Schedule
Registration
Award
Participants
Committee
Contact
REEEurope
Notes

2001 Conference Notes
<---back to notes page

All conference notes are provided in Adobe Acrobat format.


Thursday, October 25th, 2001

I. Oops! The Ten Most Common Mistakes Made Now in Business Plans
Bill Joos, Garage Technology Ventures
slide presentation
notes

II. Living in the Real Economy
Bill Reichert, Garage Technology Ventures
slide presentation
notes


Friday, October 26th, 2001
Compare and Contrast Different Entrepreneurship Program Statements
Drew Isaacs, U.C. Berkeley
notes

A. Build to last programs: Managing succession an dsustainability
John Jaquette and Deborah Streeter, Cornell
notes

B. Compare and contrast teaching of entrepreneeurship in business schools versus engineering schools and information science versus life science
David Ku, Georgia Tech
notes

C. Distance learning efforts: Online resources for entrepreneurship educators
Katherine Emery, Stanford University
notes

D. Intellectual property and conflict of interest
Jon Sandelin, Stanford University
notes

E. Incubators: to incubate or not to incubate?
Mark Rice, Babson
notes

F. Research efforts on technology entrepreneurship
Marie Thursby, Purdue University
notes

Then and Now: Starting a Company in the New New Economy
Guy Kawasaki, Garage Technology Ventures
slide presentation


Saturday, October 27th, 2001
Panel: What I'm Glad I Learned...What I Wish I Had Learned
Mike Levinthal, Ted Schlein, Kit Rodgers, Erin Turner, Adam Nash
Facilitator: Tina Seelig
notes

Summary of conference sessions
Tom Byers, Stanford University
notes

 

 

 


REEE USA is sponsored by the Stanford Technology Ventures Program and the Kauffman Foundation.


STVP
Stanford Technology Ventures Program is the entrepreneurship center within the School of Engineering. Our mission is to build a world-class center dedicated to accelerating high technology entrepreneurship research and education for engineers and scientists worldwide.


KAUFFMAN
The Kauffman Foundation works to accelerate entrepreneurship in America by reaching individuals at all ages through two focus areas: the delivery of entrepreneurship education and development, and the promotion of entrepreneurial environments.


LLEEP Clinics
In the United States, REEE serves as one of the LLEEP clinics (Lifelong Learning for Entrepreneurial Education Professionals). LLEEP is a partnership including the Kauffman Foundation, the Price Institute for Entrepreneurial Studies, Babson College, the University of Colorado at Boulder, and Stanford University.
Stanford Technology Ventures Program © 2002