Degree: Bachelor of Business Administration
Major: General Business
Concentration: Entrepreneurship
Hours: 120

On-campus or online, the 91×ÔÅÄÂÛ̳ Bachelor of Business Administration in General Business with a concentration in entrepreneurship prepares you to one day start and run your own business or businesses. This major suits the goal-oriented dreamer, the creative mastermind, the idea maker.
If you are self-confident, enjoy a flexible professional schedule, aren’t afraid to take a calculated risk and are good at managing your money, you possess the vital qualities of an entrepreneur. In addition to preparing you to create your own business, this degree allows for a solid foundation in business topics, a foundation that leads to a variety of possible careers. Majors in entrepreneurship often become business owners, store managers, CEOs and sales consultants and experts.
Cost Accounting: Cost accounting with a managerial emphasis: Job order and process cost; standard cost and variance analysis; budgetary control; relevant costing for decision making; capital budgeting.
Economics of Entrepreneurship: Comprehensive analysis and practice exercises in entrepreneurship. Studies include demand analysis; pragmatic economic feasibility studies; identification and use of resources; function and use of profits.
Intermediate Financial Management: Analytical techniques used in financial decision making, including ratio analysis, funds analysis, capital structure, dividend policy, financial forecasting, and valuation models.
Human Resource Management: A behavioral approach to the management of the human resource in business enterprise. The fundamentals of human relations and organizational behavior will be used to structure an understanding of the managerial problems of recruitment, selection, training, promotion and termination of personnel. Supervision of the work force will be considered as an examination of theories of motivation, communication and leadership.
Entrepreneurial Market Opportunities: This course focuses on recognizing opportunities in the marketplace, analyzing industry/market trends, size, growth opportunities, niches and capitalizing on opportunities through new business creation.
You're graduating with a degree in entrepreneurship, so get out there and build the business you've always imagined. Or, if you aren't quite ready to start your own company, you needn't worry. Your degree has equipped you for a variety of careers in business. You've taken courses that cover creativity, innovation, ethics, marketing, finance and a wide variety of other topics. Focus on those skills and concepts and see where you can use them.
Management, sales, consulting