- Conference Session
- Entrepreneurship & Engineering Innovation Division Technical Session 5
- Collection
- 2018 ASEE Annual Conference & Exposition
- Authors
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Karl D. Schubert, University of Arkansas; Leslie Bartsch Massey, University of Arkansas; Clint E Johnson, University of Arkansas
- Tagged Divisions
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Entrepreneurship & Engineering Innovation
Engineering and MS in Environmental Engineering from the University of Arkansas. She previously served as a project manager at a water resources center, but returned to the University of Arkansas to teach general introduction to engineering and to coordinate the Freshman Honors Innovation Experience.Mr. Clint E Johnson, University of Arkansas Clint Johnson is the Director of the Supply Chain Management Research Center and the Director of the McMillon Innovation Studio as well as an instructor at the University of Arkansas. Clint’s back ground focuses mainly on developing strategies for innovating and implementing large scale retail focused initiatives, specifically as it relates to the blending of the online and brick and
- Conference Session
- Entrepreneurship & Engineering Innovation Division Technical Session 4
- Collection
- 2018 ASEE Annual Conference & Exposition
- Authors
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Kathryn Weed Jablokow, Pennsylvania State University; Neeraj Sonalkar, Stanford University; Ilya Avdeev, University of Wisconsin, Milwaukee; Brian D. Thompson, University of Wisconsin, Milwaukee; Mohamed M. Megahed, Pennsylvania State University; Pratik Subhash Pachpute, Pennsylvania State University,Great Valley
- Tagged Divisions
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Entrepreneurship & Engineering Innovation
on thephase of the innovation process under consideration. For example, if we are studying anentrepreneurial team engaged in concept generation, then the same metrics can be used as with adesign team engaged in the same phase of the process; if the entrepreneurial team is focused onbusiness model development, however, then the outcome metrics will need to be chosenaccordingly. One aim of this study is to gather evidence to support this claim, so we can expandour investigation of I-Corps™ teams to a large scale effort.3.0 Research Methods3.1 Research Context and Research AimsThe primary objective of the NSF I-Corps™ program is to help university-based researchersdiscover markets for their technologies and determine whether they are ready to