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This document provides an overview of the 15.389A G-Lab Asia-Pacific course. It introduces the teaching team and outlines the course goals, which include familiarizing students with global entrepreneurship challenges, providing an internship experience working with a startup, and leveraging networks to provide advice. It then discusses what makes a good entrepreneurial environment and how entrepreneurship can develop in difficult contexts. The document reviews the course design, requirements, and standards.
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© © All Rights Reserved
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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
85 views40 pages

MIT15 389AF10 Lec01 PDF

This document provides an overview of the 15.389A G-Lab Asia-Pacific course. It introduces the teaching team and outlines the course goals, which include familiarizing students with global entrepreneurship challenges, providing an internship experience working with a startup, and leveraging networks to provide advice. It then discusses what makes a good entrepreneurial environment and how entrepreneurship can develop in difficult contexts. The document reviews the course design, requirements, and standards.
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
Available Formats
Download as PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
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15.

389A G-Lab Asia-Pacific

1
15 389 G-Lab
15.389 G Lab
Agenda
• Introductions
• Course Goals
• What Is a “Good”
Good Entrepreneurial Environment?
• Course Overview
• Course Requirements and Logistics
• Questions
Introducing the Teaching Team
• Kara Blackburn • Simon Johnson
• Sharmila Chatterjee • Scott Keating
• Michelle Fiorenza • Christine Kelly
• Jonathan Lehrich
• Laura Gay
• Shari Loessberg
• Yasheng Huang • Roberta Pittore
• Rebbie Hughes • Annie Wang
• Michellana Jester • Jenny Wu
The Goals of G
G-Lab
Lab
1. Familiarize you with issues and challenges
facing global entrepreneurs.
2. Provide yyou with an intensive internship p
experience working in a global startup.
3. Familiarize you
y with the p power of leveraging
g g
informal, MIT-related, and other networks
while working globally.
4. Offer high-quality advice for global
companies, making MIT Sloan the first place
th t global
that l b l startups
t t llook
k ffor advice
d i anddhhelp.
l
What is a “good”
good
entrepreneurial
p environment?
Transition economies lack many of the
“good environment” conditions.

And yyet entrepreneurs


p succeed.

How?
Adversity
Ad it BBreeds
d OOpportunity:
t it
Our Approach to Global
Entrepreneurship
p p
Roadmap
1) The Key Question: Why Does
Entrepreneurship Develop in Some Places
and Not in Others?
2) Standard
St d d Answers:
A C lt
Culture, Key Institutions
K I tit ti
3) The Limits of This View
4) An Alternative Perspective
Culture Matters
• Some cultures are more “entrepreneurial”
entrepreneurial
than others
 Overseas Chinese vs. Japanese
 N th Italians
Northern It li vs. Southern
S th ItItalians
li
 United States vs
vs. Scandinavia
Problems with Cultural Analysis
I )
• Cultures people who supposedly were not
Cultures,
entrepreneurial (e.g., Scandinavians,
G
Germans, Southern
S th Italians
t li ) ttoday
d are.
• Since cultures do not change quickly
quickly, what
else is going on?
The Importance of Institutions
Checklist of institutions
• Human capital
• Legal rules
• Financial system
• Source organizations
• Labor market
The Limits of This View
• “Conventional
Conventional wisdom
wisdom” is a stylized description of
the US system
 If this view is the answer, then entrepreneurs –
and student teams – are helpless
• Reality: Entrepreneurship is developing throughout
the world, despite or because “essential”
institutions are lackingg
• Examples: China
Poland
Vietnam
An Alternative Perspective
• Adversity breeds opportunity & innovation
• Common problems, local answers
• Importance of networks: local, national, and
cross national
cross-national
• New role for government
15 389 G-Lab
15.389 G-Lab
Course Overview
What is entrepreneurship?
• Entrepreneurship: Various definitions
 Legal definition: Self-employment used in the economic
census in manyy countries.
 Size definition: SMEs, start-ups, etc.
• World Bank cutoff point (Batra, Kaufmann, and Stone 2003): Firms
employing less than 500 employees in LDCs
 Behavioral definition: Nimble and completely market driven
(Knight 1921)
 Effects: “Creative destruction” (Schumpeter 1976, 5th
edition))
G-Lab encompasses all definitions of
entrepreneurship
• G
G-Lab:
Lab:
 Focus on SMEs and startups (i.e., size
definition)
 Help inject knowhow and expertise to nimble
fi
firms (b
(behavioral
h i l ddefinition)
fi iti )
 Hope that your projects can achieve “creative
destruction” (effect definition)
 All the G-Lab teams: Stay y out of legal
g troubles in
the host countries (legal definition, sort of)
Why study entrepreneurship?
• Developed countries: Techno
Techno-entrepreneurship,
entrepreneurship,
such as Silicon Valley
• Developing countries: Technology, but also
 Employment
 Economic growth
• “Innovative” vis-à-vis “replicative” entrepreneurship
(Baumol et al
al. 2007)
 G-Lab projects span technology and non-
technology projects
Entrepreneurship in transition
economies
• The power of entrepreneurship most evident in
transition economies:
 Lacking other mechanisms for growth,
growth such as
investment, consumption and FDI
 Severe fiscal and financing constraints
 Political instability
 Sharp output falls
 Psychological deficit and pessimism: Animal instinct is
missing (Keynes)
Entrepreneurship=The only source of
growth
• McMillan and Woodruff (2002):
( )
 Vietnam: Private sector=>10 million jobs; public
sector=>negative job creation
 Romania and Slovakia: New private firms outperformed
privatized SOEs
 A positive correlation between GDP growth and new
entrepreneurship
• Economic evidence is clear:
 Countries with a higher level and rate of entrepreneurship
activities outperform those countries that only relied on
privatization of SOEs.
Why China succeeded?
• New private sector is large and growing
 70% of GDP by some measures
 Urban employment (2006): 69.7 million
 Compared with 64 million in the state sector and only
14 million in the foreign sector
 Strong source of growth: added 46.4 million jobs
between 1996 and 2006 while the state sector shed 48
million jobs

9/12/2010 20
The role of the government?
• Deng Xiaoping in 1987:
 “In the rural reform our greatest success—and it
is one we had by no means anticipated
anticipated—has has
been the emergence of a large number of
p
enterprises run byy villages
g and townships. p Theyy
were like a new force that just came into being
spontaneously….The Central Committee [of the
C
Communist i tPParty]
t ] ttakes
k no credit
dit ffor this.
thi ”
• Will revisit this issue of governmental role in G-Lab
15 389 G-Lab
15.389 G-Lab
Course Design
A brief tour of the
classroom work off G-Lab
G
• The classroom work:
 Knowledge about host countries and macro
conditions
 A high-level discussions on the conditions and
experience
i off entrepreneurship
t hi in
i host
h t countries
ti
 Prepare you for the internship portion of G-Lab
 Provide a macro background to situate your
client firms
G-Lab
G Lab classroom sessions
• Two types of sessions:
 “Issues” sessions: What are the political,
economic and business issues in the host
countries?
 “Projects
“P j t ” sessions:
i H to
How t perform
f t
team work,
k
line up necessary resources, leverage MIT and
non-MIT
MIT network,
t k communicate i t tot hhostt
companies, etc.?
 Faculty advising: Covering both what and how
The design of “issues”
issues sessions
• To the extent possible,
possible we try to present and
combine macro and micro issues/cases
• For example:
 A macro case on China is followed byy
a G-Lab company/micro case on PPS.tv
 A case on business environment in Vietnam
is followed by a G-Lab case on
PeaceSoft Solutions
PeaceSoft
15 389 G-Lab
15.389
Course Requirements and Logistics
Course Requirements
Individual (45%) Team (55%)
• Class Participation (20%) • Project
R Workplan
R (10%)
• Case
C Write-up(s)
W it ( ) (10%) • R
Remotet Researchh Reportt
• Peer Review (5%) (15%)

• After Action Review (10%) • Company Deliverables,


Poster, Final Internship
Report (25%)
• Host Company Feedback
(5%)
Course Standards
• Sloan Professional Standards
 On time
 Respectful of faculty, guests, and classmates
 No cellphones, laptops, or other electronics
Course Expectations
• Attendance Is Mandatory
 One unexcused absence = grade reduced by 5%
 Three unexcused absences = fail the course
Class Participation
• Class participation is 20% of grade
• Why?
 G-Lab is a collaboration
 Learn from each other
 Not contributing = free riding
Travel
• Allowed itineraries:
• Boston-Project Site-Boston
• Derivations allowed but you pay the difference in airfare
• Work at least three consecutive weeks between
Jan. 5 and Jan. 30
• Arrive up p to 48 hrs before start work date,, depart
p upp to 24 hrs
after end date
• You can stay longer, but you’ll pay the extra hotel days
• Must be on campus Jan 31
• Tickets purchased by Session 17
• Ensures lower fare
• Allows enough time to get visa(s)
Travel
• Tripp is required
q
• Team’s eligibility for travel is not guaranteed
• Field
Fi ld workk andd classroom
l workk are
complementary
• Go-No Go Decision will be made by the
Teaching Team by Session 21
Covered Expenses
• What expenses are covered by MIT/Host?
• Economy Airfare Boston
Boston-Project
Project Site
Site-Boston
Boston for working dates (+/-
(+/ 2
days)
• Reasonable (safe & clean) Lodging for working dates (+/- 2 days)
• What expenses do I cover?
• Airfare itinerary different than above
• Additional nights of lodging
• Visa(s)
• Ground transit (commuting,
( g roundtripp airport-lodging)
p g g)
• SIM card, internet charges
• Meals
• Vaccination(s),
V i ti ( ) medicationsi ti
d items
• Laundry & personal
Teams
• 4 students per team

• Team mixer on Session 3

• Teams submit applications on Session 5


Projects: Exceptional Diversity
• Size
• Stage
• Industry
• Project
• Location
 BONUS – Middle East and Africa regions
now available in this section
Projects: Schedule
• Bids due Session 5
• Matches announced Session 6
• Remote internship October-December
• On-site
O s e internship
e s p in Ja
January
ua y
 At least three consecutive weeks between
Jan 5 and Jan
Jan. Jan. 30
 Confirm dates with host company by Session 12
• Debrief, poster session, and final report in February
Don’tt Take This Course If …
Don
1. Only one project can make you happy
2. You haven’t told your significant other that you’ll be
awayy for three weeks in Januaryy
3. You just want a cheap vacation
4 You can
4. can’tt afford to spend ~$1000
5. You desperately want an A, but you don’t like to
t lk in
talk i class
l
6. You’re looking for an easy 12 credits
7. You have prior commitments in January
Next Steps
Today: Sign attendance sheet
shee

ASAP: Contact TAs if you want to drop or swap

Watch for email: Begin browsing projects on g-lab.mit.edu


Session 3 : Team mixer
Most waitlist and swap requests will be resolved by the next day
15 389 G
15.389 G-Lab
-Lab
http://g-lab.mit.edu/
MIT OpenCourseWare
http://ocw.mit.edu

15.389A Global Entrepreneurship Lab: Asia-Pacific


Fall 2010

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