
updated: 8/24/2005 2:37:10 PM
Purdue University says it will offer $100,000 in prize money for the 19th annual Burton D. Morgan Entrepreneurial Competition on February 16.

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The university says this Fall it will offer six workshops to help prepare teams to write business plans to qualify for the competition.
Source: Inside INdiana Business
Press Release
WEST LAFAYETTE, Ind. - Purdue University students and faculty have the
opportunity to learn what it takes to be an entrepreneur and compete
for $100,000 in total prize money on Feb. 16 in the 19th annual Burton
D. Morgan Entrepreneurial Competition.
Those who have an idea or a technology for a business or an interest in
running their own enterprise should come to the informational call-out
sessions at 6:30 p.m. on Wednesday and Thursday (Aug. 31 and Sept. 1)
in the Krannert Auditorium or register for the competition online by
Sept. 12. Registration information and the complete competition
calendar are available at
http://fred.e-enterprise.purdue.edu/wps/portal/_s.155/7069.
Finalists will compete in two divisions - open and undergraduate. The
open division teams can include faculty, staff, graduate students and
outsiders, such as alumni or area business people (outside participants
can make up a maximum of 20 percent of the team). Undergraduate teams
are made up wholly of Purdue undergraduates, although these teams may
have a faculty adviser. In both divisions, students must make the Feb.
16 presentations.
The 10 finalists will give 10-minute business plan presentations and
then field 10 minutes of questions from a panel of professors and
venture capitalist judges.
Prizes in the open division are $30,000 for first place, $15,000 for
second place, $10,000 for third place, $5,000 for fourth place and
$2,000 for fifth place. In the undergraduate division, prizes are
$15,000 for first place, $10,000 for second place, $8,000 for third
place, $3,000 for fourth place and $2,000 for fifth place.
In addition to the cash prizes, Ice Miller, the Indianapolis-based
legal and business advising firm, is providing legal and business
services for the top three finishers in the open division worth $5,000
for first, $3,000 for second and $2,000 for third. The Purdue Research
Park is providing free office space for one year to the open division
winner.
Don Blewett, associate director of the Burton D. Morgan Center for
Entrepreneurship, said entrepreneurship is not mysterious, unique or
brand-new.
"You can get most ideas to fly," he said. "It's just a question of how
high. It's lemonade stands and the thought processes you go through in
a startup.
"You can define entrepreneurism as the aggressive and creative
application of standard business principles and making decisions
quickly for the right reasons. It's saying what you're going to do and
doing what you say. We can provide the tools to make your idea fly."
This fall the Burton D. Morgan Center for Entrepreneurship will offer
six workshops to prepare teams to write business plans to qualify for
the competition finals. Blewett said the three-hour workshops will
cover all the functional areas of an MBA - finance, marketing, human
resources, accounting, operations and management communication - and
how all the areas interact. The first workshop takes place on Sept. 28.
"Win, lose or draw, this is solid, basic business education that will
make you more employable," Blewett said. "And having won real dollars
in a business plan competition is a resume item that will separate you
from other graduating job seekers because established companies seek
entrepreneurial employees.
"Longer term, the competition will prepare its entrants to enter the
entrepreneurial arena at any point in their future careers."
For further information, call Blewett at (765) 494-4485,
blewett@purdue.edu.
Source: Purdue University