enow.com Web Search

Search results

  1. Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
  2. William R. Kerr - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/William_R._Kerr

    William R. Kerr is the Dimitri V. D'Arbeloff – MBA Class of 1955 Professor of Business Administration professor at Harvard Business School, where he is a co-director of Harvard's Managing the Future of Work project and faculty chair of the Launching New Ventures program for executive education.

  3. Carl Schramm - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Carl_Schramm

    Carl J. Schramm (born 1946) is an American economist, entrepreneur, author, former President of the Ewing Marion Kauffman Foundation, and University Professor at Syracuse University. He is the author of the book Burn the Business Plan: What Great Entrepreneurs Really Do, [4] published by Simon & Schuster.

  4. Entrepreneurship - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Entrepreneurship

    Elements. Entrepreneurship includes the creation or extraction of economic value. [ 11 ][ 12 ][ 13 ] It is the act of being an entrepreneur, or the owner or manager of a business enterprise who, by risk and initiative, attempts to make profits. [citation needed] Entrepreneurs act as managers and oversee the launch and growth of an enterprise.

  5. The Great Stagnation - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Great_Stagnation

    The main thesis is that economic growth has slowed in the United States and in other advanced economies, as a result of falling rates of innovation. [3] In Chapter 1, Cowen describes the three major forms of "low-hanging fruit": the ease of cultivating free and unused land, rapid invention from 1880 to 1940 which capitalized on the scientific breakthroughs of the 18th and 19th centuries and ...

  6. Joseph Schumpeter - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Joseph_Schumpeter

    The field of entrepreneurship theory owed much to Schumpeter's contributions. His fundamental theories are often referred to [ 48 ] as Mark I and Mark II. In Mark I, Schumpeter argued that the innovation and technological change of a nation come from entrepreneurs or wild spirits.

  7. Entrepreneurship ecosystem - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Entrepreneurship_ecosystem

    Entrepreneurship ecosystems commonly refer to academic programs within a university that focus on the development of student/graduate entrepreneurs and/or the commercialization of technology or intellectual property developed at the university level. [11][12] However before the entrepreneurial ecosystem can bloom, the education system must ...

  8. Elmira Bayrasli - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Elmira_Bayrasli

    Bayrasli is a professor at Bard College, in the Globalization and International Affairs Program, where she teaches Foreign Policy in the Time of the Internet. She is also an adjunct professor at New York University, teaching foreign policy and global entrepreneurship. In 2014, New America awarded her a fellowship, focusing on Turkey and the ...

  9. 3 Growth Stocks Wall Street Might Be Sleeping On, but I'm Not

    www.aol.com/3-growth-stocks-wall-street...

    2. Nike. After reporting only a 1% increase in revenue on a constant currency basis for its fiscal 2024, which ended in May, and guiding for a mid-single-digit sales decline in fiscal 2025, it may ...