About the Kelley Undergraduate Program
Minors and Certificate
Entrepreneurship and Small Business Management
The 21-credit Minor in Entrepreneurship and Small Business Management is intended for non-business majors who have aspirations and goals in business that will require entrepreneurial skills. Such students might plan to open businesses of their own or work for smaller and/or family-owned businesses. As an alternative to the more traditional minor in business, the minor in entrepreneurship and small business management could fulfill such students’ educational needs while allowing them to pursue their career goals more directly.
Requirements for the Minor in Entrepreneurship and Small Business Management are:
- Complete 26 or more credit hours of college work that counts toward graduation and be admitted to an appropriate degree-granting school at IU Bloomington.
- Successfully complete the following courses
- BUS-A 200 or BUS-A 201 or BUS-A 202 (3 cr.)
- BUS-K 201 (3 cr.)1
- BUS-L 201 or BUS-L 311 (3 cr.)
- BUS-W 212 (3 cr.)
- BUS-M 300 (3 cr.)
- BUS-W 300 (3 cr.)
- Successfully complete one of the following elective courses:
- BUS-F 300 (3 cr.)
- BUS-G 300 (3 cr.)
- BUS-P 300 (3 cr.)
- BUS-Z 302 or BUS-J 306 (3 cr.)
1CSCI majors may substitute CSCI-C 211 or CSCI-H 211 for BUS-K 201 if they are pursuing a business minor; however, if they change majors or become business majors, they must take BUS-K 201.
Cross Campus Certificate in Entrepreneurship
The need for many students in other disciplines to understand entrepreneurship is increasing, especially with the dramatic changes taking place in their fields of study. Many students end up in careers where they work for themselves and thus basic business and entrepreneurial principles become invaluable for them.
The Cross Campus Certificate in Entrepreneurship consists of fifteen credit hours. Only students outside of the Kelley School of Business will be admitted into the Certificate in Entrepreneurship program. The program consists of three courses from the Kelley School of Business and two courses chosen by each school. This allows for the students to learn the basic issues involved with entrepreneurship while retaining some flexibility in tailoring the program to the students’ particular area(s) of interest.
Each school will propose specific courses that their students will be required to take in order to receive the Certificate. These courses will be discussed and approved by the Department of Management & Entrepreneurship in consultation with the Johnson Center for Entrepreneurship & Innovation so that each school has developed a list of potential courses related to the specific domain. Students who are also working toward the Minor in Small Business Management and Entrepreneurship will only be able to receive either the minor or the certificate, not both. Students should work with the advisor in the School of Informatics & Computing, Jacobs School of Music, or School of Public and Environmental Affairs to determine the appropriate coursework required for the certificate.