📺 Stream EntrepreneurTV for Free 📺

Why Entrepreneurs Should Go Back to School The classroom can provide many benefits to entrepreneurs, even those with established businesses.

By Lisa Evans

entrepreneur daily

Opinions expressed by Entrepreneur contributors are their own.

Kids aren't the only ones who went back to school this month. Entrepreneurs, too, are heading back to the classroom and are reaping many benefits from breaking out their pencils and notebooks. Kyle Jensen, director of entrepreneurship programs at the Yale School of Management, says he's seen many entrepreneurs return to school after starting a business in order to gain the formal education they may have been missing. Even the most experienced entrepreneurs can benefit from classroom learning.

Create a well-rounded entrepreneur.

Returning to school, Jensen says, can not only contribute to entrepreneurs' understanding of their particular business, but also to the craft of entrepreneurship. "They come back to school with all the dots and our job is to connect those dots with theory," he says. The entrepreneur leaves the classroom with a better ability to generalize past their own experience and they gain valuable insights they can then use to grow their business and boost their potential.

Mike Campbell, CEO of Iron Lot, a heavy-equipment sales and export company, decided to go back to school last fall, seven years after starting the company, to obtain his bachelor's degree in entrepreneurship from Liberty Online University. "Formal education is a tremendous resource for an entrepreneur," he says. "Not only does it increase one's practical knowledge, it sharpens and inspires ideas."

Provide practical knowledge.

Pursuing a degree in entrepreneurship has helped Campbell to improve his understanding of business, the accounting process, inventory management, pricing and international trade agreements. Economics classes have broadened his understanding of global economies and gave him a better foundation for understanding pricing and competition which enabled him to make pricing changes that have led to higher profit.

"The business changes I have made as a result of this education have greatly improved my profitability," he says. The added profit to his business, he says, will far exceed the financial cost of his education.

Related: How Entrepreneurs Can Balance School and Business

Improve skills.

School can also help entrepreneurs enhance their skills, providing added benefit to the business. School writing projects helped improve Campbell's communication skills, enabling him to communicate better to customers and restore relationships.

Learn from peers.

School provides a new pool of resources for entrepreneurs. Classmates and instructors can provide guidance and new insights that entrepreneurs would be hard pressed to find elsewhere.

An opportunity to re-build.

For Campbell, going back to school was an important part of the process of rebuilding his company. His company struggled after the recession and it was made clear that some changes would be necessary for Campbell to pull through.

Related: 12 Sites That Will Teach You Coding for Free

Lisa Evans is a health and lifestyle freelance journalist from Toronto.

Want to be an Entrepreneur Leadership Network contributor? Apply now to join.

Editor's Pick

Leadership

How to Turn Workplace Conflict into a Strategic Advantage

Conflict is present in all organizations and takes numerous forms. Here's how organizations can harness conflict to create better outcomes and healthy conflict management cultures.

Marketing

We Are in an AI Arms Race. Here's How We Can Beat AI Bots and Fraud.

An explanation of how fraudsters use AI to game digital advertising platforms — and how constant AI innovation is key to combating them.

Business News

Google Lays Off Hundreds of 'Core' Employees, Relocates Others Overseas

The layoffs were announced days before Google's parent company, Alphabet, announced its Q1 2024 earnings.

Business News

McDonald's CFO Says 'Everybody's Fighting for Fewer Consumers' as Earnings Reports Show People Are Spending Less on Fast Food

Starbucks, Pizza Hut, KFC, and McDonald's all reported lower-than-expected sales this week.

Growing a Business

10 Founders On the 'Aha' Moments That Unlocked Massive Growth: 'It Felt Like a Secret Hidden In Plain Sight'

New companies rarely get off the ground without some roadblocks, setbacks, and unforeseen decisions. Here, 10 founders describe the pivots that catapulted their profitability.