Skip to content
City PM
  • Germany
  • France
  • Europe
  • Markets
  • Business
  • Opinion
  • DE
  • Germany
  • France
  • Europe
  • Markets
  • Business
  • Opinion
  • DE
Wednesday 24 March 2010 8:25 pm

How an MBA can make you an entrepreneur

By: KCS-content

Add as a preferred source on Google

SURVEYS of this newspaper’s readers always show that a large proportion of them hope to start up their own business one day. But if that is your dream, how do you go about it? Can you learn to be an entrepreneur? There is a mystique around entrepreneurialism and those who have succeeded often promote the idea that it is a quality that you are born with and no amount of training can make you successful.

Which is odd, because in recent years MBA courses have increasingly incorporated an entrepreneurial aspect. Many have electives about starting businesses. But can you really learn entrepreneurialism? As is often pointed out, the heads of Apple, Google and Microsoft do not have MBAs. If you want to start your own business, can an MBA help you?

Gary Dushnitsky, associate professor of Strategic and International Management & Entrepreneurship at London Business School, says that an MBA course can give you the “toolkit” to start a business. When people think of entrepreneurs they tend to emphasise the brilliant idea, the light bulb moment, and while that can be important, structural factors are also part of building success. For example, setting up the business in such a way that it can be scaled up. “Successful entrepreneurship is not just about having an idea that has traction, but having an organisation that allows you to monetise the idea. Do you have a marketing department that can sell the product? A finance department that can deal with the sometimes lumpy cashflows?” Many successful entrepreneurs are those who have found a way to monetise ideas. Gyms and coffee shops existed for hundreds of years before Fitness First or Starbucks.

Dr Shai Vyakarnam, director of the Centre for Entrepreneurial Learning at Judge Business School at the University of Cambridge, agrees that there is a perception that MBAs are unhelpful to entrepreneurship. “There is a negative part of MBAs, which is that most of the curriculum is about risk mitigation,” he says, pointing out that a lot of modern finance is about reducing risk. Entrepreneurs, of course, need a high tolerance of risk, and these two seem to pull in opposite directions. But the risk removal strategies can certainly be useful if used in the right way.

Learning about spread-sheets, venture capital, marketing, these are all useful things to know and might help you not get walked all over by somebody who has been doing it for 15 or 20 years. He also says that another side to the MBA is very helpful indeed to entrepreneurs – the networking. An MBA is largely about the contacts that you make at things like venture capitalist events and especially at business schools that are embedded in other universities – Judge at Cambridge, Imperial or Said in Oxford, for example – there are lots of people floating around, engineers or scientists for example, who can help you.

Really, there is no way to predict where entrepreneurs will emerge from. If an MBA is your route, then so be it. “I am from the Frank Sinatra School of business,” says Vyakarnam. “Do it your way.”

Share this article

  • Facebook
  • X
  • LinkedIn
  • WhatsApp
  • Email

Similarly tagged content:

Sections

  • Jobs and Money

Categories

  • Money

Related Topics

  • NULL

Trending Articles

  • Citroën 2CV returns as a £13,000 electric car, and the timing is no accident

  • James Watt offers to buy back Brewdog

  • Bank of England warns Burnham of UK economy’s ‘big issue’

  • The former African gold miner taking on the billionaire Issa brothers

  • Rachel Reeves to unveil next steps for ring-fencing reform at Mansion House

More from City PM

  • The ROI of an MBA: Why mid-career professionals are choosing the Executive MBA in 2026

    Partner
    Bayes Business School building in CityAM news article header with modern architecture and bustling city backdrop
  • Hult Launches Credit-Bearing AI Lab Across Graduate Programs

    Business Wire
  • DLE Limited Announces Patent Filing for Ambient-Temperature Diamond Process and Offers Staged Disclosure Framework

    Business Wire
  • CRH elects W. Anthony (Tony) Will to its Board of Directors

    Business Wire
  • Non-compete clauses are restraining Britain’s talent market

    Opinion
    London office workers collaborating on AI and tech projects, surrounded by computers and digital interfaces in a modern wo...
  • Why Richard Harpin sold half of homeServe for half a million pounds — and what he’d do differently

    Business
  • Integreon Names Krishna Nacha CEO

    Business Wire
  • Catalytic capital is the next phase in philanthropy

    Opinion
    Corporate philanthropy concept with diverse professionals collaborating on sustainable, long-term global health solutions

City PM — European politics, business and analysis.

Europe

  • Germany
  • France
  • Europe
  • UK & Ireland

Topics

  • Business
  • Markets
  • AI
  • Technology
  • Opinion
  • Energy

More

  • Politics
  • Economics
  • Fintech
  • Legal
  • Sport
  • Life

Company

  • About City PM
  • Editorial Policy
  • Corrections
  • Contact
  • Terms of Use
  • Privacy Policy
  • Cookie Policy
© 2026 City PM · Published by CityPM Media, Bahnhofstrasse 65, 8001 Zürich, Switzerland
About · Editorial Policy · Corrections · Contact · Privacy · Facebook