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Innovation & Entrepreneurship in IT (ISYS90039)
Graduate courseworkPoints: 12.5On Campus (Parkville)
About this subject
Contact information
Semester 2
Dr. Sean Maynard
email: sean.maynard@unimelb.edu.au
Overview
| Availability | Semester 2 - On Campus |
|---|---|
| Fees | Look up fees |
AIMS
This subject asks the question ‘what makes a successful entrepreneur?’ It’s a complex topic and the subject of heated debate in the business, education and the economics communities, and also in discussions of international development, sustainability and social philanthropy. The way we will approach this subject is by looking at the behaviours, attitudes, values and skills that entrepreneurs need to create the climate for successful innovation - whether they are entrepreneurs starting new ventures or ‘Entrepreneurs’ in large organisations. What you will discover in this subject is that innovation isn’t just about having great ideas, and that entrepreneurs aren’t who you think they are. The subject will do this by looking at topics such as how innovation works and how it can be managed, different modes of entrepreneurialism, how entrepreneurs think and how to create, build and sustain an entrepreneurial business.
INDICATIVE CONTENT
The subject comprises 5 themes:
- ’Making New Things’, a survey of current thinking about innovation and entrepreneurship
- ’The Customers’ Point of View’, looking at techniques for understanding customers and consumer-led innovation
- ’Everything is Negotiable’, including work done at the Harvard negotiation project on win/win negotiation and emotional negotiation
- ’Everyone Needs Help’, exploring the ways entrepreneurs create support networks to help them be successful innovation and mentoring
- ’Inspire People’ - an examination of the importance of vision and commitment in innovation and entrepreneurship.
The subject involves advanced learning activities including case-based, experiential, and team-based approaches.
Intended learning outcomes
Apply skills in critical thinking and systems analysis to identify, evaluate, and communicate strategic and operational opportunities related to the application of entrepreneurship and innovation in real-world settings
Generic skills
On completion of this subject, students should have developed the following generic skills:
- Report writing
- Oral communication
- Independent learning
- Public presentations
- Teamwork
Last updated: 2 November 2025