UTS MBA in Entrepreneurship (Discontinued)
The UTS Business School Master of Business Administration in Entrepreneurship (MBAe) was promoted as a 12-month intensive MBA designed for entrepreneurs and innovators.
Program status (important): The MBA in Entrepreneurship is no longer offered. Prospective students looking for a current UTS MBA should refer to the current Master of Business Administration course page for up-to-date structure, intakes, fees and subject information.
- Work on applied, project-based tasks aligned to entrepreneurship and innovation practice.
- Develop a clearer understanding of venture viability, customer needs, and execution risk.
- Progress an idea or initiative through structured coursework, feedback and iteration.
How the MBA in Entrepreneurship Works
The MBA in Entrepreneurship at UTS was described as being constructed as three short courses. Students could build capability in stages while developing their own enterprise ideas.
The MBAe helps you gain the necessary skills, meet the right people and develop your entrepreneurial project. It is for people who have ideas and want to see them through either as a start-up entrepreneur or as a change agent in existing organisations.
Dr Jochen Schweitzer, Program Director, MBA in Entrepreneurship
Why UTS Business School?
At the time this program was promoted, UTS positioned the MBAe around innovation and practice-based learning, with an emphasis on applied work and cohort-based development. Because UTS course structures and specialisations change over time, the current MBA page above is the most reliable reference point for what is offered now.
Agile, adaptive, applied
The MBAe was presented as an option for people who wanted to study without putting their professional life on hold, with subjects designed to support practical application alongside ongoing work and projects.
Position, position, position
The program was associated with UTS’s City campus setting in Ultimo and the surrounding Sydney innovation and creative industries precinct, with proximity to startups, technology and media organisations, and cultural institutions connected via The Goods Line.