- Ole Miss School of Business
- Innovate.ms
- Mississippi Angel Network
- Miss. Small Business Development Center
- Transactional Law Clinic
- UM Foundation
- Insight Park
- Division of Technology Management
- Haley Barbour Center for Mfg. Excellence
- Mississippi Development Authority
- Mississippi Small Business Development Center
- Oxford-Lafayette County Chamber of Commerce
- North Mississippi Enterprise Initiative (NMEI)
Ole Miss’s First Women & Entrepreneurship Week
Please read the below press release to learn more about our first Women & Entrepreneurship Week.
Women in Entrepreneurship Week Kicks Off Nov. 14
The Ole Miss Career Center, School of Engineering, and the CIE partner for a special week of events
OXFORD, Miss.–A new week-long event is being hosted by the Career Center and Center for Innovation and Entrepreneurship (CIE) aiming to promote women working in entrepreneurship at the University of Mississippi starting on Nov. 14.
Each event aims to coach students in professional development areas that impact women students with entrepreneurial aspirations.
Cobie Watkins, director of student and alumni programs at the CIE, says her department has wanted to host an event for almost two years to demonstrate to women that entrepreneurship is a vibrant pathway to a career.
“Historically men have possessed a greater hold on the entrepreneurial market but that’s changing now,” Watkins said. “We want women to see they can be just as successful in this field as men.”
More women are imagining themselves as business owners and entrepreneurs- almost 42 percent in 2015, up from 36 percent in 2012- and those numbers are continuing to grow according to Watkins.
Richard J. Gentry, associate professor of entrepreneurship and strategy director, said that the CIE’s goal is to have students think about starting their own businesses and broadening their opportunities to become more innovative.
“The job market today is much less stable than it was a generation ago,” Gentry said. “A primary mission of a college is to help students appreciate the range of employment opportunities for both small and large businesses.
“WE Week is a central part of that and we’re so happy to be partnering with our friends across campus to present it.”
There are four events throughout the week that will each entail a different aspect of business.
The first event is on Tuesday, Nov. 14 at 12 p.m. at the Overby auditorium and includes regional experts educating attendees on how to best market themselves in their careers.
On Wednesday, Nov. 15 at 2 p.m. there will be a panel for personal branding and small business owners will be present for the discussion.
“We believe entrepreneurship and entrepreneurial careers are going to continue to shape the economy of Mississippi and the region,” Watkins said. The speakers and panelists at these events will be a wonderful example for our attendees.”
Thursday’s event (Nov. 17) will include Sierra Madre Research, a Mississippi-based startup from Calhoun City, Miss, and a couple that scored a deal with Richard Branson, an entrepreneur and cast member on the television show “Shark Tank.”
The final day, Friday, November 18, will feature Brittany Wagner from Netflix’s “Last Chance U,” where Wagner will discuss her success story.
Thursday and Friday’s events will both be in the Overby Auditorium at noon.
“I feel like these topics will offer good information to so many students who are interested in these areas for their careers,” said Casey Cockrell, Assistant Director of Employer Services at the UM’s Career Center. “There is something for everyone all week.”
Each event will include door prizes such as two free nights at the Inn at Ole Miss along with manicure gift cards, jewelry and an assortment of other winnings.
Watkins said a committee of six women ages 19 and up developed these events with the goal for the attendee to think about the challenges they face as women in their careers. The goal was to host events that would help others take a leap in creating a desirable future for themselves.
“We took those ideas, and narrowed down the list, to showcase subject areas and speakers that would represent a multitude of viewpoints of women in their careers and women as entrepreneurs,” Watkins said.
“The world of work is constantly changing and trends develop,” Cockrell said.
“Right now is a good time to learn about entrepreneurship as it might be the best and most rewarding career path for a student.”
By Haley Myatt
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