benbo
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In business school we took a class on entrepreneurship. We had to come up with a business and then do everything you would actually have to do to get it started - find a location, plan funding, do all the accounting, etc.Are you sure you aren't an entrepreneur? Per my econ class, entrepreneurs are "organizers" that pull materials and manpower together to create products to be sold. That is exactly what engineers do.I have an MS in IS that I got from a business school, and it is basically the same as an MBA (they pretty much gave us a choice on which we wanted). I really liked it, and it is easy, and I was the top student. I was always in the middle in engineering school. But I don't use it at all. And I am no entrepreneur - I don't think they can really teach you that, although they can show you the nuts and bolts.
Starting a business on top of that can be learned, but there are a lot of hoops that need to be gone through such as registering a business, getting tax ID, ect.....
Then we had to "pitch" it to a panel of investors from the community. All of them were small buisness owners in our area. One owned a place called "Wahoo's Fish Taco's" which is pretty famous in So-Cal. If they didn't think it was at least a marginally viable plan you failed the course. I passed, but ..
I HATED it. I am fine getting a reasonable paycheck.
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