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July 19, 2010

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Bcroke.wordpress.com

Hi Drew, thanks for sharing the AACSB report on innovation in business schools.

As a recent graduate of a "good" business school, I couldn't be a bigger advocate for innovation in business schools and higher education in general. It is desperately needed.

Is it ignorant for me to think I learned more from reading authors like Steven Covey, Seth Godin, and "countless bloggers" than I did in most of my classes? (don't get me started with the marketing textbooks)

I think schools are capable of so much more. I was really fortunate to be involved in some amazing programs, but these are the exception to classes, and I just think we all can do so much more.

I think to innovate is to lead and we need more leaders in this country now. Not the "official leaders", but people like you and me.

I'm looking forward to reading more of your blog. I just moved from Cinci to Toledo for a new job. (also an avid guitar player :))

Best
Brandon

Zach Campau

Hi Drew, I took a great course during my MBA titled Innovative New Business Design. The course paired graduate students from Business and from Engineering schools together into teams, and the teams created commercialization plans for new technologies. It's interesting to see the 8 recommendations from the AACSB - I believe the course I took did a great job covering those recommendations. If you're interested, I wrote a bit about it on my blog: http://zachcampau.com/innovation-through-observation

Lisa

Hello Drew,
Great article!
I just finished my MBA, and now I'm looking for a PhD program that focuses on Marketing and Innovation. Do you have any suggestions?
Lisa

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About This Blog

  • For thousands of years, inventors have embedded five simple patterns into their inventions, usually without knowing it. These patterns are the "DNA" of products that can be extracted and applied to any product or service to create new-to-the-world innovations. Drew Boyd shares how to use this effective, repeatable, and trainable innovation process for organic growth.

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