Featured Job: IT Recruiter for Inventcorp, Hyderabad
News »Browse Articles » Entrepreneurship emerges as a career choice on campuses
0
Vote Vote

Entrepreneurship emerges as a career choice on campuses

Views 0 Views    Comments 0 Comments    Share Share    Posted 28-10-2009  

Right Choice at Right Times

There is more interest shown by students towards entrepreneurship with incubation centers across campuses fostering the young entrepreneurs. His batchmates will be busy wooing and being wooed by recruiters this placement season, but 26-year-old Mainak Chakraborty, who will graduate in 2010 from the Indian Institute of Management, Bangalore (IIM-B), has chosen to sit out the season. Chakraborty wants to start a company that will set up recharge centres for electric vehicles. And he is hoping to incubate the company at the institute`s NS Raghavan Centre for Entrepreneurial Learning (NSRCEL), reports Livemint.

From start-up outfit Kollabia, an online platform for music composers, launched by a group of second-year students at the International Institute of Information Technology, Bangalore (IIIT-B), to an algorithmic trading platform incubated at the iAccelerator programme at Indian Institute of Management, Ahmedabad (IIM-A), to Just Books Clc, an online book-lending company incubated at NSRCEL, the idea of entrepreneurship as a regular career choice is fast gaining ground at campuses countrywide. Chakraborty, for instance, is starting his company in association with two first-year management students.

"Having an incubator on campus definitely provides a fillip to students with entrepreneurial ideas," says S. Rajagopalan, professor, IIIT-B. "On an average, about 25 students from our graduating batch of 126 have chosen entrepreneurship as a career."

Tier-II institutes are following suit, but it`s early days yet. From a graduating batch of 200 MBA students from MATS Institute of Management and Entrepreneurship, Bangalore, typically about five-six students turn entrepreneurs. "We would be happy to incubate 100 students, but we find that there are not enough proposals coming in from students, most of whom prefer to join brand name companies in the early part of their careers," says G. Lakshman, professor, marketing, at the institute.

Earlier this year, IIIT-B registered its on-campus incubation facility as a not-for-profit company, now called the IIIT-B Innovation Centre. It will provide monetary help in the form of grants and seed capital to start-ups, that in some cases are incubated for as long as three years.

"Also, IIIT-B and IIM-A will jointly collaborate to run the iAccelerator programme, where winning ideas in the wireless and Internet space are provided a small seed capital of Rs. 5 lakh and are mentored for four months on campus," says Rajagopalan, adding that the first batch of start-ups to be incubated at IIIT-B will commence in December.

Similarly, the on-campus incubation facility at MATS Institute of Management and Entrepreneurship has provided support to 20 start-ups till date. These have been in areas of financial services, hospitality, manufacturing, education services, among others.

Gaurav Jain, a second-year management student at the institute, is taking the help of his college faculty and seniors to set up an aluminium foil manufacturing facility in Bangalore. "As part of the incubation process, I am getting a lot of inputs on the financial feasibility plan for the project," he says.
Apart from influencing students to choose entrepreneurship as a career, these campus incubators are also filling a vital gap in the start-up ecosystem. "There are not many people or institutions who provide angel funding for start-up ideas of less than Rs. 1 crore," says Deepan Chakravarthy, co-founder of HashCube Technologies, a start-up that creates games for social networking platforms; it was incubated this year in the iAccelerator programme at IIM-A.

It?s not just students who are reaping the benefits of on-campus incubators; most college incubators also encourage outsiders to seek on-campus support, as in the case of Chakravarthy who graduated in 2006 from Anna University, Tamil Nadu, and chalked up a couple of years` work experience before pitching his idea for the on-campus incubation programme.

Source:
http://www.siliconindia.com/shownews/Entrepreneurship_emerges_as_a_career_choice
0
Vote  Vote
Enter your comment:
No Comments For This News

Search News

What's the News?

Post a link to something interesting from another site, or submit your own original writing for the Recruitment community to read.

Most Popular News

Most Recent User Submitted News