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2026 (Current Year) Faculty Courses School of Environment and Society Department of Technology and Innovation Management Graduate major in Technology and Innovation Management

Entrepreneurship and Business Development II

Academic unit or major
Graduate major in Technology and Innovation Management
Instructor(s)
Masako Toriya
Class Format
Lecture/Exercise
Media-enhanced courses
-
Day of week/Period
(Classrooms)
Class
-
Course Code
TIM.D517
Number of credits
0.50.50
Course offered
2026
Offered quarter
4Q
Syllabus updated
Mar 5, 2026
Language
Japanese

Syllabus

Course overview and goals

Terminologies "Business development" and "entrepreneurship" can be defined as a comprehensive process and human activities to realise business opportunities, respectively. These factors are critical and complimentary eith each other thus are highly required for all professionals who aim to create a novel value in the society. This posture is not limited only to business venturing but is also broadly extended towards scientific research and technology development.
The present lecture series consists of lecture and practice parts in order to build up the basic knowledge of the business development and entrepreneurship and to develop basal skills to practice key items learnt in a real world. In Part II, we will practice new business creation and design.

Course description and aims

By the end of this course, students will be able to:
1) Understand the concept of entrepreneurship and business development,
2) Apply multiple methods for generating business ideas,
3) Apply appropriate frameworks and tools for formulating new business strategies,
4) Independently develop a business plan using standard formats

Student learning outcomes

実務経験と講義内容との関連 (又は実践的教育内容)

This lecture series is delivered from both theoretical and practical perspectives by an instructor who have provided new business development training to companies, as well as an instructor with experience working at venture capital firms and startups.

Keywords

New business development, entrepreneurship, innovation management, venture companies, service design, system design

Competencies

  • Specialist skills
  • Intercultural skills
  • Communication skills
  • Critical thinking skills
  • Practical and/or problem-solving skills
  • Problem identification skills

Class flow

This lecture series progresses along the key perspectives that should be considered in new business creation: problem definition, business concept development, value validation, and system design.
Each lecture consists of classroom learning and practical exercise components. In the exercise portion, students engage in group exercises using online whiteboards to work with frameworks and tools.

Course schedule/Objectives

Course schedule Objectives
Class 1

New Value Creation

Frameworks for new value creation, value proposition, customer value chain analysis

Class 2

Problem Definition 1

An approach for problem definition that guide new business development

Class 3

Problem Definition 2

Approaches for problem definition that guide new business development

Class 4

New Business Value Validation

New business creation systems, value validation through research and prototyping

Class 5

Systems Engineering for New Business Design 1

System requirements definition through context analysis and use case analysis

Class 6

Systems Engineering for New Business Design 2

Functional analysis and architecture design

Class 7

Group presentation and reflection

Students present their new business proposals.

Study advice (preparation and review)

To enhance effective learning, students are encouraged to spend approximately 100 minutes preparing for class and another 100 minutes reviewing class content afterwards (including assignments) for each class.
They should do so by referring to textbooks and other course material.

Textbook(s)

Practice by groups and presentation

Reference books, course materials, etc.

Ishii, Kosuke and Kenji Iino, Sekkei no Kagaku: Kachi-zukuri Sekkei [Design Science: Value-Creating Design], Yokendo Publishing, 2008, ISBN: 978-4-8425-0434-6
Stanford d.school『An Introduction to Design Thinking: Process Guide』Stanford University, 2010
Donella H. Meadows『Thinking in Systems: A Primer』edited by Diana Wright, Chelsea Green Publishing, 2008年, ISBN: 978-1-60358-055-7
INCOSE『Systems Engineering Handbook: A Guide for System Life Cycle Processes and Activities』5th Edition, edited by David D. Walden, Thomas M. Shortell, Garry J. Roedler, Bernardo A. Delicado, Odile Mornas, Yip Yew-Seng, and David Endler, John Wiley & Sons, 2023年, ISBN: 978-1-119-81429-0
To be recommended in the fist class.

Evaluation methods and criteria

Proactive participation in the lectures and the quality of the reports are considered. Details are to be informed of in the first lecture.

Related courses

  • TIM.D516 : Entrepreneurship and Business Development I
  • TIM.B410 : Innovation Management I
  • TIM.B411 : Innovation Management II

Prerequisites

It is recommended that students complete "Entrepreneurship and Business Development I" prior to enrolling in this course; however, "Entrepreneurship and Business Development II" may also be taken as a standalone course.

Other

This lecture plan is a model case. Please check the lecture schedule of each academic year.