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BSc Business Management with Entrepreneurship
About this course
Business management with entrepreneurship combines the analytical rigour of studying how organisations are built and run with a focus on the particular challenges and opportunities of creating and growing new ventures. Where management courses examine established organisations, the entrepreneurship specialism pushes you to think about uncertainty, opportunity recognition, resource constraints, and the process of turning an idea into something that can sustain itself and scale. The combination is well suited to students who want to understand business in depth while maintaining a bias toward innovation and initiative. At the University of Brighton, this three-year full-time programme includes a placement year and a work placement, giving the degree a substantial practical dimension. The placement allows you to work inside a real organisation, whether an established company, a start-up, or a social enterprise, and to apply your developing understanding to genuine business problems. Brighton's location and culture make it a fertile environment for entrepreneurial thinking, and the university's connections with the local and regional business community add texture to the academic curriculum. Throughout the programme you will study the core disciplines of management, including strategy, finance, marketing, operations, and organisational behaviour, alongside courses focused specifically on entrepreneurship, innovation, new venture creation, and the management of growth. You will develop skills in business planning, financial modelling, market analysis, and pitching ideas to audiences who will challenge your assumptions. The degree trains you to think both analytically and creatively, and to translate that thinking into practical plans. Graduates are well placed to start their own ventures, to join early-stage companies, or to take on roles in larger organisations where innovation and entrepreneurial thinking are valued. Business development, product management, marketing, and consultancy are common career paths. The placement year gives you professional experience and industry contacts that strengthen your position in graduate recruitment significantly. Many graduates also go on to masters study in entrepreneurship, management, or specialist areas such as innovation management or social enterprise, and some pursue MBA programmes after a period of professional experience.
Syllabus & Modules
Typical curriculumStudent Satisfaction
National Student Survey - 130 respondents (64% response rate)
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