Tag: entrepreneurial lifecycle

  • Beyond the Bake Sale: Reimagining University-Industry Partnerships for Genuine Impact

    Title: Reimagining the University-Industry Partnership: A New Model for Impact

    There’s a certain quaintness to the traditional image of university-industry partnerships. Think career fairs, bake sales to fund student projects, perhaps a guest lecture from an industry leader. These are valuable initiatives, certainly, but they often feel like peripheral activities – a polite nod towards the ‘real world’ rather than a fundamental shift in how universities operate.

    I’m not dismissing these efforts, mind you. I’ve participated in them myself, organizing career workshops and facilitating industry mentorship programmes. But after years of observing these interactions from both sides – as an academic deeply invested in research and a consultant advising businesses – I’m convinced that we need to fundamentally reimagine the university-industry partnership. We need a model that moves beyond simple transactional exchanges and embraces genuine collaboration, one that prioritizes shared value creation over short-term gains.

    I’m not suggesting a radical overhaul, but rather a subtle recalibration – a shift in mindset that recognizes the inherent strengths of both institutions and leverages them to address complex societal challenges. It’s a vision born from witnessing firsthand the frustrating disconnect between academic research and real-world application, and fueled by a deep conviction that universities have a crucial role to play in driving innovation, productivity and economic growth.

    The Current Landscape: A History of Missed Opportunities

    Let’s be honest, the current landscape is often characterized by a degree of mutual skepticism. Universities are perceived as ivory towers, disconnected from the practical needs of businesses. Businesses, in turn, view universities as slow-moving bureaucracies, resistant to change and unwilling to commercialize their research.

    This isn’t entirely unwarranted. The traditional model often prioritizes academic publications over practical impact, incentivizing researchers to publish in high-impact (don’t get me started on those) journals rather than seeking solutions to today’s real-world problems. The intellectual property landscape can be a minefield, with complex licensing agreements and conflicting interests hindering commercialization efforts. And let’s not forget the inherent cultural differences – the academic emphasis on rigorous peer review clashes with the business imperative for rapid iteration and market validation.

    I recall one particularly frustrating experience advising a medtech startup that was struggling to secure funding for a promising new intervention. The university’s technology transfer office, while well-intentioned, was bogged down in lengthy negotiations with potential investors, delaying the project and ultimately jeopardizing its future. It was a stark reminder that good intentions alone aren’t enough; we need streamlined processes, clear incentives, and a shared commitment to driving impact.

    A New Model: Shared Value Creation at the Core, Grounded in Experiential Learning

    My vision for a reimagined university-industry partnership centres on the concept of shared value creation (The central premise of enterprise creation). It’s about moving beyond transactional exchanges and fostering deep, collaborative relationships that benefit both institutions and society as a whole. Crucially, this requires embedding experiential learning at the heart of our approach. Tools like SimVenture, for instance, offer unparalleled opportunities for students to grapple with real-world business challenges in a safe and engaging environment. Imagine undergraduate teams developing strategic plans for simulated companies, making investment decisions, navigating market fluctuations – all while receiving mentorship from industry professionals. This isn’s just theoretical learning; it’s applied knowledge, forged in the crucible of simulated experience.

    Key Pillars of a Collaborative Future:

    Here are some concrete steps we can take to build this collaborative future:

    1. Embedded Industry Fellows: Imagine a programme where experienced industry professionals are embedded at the same level, within university departments, working alongside faculty and students on real-world projects. These fellows would bring valuable insights into market needs, provide mentorship to aspiring entrepreneurs, and help bridge the gap between academic research and commercial application.
    2. Challenge-Driven Research: Instead of pursuing research topics in isolation, universities should actively solicit challenges from businesses and policymakers. This would ensure that our research is aligned with real-world needs, increasing its relevance and impact.
    3. Flexible Intellectual Property Frameworks: We need to move away from rigid, one-size-fits-all intellectual property frameworks and embrace more flexible models that encourage collaboration and innovation.
    4. Cross-Disciplinary Innovation Hubs: Universities should establish cross-disciplinary innovation hubs that bring together faculty, students, and industry partners from diverse fields to tackle complex challenges.
    5. Data-Driven Impact Assessment: We need to develop robust data-driven impact assessment frameworks that measure the real-world benefits of our research.
    6. Robust Subcontractual Oversight: Recognizing that complex projects often involve subcontracting, universities must implement rigorous oversight mechanisms. As detailed in my work on this topic, clear contractual provisions, independent audits, and transparent reporting are essential to ensure accountability, mitigate risks, and safeguard the integrity of collaborative ventures. This includes establishing clear lines of responsibility for performance, quality control, and ethical conduct across all tiers of the project.

    The Role of Policy: Incentivizing Collaboration

    Government policy also has a crucial role to play in incentivizing collaboration between universities and businesses. This could involve providing tax breaks for companies that invest in university research, creating grant programmes that specifically target collaborative projects, and streamlining regulatory processes to facilitate commercialization.

    I remember advocating for a policy change in my own state that provided tax credits to companies that partnered with universities on research projects. The impact was immediate – we saw a surge in collaborative initiatives, leading to the creation of new businesses and high-paying jobs.

    Embracing Imperfection: A Journey, Not a Destination

    This isn’t about creating a utopian vision of perfect collaboration. It’s about acknowledging that the journey will be fraught with challenges, setbacks, and disagreements. There will be times when we stumble, make mistakes, and question our assumptions. But it’s through these experiences that we learn, adapt, and ultimately build a more effective partnership.

    As I reflect on my own experiences, I’m filled with a sense of optimism and hope. I believe that universities have a vital role to play in driving innovation, creating jobs, and addressing some of the world’s most pressing challenges. And I believe that by reimagining our partnerships with businesses, incorporating experiential learning tools like SimVentures and implementing robust subcontractual oversight, we can unlock a new era of shared value creation and lasting impact.

  • Bridging Academia and Consulting: My Journey in Entrepreneurial Impact

    Bridging Academia and Consulting: My Journey in Entrepreneurial Impact

    Introduction: The Dual Lens of Academia and Consulting

    As I sit at my desk in Worcester, England, surrounded by decades-old books on entrepreneurship and a whiteboard filled with frameworks for scaling startups, I can’t help but reflect on how my career has unfolded. Over the past 25 years, I’ve oscillated between academia and consulting—roles that at first glance might seem incompatible but, in reality, are deeply intertwined. My work spans university leadership, board governance, and advising governments on entrepreneurial ecosystems, all while publishing research that informs both sectors.

    This post is a candid exploration of my journey: how I built credibility as an academic while cultivating expertise as a consultant, and the lessons I’ve learned along the way. It’s also a guide to those navigating similar paths, blending scholarly rigor with the actionable insights that consultants thrive on.


    The Academic Foundation: Teaching, Research, and “Failing Forward”

    My academic roots began in engineering, a discipline that taught me to value precision and systems thinking—a mindset I’ve carried into entrepreneurship. In 2015, as Senior Lecturer and Course Leader for Entrepreneurship at the University of Worcester, I designed a BA in Entrepreneurship that combined theory with practice. (A paper reviewing this course is here) Students weren’t just learning about business models; they were building them, often in collaboration with local businesses.

    One pivotal moment came when I tried to integrate rural entrepreneurship into the curriculum at the Royal Agricultural University (RAU). I envisioned a programme where students could apply innovation to agricultural challenges, like sustainable food systems. But early attempts faltered—the disconnect between theoretical concepts and the practical needs of rural communities left me frustrated. I realized success required more than just syllabus design; it demanded partnerships with entreprenurial ecosystem: farmers, policymakers, and local startups.

    Tip #1: Build bridges between academia and industry early. My learning at the RAU led to a revised approach: co-creating curricula with stakeholders.


    The Consultant’s Edge: From Theory to Tangible Impact

    Consulting forced me to abandon the comfort of academic abstraction. When I became Director of Employability and Entrepreneurship at GBS in 2022, I faced a stark reality: over 15,000 students—many from disadvantaged backgrounds—needed support moving beyond academia into meaningful careers.

    The challenge was twofold: scaling services without diluting quality and addressing systemic barriers like poor English proficiency. My solution? A “staged competency approach,” rooted in my research, which tailored support to students’ readiness. We embedded employability into classroom curricula, paired struggling learners with language tutors, and built employer networks. The numbers? 2,639 new roles secured by students in one year—proof that frameworks matter when paired with execution.

    Tip #2: Turn research into action. My 9 Stages of Entrepreneurial Lifecycle model wasn’t born in a vacuum; it emerged from years watching startups succeed or fail. When consulting, use your research as a lens—but adapt it to the client’s reality.


    The Tension of Dual Roles: When Worlds Collide

    Balancing academia and consulting isn’t without friction. At Albion Business School, where I serve as a Board Trustee, I championed globalizing entrepreneurship education. Yet negotiating institutional bureaucracy to adopt innovative programmes tested my patience. Similarly, advising startups in mobile gaming (via dojit, a past venture) taught me that the academic rigor of “agile methodologies” must flex to suit corporate timelines.

    Emotional Insight: There were nights when I questioned whether my dual path was sustainable. My breakthrough? Embracing the dichotomy: academia lets me explore why entrepreneurship works; consulting forces me to answer how.


    Emerging Frontiers: Opportunities in EdTech, Policy, and Rural Innovation

    The future of entrepreneurial education is digital. While my work on open educational resources with Beijing Foreign Studies University showed promise, I’ve realized scalability requires more than just free content. Hybrid formats—like virtual incubators for African startups—could democratize access, especially in regions where universities are underfunded.

    As a Fellow of The Centre for Entrepreneurs, I’ve advised governments on startup programmes and rural innovation hubs. My takeaway? Policy should incentivize ecosystems, not just businesses—for example, tax breaks for universities collaborating with local SMEs.

    Tip #3: Advocate for systems change, not just individual success. My recent work in South Sudan reflects this philosophy: educating women isn’t about creating lone entrepreneurs but fostering an ecosystem where they can thrive.


    Practical Takeaways for Aspiring Academic/Consultants

    1. Leverage interdisciplinary expertise: My engineering background informs tech ventures, while my research on rural entrepreneurship shapes policy. Never dismiss a skill as irrelevant.
    2. Embrace “messy” collaboration: My EdTech projects with China and India succeeded because we allowed cultural nuances to shape outcomes—not the other way around.
    3. Measure what matters: When I assessed the impact of student startups, I shifted focus from mere business counts to metrics like job creation and community investment.

    Conclusion: The Power of Dual Vision

    Bridging academia and consulting isn’t just a career choice—it’s a lens. By wearing both hats, I’ve crafted frameworks that endure (my 9 Stages) and programmes that scale (at GBS). For newcomers, I urge you to resist silos: publish research and pitch it to boards; teach courses that align with industry trends.

    As I look toward the next chapter, I’m focused on expanding free education models in Africa and refining my digital toolkits. Will it be easy? No. But then again, neither was convincing a roomful of farmers in Cirencester that gaming startups could revolutionize agriculture.


    Final Thought: Your expertise has value in both ivory towers and boardrooms—use it to build bridges, not barriers.

  • Unlocking Growth: The 9 Stages of the Entrepreneurial Lifecycle

    Unlocking Growth: The 9 Stages of the Entrepreneurial Lifecycle

    How a structured approach to entrepreneurship can drive national economic development


    Entrepreneurship is often romanticized as a chaotic, unpredictable journey—but the truth is, behind every successful business lies a lifecycle. Just as humans grow through distinct stages, so do entrepreneurial ventures.

    Over the past few years—through my work in academia, consultancy, and government advising—I’ve found that helping people understand where they are in the entrepreneurial journey can make the difference between failure and flourishing.

    That’s why I developed a practical framework called the 9 Stages of the Entrepreneurial Lifecycle. This model doesn’t just help entrepreneurs navigate their own paths—it also provides governments, educators, and economic developers with a blueprint for building an entrepreneurial nation.

    Let’s take a closer look.


    The 9 Stages of the Entrepreneurial Lifecycle

    Each stage reflects a different phase in a business’s evolution—from the first spark of an idea to a successful exit. Here’s how it breaks down:

    1. DiscoverySpotting the Opportunity

    This is where it all begins. Entrepreneurs identify problems, needs, or gaps in the market.
    🧠 Connected blogs:

    Why Every Entrepreneur Needs to Master the Art of Opportunity Recognition

    9 Stages of Enterprise Creation: Stage 1 – Discovery

    2. ModelingDesigning the Business Blueprint

    Once the opportunity is clear, the focus shifts to business models, customer segments, value propositions, and revenue streams.

    🧠 Connected blogs:

    9 Stages of Enterprise Creation: Stage 2 – Modeling

    The Business Plan – Deep Dive into Financial Planning

    Developing a business process diagram for your startup

    3. StartupFrom Idea to Action

    The venture becomes real—founders mobilize resources, form teams, build MVPs, and launch early versions of their product or service.

    🧠 Connected blogs:

    9 Stages of Enterprise Creation: Stage 3 – Startup

    Revolutionizing Startups: Harnessing AI for Efficiency and Growth Without Relying on Cheap Labour

    4. ExistenceValidating the Market Fit

    The business acquires early customers and proves the value proposition. It’s about proving the concept works in the real world.

    🧠 Connected blogs:

    9 Stages of Enterprise Creation: Stage 4 – Existence

    Its Sunday Afternoon, what should I do?

    5. SurvivalAchieving Sustainability

    This is where many ventures struggle. They need enough cash flow to cover costs, scale operations, and survive the lean times.

    🧠 Connected blogs:

    9 Stages of Enterprise Creation: Stage 5 – Survival

    The Importance of Mental Health for Entrepreneurs

    6. SuccessGrowing and Expanding

    Now it’s about taking off. Businesses in this stage often seek funding, expand their teams, enter new markets, or optimize their operations.

    🧠 Connected blogs:

    9 Stages of Enterprise Creation: Stage 6 – Success

    The Role of Mentorship in Entrepreneurial Success

    Understanding Locus of Control: A Key to Entrepreneurial Success

    7. AdaptationResponding to Change

    Markets shift. Competitors appear. New technologies disrupt. Adaptable businesses innovate and pivot to stay relevant.

    🧠 Connected blogs:

    9 Stages of Enterprise Creation: Stage 7 – Adaptation

    Building an Inclusive Culture from the Ground Up: A Guide for Leaders and Founders

    8. IndependenceOwning the Market

    These businesses are now robust, profitable, and self-sustaining. They often become leaders in their space.

    🧠 Connected blogs:

    9 Stages of Enterprise Creation: Stage 8 – Independence

    Remember your motive for starting a business

    9. ExitPassing the Torch

    Founders may sell the company, go public, or transition to a new leadership team. This frees capital and energy for the next idea.

    🧠 Connected blogs:

    9 Stages of Enterprise Creation: Stage 9 – Exit

    Do you know your Exit Strategy?


    Why This Model Matters for National Economic Development

    Too often, economic development policy focuses narrowly on startup support—but this ignores the reality that entrepreneurial needs evolve.

    By using the 9-stage model, governments and support organizations can:

    ✅ Design targeted interventions (e.g., ideation grants vs. scale-up finance)
    ✅ Measure success more accurately across each stage
    ✅ Create stage-specific training, mentoring, and funding tools
    ✅ Avoid one-size-fits-all policies that fail to meet real needs
    ✅ Support entrepreneurial ecosystems that are holistic, not fragmented

    Just imagine the power of national strategies that don’t just encourage people to start businesses—but help them grow, adapt, succeed, and exit effectively.


    Embedding the Lifecycle in Education and Practice

    At Albion Business School and through our entrepreneurship programmes, we’re embedding this lifecycle into student learning—from foundation year to graduate-level projects. We also encourage schools to introduce the concept at an earlier age.

    🧠 Connected blog: Building Entrepreneurial Mindsets in Teenagers: Lessons from Education and Practice

    When young people understand the journey of entrepreneurship, they stop expecting overnight success—and start building step by step.


    Final Thoughts: A Pathway to Prosperity

    We live in an age where economic transformation is urgently needed—whether due to climate challenges, digital disruption, or population shifts.

    Entrepreneurship, when supported well, has the power to revitalise economies, create meaningful jobs, and build national resilience.

    The 9 Stages of the Entrepreneurial Lifecycle provides more than just a roadmap for individuals—it offers a strategic tool for countries and communities to design better support, smarter policies, and more successful ventures.

    Let’s stop guessing what entrepreneurs need—and start guiding them with clarity and purpose.