Lancaster University ‘going global’ to enhance student education around the world

Lancaster University Management School’s (LUMS) Entrepreneurs in Residence (EiR) network is going global in a bid to further improve student education and stimulate more cutting-edge research across the world.
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In a new initiative, LUMS will partner with business schools across the world to share entrepreneurial connections in order to create a giant pool of business experts who are on hand to help business students and bring classroom learning to life.

The move is the next step in LUMS’ hugely successful EiR network, which comprises of entrepreneurs who are embedded in all activities within the Management School from mentoring students and contributing to lectures and seminars, to sitting on LUMS’ Advisory Board with senior leaders to agree strategy and direction for the faculty.

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Over the last 17 years it has grown from a single entrepreneur to a network that boasts more than 90 members from a variety of backgrounds and cultures, operating in different sectors and markets right across the world. Its youngest member is a 21-year-old businesswoman from Malaysia, who owns a manufacturing business employing 40 people.

Lancaster University Management School.Lancaster University Management School.
Lancaster University Management School.

Brian Gregory, senior teaching fellow at LUMS and director of the EiR network, said: “Our EiRs are incredible, influential people who are working on the front line of business, facing the real-world challenges our students are learning about in their lecture theatres.

“To make their education and experience even more relevant, we bring lessons to life by connecting entrepreneurs with students in the classroom wherever possible. So, if we are delivering a lecture about the coffee industry and the challenges it faces, for example, we can give students the chance to speak directly to a coffee grower in Columbia, to open their eyes to direct experiences and challenges.

“By widening our EiR network to include other universities and their own business connections, we widen our pool of global experts. This will be of huge mutual benefit to both students and entrepreneurs. Students will be able to have direct access to specific businesspeople in specific markets, while entrepreneurs also get access to a wider, stronger network and the opportunity to connect with different regions, gain a deeper understanding of new markets and have the chance to identify future talent.”

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It was announced that Lancaster University Management School will lead the new ‘knowledge exchange’ programme with a network of business schools from across the world at the annual EiR conference, held in Lancaster this week.

The crowd of more than 80 business leaders from across the UK heard that LUMS already had interest and connections made with universities across Asia, Europe and the US as well as the UK.

This week’s event was the second Entrepreneurs in Residence annual conference, designed to celebrate and strengthen LUMS’ unique EiR network. It brought business leaders and leading academics together for lively discussions on pressing issues, and featured talks on topics such as sustainability and future food security, succession planning in family businesses and stewardship.

The event was opened by Prof Claire Leitch, Executive Dean of Lancaster University Management School, and Lancaster MP Cat Smith also addressed the audience.

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Lancaster University has recently been shortlisted for ‘Business School of the Year’ in the Times Higher Education Awards, based upon its unique Entrepreneurs in Residence programme.