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Education & School Counseling Anchorage AK

Bill Gates and Oprah Winfrey don’t have business degrees, but they’re exceptions to the rule. Your innate business sense may surface on its own, but biz-ed classes coax it out and sharpen it up in Anchorage.

Kelly Blalock
(907) 742-3392
Anchorage, AK
Anchorage Job Center Midtown
(907) 269-4759
3301 Eagle Street, Suite 101
Anchorage, AK
A C C F T Local 2404
(907) 562-2660
3211 Providence Dr
Anchorage, AK
Eagle River Job Center
907-696-6832
11723 Old Glenn Hwy., B-4
Eagle River, AK
Terese Lipinski Kashi
(907) 398-0502
Soldotna, AK
Keith Cates
(907) 786-6314
Anchorage, AK
Anchorage Gambell Job Center
907-269-6414
400 Gambell Street
Anchorage, AK
Anchorage Job Center Muldoon
907-269-0000
1251 Muldoon Rd., Suite 114
Anchorage, AK
Barbara Wise Doyle
(479) 283-2847
Fayetteville, AK
Tok Job Center
907-883-5629
State Office Building, Mile Post 1314
Tok, AK

Formal Business Education - Do You Need It?

You want to start your own company but don’t have a “business” background or education. Do you need it, or can you just learn as you go? Then again, can entrepreneurship really be taught in a classroom?

With classes for would-be business owners now a trend on college campuses nationwide, it’s time to take a fresh look at the value of a biz-ed.

Traditionally, business schools were attended by students intent on a career in corporate America, with curricula tailored for exactly for that.

Things have changed.

Today, more than 2,000 two- and four-year colleges across the country offer entrepreneurship courses, up from 1,400 in 1998 and 300 in 1980, according to the Kauffman Foundation , a Kansas City, Mo.-based resource center for small business owners. In recent years, Kauffman has given more than $50 million in matching grants to 23 universities for expanded entrepreneurship programs.

Inventiveness Sparks Shift

Advocates of startup-ed say the shift comes from a growing understanding of entrepreneurship's key role in economic and job growth, and that more college graduates will start their own companies or work at small firms instead of marching off to Fortune 500 companies.

Besides that, more young adults are arriving on campus having already started businesses or ready to. That’s a change from the past, when most people didn't launch startups until middle age.

Business Schools as Startup Incubators

Author: Glenn R. Swift

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