means being an executive, so if you don`t understand the function of a CEO or other Chief Executive, you`re in real trouble.

Everything else you can learn by the seat of your pants. :-)
RocketScientist

posts: 10

Apr 18, 2008 1:52 AM ET    Quote  Report Abuse
Points: 0   Vote
Hey RS-

I have a Doctorate in business with a specialty in small business management. I`ll tell you that my level of education has VERY little do with my success in business. My motivation in getting the degree was to to be able to teach, not to make me a better business person. The only things that really helped me came from when I had professors who had actual real-world experience as an entrepreneur. The ones that I had (and there were lots) who were packed with book knowledge but little or no real-world experience didn`t help much at all. It`s good to get an education but it only goes so far.

Good luck,
Ron
 
It seems to me there is a disconnect between academai and the the business world. Shouldn`t they be teaching what makes a business a success in universities?
RocketScientist4/18/2008 1:54 AM
Page of 2 Next »
Post Reply
 
.
Advertisement

Keep the Community Clean!

  • StartupNation forums should be used as a platform to learn, educate others, share stories, tips & tricks and to provide constructive feedback.
  • Please do not use the Forums for advertising & blatant self-promotion.
  • Please be respectful to other members and refrain from personal attacks and vulgar language.
  • StartupNation reserves the right to delete any message, reply, and/or member who violates our terms of use.
Read full terms of use
Advertisement
Advertisement
Advertisement
Advertisement