This course is like a mini-MBA (Masters' in Business Administration) and covers much of the same ground as a business school classical post-experience MBA (though not in the same depth). This is one of a triad of related courses all of which are of special interest to those intending to become managers (practically everyone!), or, eventually, owners of their own companies.
Teaching and Learning Methods: Lectures, team exercises, and presentations
Course Policies: On-time class attendance is mandatory; three unapproved absences mean exclusion.
This course consists of three essential elements:
(1) 'Know yourself' - understanding the drivers of your own behavior. This is the basis of any personal development and is critical for developing effective interaction with others whether as a team member, or as a team leader.
(2) 'Working with others' - building on the self-knowledge mentioned above, this core element allows you to explore, understand, and practice ways of working with others that are both more enjoyable and more effective. This is critical given that almost everyone works as part of a team.
(3) 'What's next?' - building on both the above sections, this element helps you take the next steps in your career: setting objectives, selecting target organizations, applying for jobs, and effective interviewing.
Teaching and Learning Methods: Lectures, team exercises, and presentations
Course Policies: On-time class attendance is mandatory; three unapproved absences mean exclusion.
Thanks to this class, you will understand why an innovative project cannot be considered as a regular project.You will learn how to take the market into account at a very early stage in project management, how to link technology and needs and how to lead in a time of uncertainty and complexity. You will be trained to build a solid and convincing launching strategy as a team on specific cases that you choose. Whatever the nature or maturity of a project, you will learn to identify its potential and market, to choose the most relevant positioning and to build a viable business model.
You have an innovative idea that you would like to expand in the market. You want to know if you are made for entrepreneurship. You plan to work in a R&D company or in an innovation department. Or you are simply curious to know how to innovate better. This course is for you!
Teaching and learning methods:
The pedagogy of this course is deliberately interactive through the application of new concepts studied on concrete cases. We will use the pedagogical tools developed by Vianeo (card game, paper canvas, digital platform) and the participants' cases throughout the course in teams of 5 or 6.
Course Policies: Mandatory attendance. Between 2 courses, work on collecting information, further analysis, updating or preparation.
This course provides a solid introduction to intellectual property law from a managerial and strategic perspective taking an international and comparative approach.
The course is the study of how companies protect innovations in order to create value for the company
Teaching and Learning Methods : Lectures and cases sessions (group of 4 students)
Course Policies : Attendance to Lab session is mandatory.
Thiscourse aims to start with the circular flow of economic activity and the interdependence of its institutional sectors. The evolution of sustainable development’s concept is developed with its economic, social and environmental dimensions. It highlights the challenges and commitments to be met at national and international level. Corporate social responsibility towards the various stakeholders is an essential step in the achievement of a sustainable economy.
Teaching and Learning Methods
A course of 5 sessions around the fundamentals of the concept of sustainable development.
Students will then have to apply their knowledge in 2 sessions through:
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Presentation (student subgroups) on a topical subject related to sustainable economy challenges. -
Debriefing and discussion
Course Policies: Seven 3-hour sessions.
EURECOM wishes to involve students in its "promotion" activities and thus values their commitment to the school community.
Teaching and Learning Methods:
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Activity of elected student delegates:
- Participation in teaching committees appeal commissions and disciplinary councils
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Activities to "promote" the school:
- Travel to the venue of the event
- The pedagogical recognition of student commitment takes the form of a compulsory UE for first-year students and an optional free EC for the other years.
Course Policies:
Student engagement activities can only be validated once per academic year.
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For elected students:
- Any invitation to attend a council or a committee is equivalent to an authorization to be absent from lessons for full members and, in the event of absence or impediment, for substitute members.
- The list of elected students is communicated to the heads of the components concerned so that the special status of these students in the context of teaching is known.
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For "promotion" activities:
- Possibility of one-off absence from lessons, duly justified
The commitment mission must represent a minimum of 40 hours over the academic year.
Article 29 of the Equality and Citizenship Law, published on 27 January 2017, generalizes the mechanisms for recognizing student commitment to all higher education institutions.
Student involvement in solidarity promotes the acquisition of skills and knowledge that contribute to personal development, citizenship training, and better integration of students.
Teaching and Learning Methods: The pedagogical recognition of student commitment takes the form of a CE that can be chosen within an opening UE. It is therefore not compulsory but can be chosen by the student in addition to the curriculum.
Course Policies:
The activities or missions in the student's commitment can only give rise to one validation per academic cycle.
This CE is not available to students in the first year of the engineering cycle.
The commitment must represent a minimum of 20 hours over the academic year.
Application file: To benefit from the validation of their commitment, the student must:
- Apply to the Director of Studies no later than 7 days after the start of the academic year. For students who start their commitment activity during the semester, the application must be made before the end of the semester to be considered for the following semester.
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The application file includes:
- A photocopy of the student card or the school certificate
- The application forms
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Any formal proof of belonging to one of the categories listed under “Description”; i.e:
- A certificate of activity and/or mission specifying the host organization, the general missions, and the time constraints, signed by the head of the organization
- A contract of employment
- Any supporting documents that the student considers useful to attest to his/her commitment and the particular needs related to the activity in which he/she is engaged.
- After obtaining a favourable opinion, the registration to the CitiCom CE is validated.
Course for EIT students only
Two topics – with related concepts, methods and/or tools – will be covered in the context of a selected innovation or entrepreneurial case:
• One fixed and common topic: Assessing the impact of a technology on an industry, market and/or organization, the support and barriers to its deployment, the influence on a specific goal/agenda (technology transfer, existing industry, new company, etc.).
• One case-dependent topic: pertaining to market / business environment analysis (main forces affecting the business, suppliers, partners, competition, environmental issues), sustainability and social issues, business modeling, go-to-market strategies, etc.
The innovation or entrepreneurial project may be originating from:
• Cases issued from EIT Digital Innovation Action Lines: within Activities, Partners / Business Community projects,
• Cases based on the continuation of students EIT Digital Summer School (or BDLab) project,
• Cases within other innovation or entrepreneurial projects rooted in a real-life environment as may be collected in the university ecosystem.
Teaching and Learning Methods :
The I&E Study is based on a group assignment and on an individual assignment. A large autonomy is given to the students to organize and achieve their goals.
a. Group assignment:
Students will work in teams of around 4 students. Teams will be assigned cases. Each team will identify and address a challenge/question in the context of their assigned case. This challenge/question may be related to considering alternate business models or go-to-market scenarios in relation with the innovation or entrepreneurial case, fed by exploration in some specific areas: business environment, competition, suppliers, partners, environmental and sustainability issues, etc.
To address their challenge/question, the students will cover the 4 generic steps of an explorative business analysis:
- Identification of the relevant challenge/question,
- Acquisition of applicable concepts/methods/tools,
- Observations (data collection) on a selected part of the case,
- Analysis and interpretation.
Students’ supervision comprises:
- One individual or group session to introduce and detail the assignment and help students identify the challenges/questions,
- 1-to-many workshops: one for each of the 4 study steps above. Students support can be structured through pre-/post-assignments for each workshop,
- One oral defense.
It is expected that the authors of the case will contribute to supervision, provide data/contacts, participate to an oral defense and/or offer other meeting occasions to ensure rooting of the business assignment in real life.
b. Individual assignment:
Students will work on an online individual assignment. This individual assignment can be done before, during or after the group assignment. In this assignment, students will acquire concepts and tools pertaining to the assessment of the impact of a technology on an industry, market and/or organization. Students will also get the opportunity to apply these concepts and tools to their own case (based on their group-assignment case when possible).
Students’ supervision comprises (may be combined with the group assignment supervision):
- One group session to introduce and detail the assignment,
- 1-to-many workshops to help students follow the steps in the assignment structure.
Cour
This course focuses on Responsible Research and Innovation applied to the digital domain. It provides conceptual, theoretical and empirical foundations for students to develop a transdisciplinary approach to dealing with the non-technical implications of technological innovation. Students will learn about the key concepts in the field (sustainability, reversibility, acceptability, anticipation, participation) as well as the main methods of technology assessment that enable them to better approach the contemporary challenges and controversies of the digital age. Based on contributions from experts from different backgrounds, the course sessions will cover a range of issues raised by digital technologies in terms of health, ethical, social and environmental risks.
Teaching and Learning Methods: The course consists of seven complementary sessions led by various experts in the field of digital technologies and impact assessment (university researchers, representatives of public regulatory and risk assessment agencies, consultants, business leaders). It is based on a participatory teaching approach, requiring the active involvement of students, both in class (discussions, presentations, tutorials) and at home (reading, web research, writing). A collective research project to formalise knowledge will be required and presented at the end of the course.
Course Policies: Attendance and punctuality at all course sessions are compulsory. Classwork/homework associated with each session is also compulsory and will be marked. Laptops or tablets are permitted for note-taking and practical work.