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Detailed data pertaining to 2013 2014 annual report pierre l. morrissette institute for entrepreneurship.
2013/2014 Annual Report
PIERRE L. MORRISSETTE INSTITUTE FOR ENTREPRENEURSHIP
A Year to Celebrate
2013/2014
Ivey has been shaping entrepreneurial and family business leaders for nearly 20 years.
Beginning in 1995, under the banner of the Institute for Entrepreneurship, Innovation
& Growth, and then through the generosity of Pierre L. Morrissette, MBA ’72,
our commitment to entrepreneurship and family business has always been a
strength at Ivey. Thanks to a $2.5-million donation from Morissette, the Pierre L.
Morrissette Institute for Entrepreneurship was created in 2007 to develop the best in
entrepreneurial resources, both in the classroom, through such programs as the
New Venture Project, and through ground-breaking research that positions Ivey as
the go-to-place for practitioners.
Now Ivey and the Morrissette Institute have taken the next step with the hosting of
the 34th annual Babson College Entrepreneurship Research Conference. Its success
has marked Ivey as a global brand for entrepreneurship research and education.
This has been an extraordinary year of achievements in all areas.
SEPTEMBER
Paul Hayman, HBA ’81, began his tenure as
Ivey’s Executive Entrepreneur-in-Residence
for HBAs completing the New Venture Project
(NVP). Hayman joined Bill Wignall who had
been providing guidance to the MBA students
since April 2013. The 2013 class of NVP
included more than 200 HBA and
MBA students.
DECEMBER
Ivey and KPMG’s QuantumShift™
program launched the inaugural
FutureShifters Video Contest,
which invited aspiring Canadian
entrepreneurs to create videos about
their businesses with the winner
getting an invitation to the program.
OCTOBER
Kelsey Ramsden, MBA ’04,
was honoured as PROFIT and
Chatelaine Magazine’s top
Canadian female entrepreneur
for the second consecutive year.
2013
Highlights of 2013/2014
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2013 I VEY ANNUAL REPORT | 3
JUNE
More than 300 of the world’s
best entrepreneurship
researchers visited Ivey for the
34th annual Babson College
Entrepreneurship Research
Conference June 4-7, 2014.
JANUARY
A team from the Indian Institute
of Management-Calcutta won
the 16th annual IBK Capital Ivey
Business Plan Competition in
January, becoming the ?rst
winner outside of North America.
2014
Inside the Pierre L. Morrissette
Institute for Entrepreneurship annual report
4
Message from the
Executive Director
5
Meet our Advisory Council
6
Program Excellence
11
Thought Leadership
16
Global Community
Highlights of 2013/2014
APRIL
Former Prime Minister Paul Martin helped
Ivey celebrate the 10th Annual National Family
Business Day Celebration, hosted by the
Canadian Association of Family Enterprise,
Southwestern Ontario (CAFE) and Ivey’s
Business Families Centre.
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What a great time to be an Ivey
Entrepreneur! It has been an honour
to serve as Executive Director of the
Morrissette Institute this past year. More
than ever, Ivey students now recognize that
barriers to establishing new enterprises
are lower than ever and the support
mechanisms available to assist launching
a business are here. The global economic
uncertainty only served notice to the
broader Ivey Community of the need to
unleash the entrepreneurial potential
within the Ivey network. The Morrissette
Institute supports Ivey’s leadership
position in entrepreneurship by facilitating
the launching of businesses, the strategic
growth of entrepreneurial ?rms, and the
transitions of entrepreneurial families.
Some highlights of the year include:
Program Excellence
The Morrissette Institute supported
the development of a complete suite
of electives in Entrepreneurship, which
are now in tremendous demand with
40 per cent of Ivey students taking
entrepreneurial courses and 36 students
receiving certi?cates in Entrepreneurship.
Our Entrepreneurs-in-Residence, Bill
Wignall and Paul Hayman, supported by
80 virtual Entrepreneur-in-Residence
mentors, assisted more than 200 students
in creating business plans in the New
Venture Project. Several of these teams
were “market ready” and advanced into
the MaRS Incubator Ecosystem, an Ivey-
sponsored program to assist launch-ready
students. The QuantumShift™ program for
high-growth entrepreneurs, led by
Professor Eric Morse, has celebrated 10
years of success and, as a result of the
program, more than 500 entrepreneurs are
growing their businesses all across Canada.
Thought Leadership
Research excellence at the Morrissette
Institute is led by Professor Simon Parker
and this year the achievements exceeded
expectations. In addition to signi?cant
output from our strong group of professors
and PhD students, Ivey had the honour
of hosting the world’s leading academic
conference for entrepreneurial research,
the Babson College Entrepreneurship
Research Conference. For the ?rst time in
26 years in Canada, this conference of the
best researchers in the ?eld joined Ivey
professors in this celebration of the ?eld of
entrepreneurial research.
Message from
the Executive Director
David Simpson,
MBA ’88,
Executive Director,
Pierre L. Morrissette
Institute for
Entrepreneurship
Director, Business
Families Centre
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Meet our
Advisory
Council
The Advisory Council of the
Pierre L. Morrissette Institute for
Entrepreneurship acts as a powerful
and visible body of leadership,
in?uence, and support within the
constituencies the Institute serves.
Chair
David Wright, HBA ’83
President, Agora Consulting
Partners Inc.
Members
Ian Aitken, HBA ’87
Managing Partner,
Pembroke Management Ltd.
Bruce Barker
Partner, Bennett Jones LLP
Andrew Barnicke, HBA ’83
President, Abbey Road Ventures Inc.
Michael Boyd, MBA ’76
Corporate Advisor and Director
Connie Clerici, QS ’08
President and CEO, Closing the
Gap Healthcare Group
Ron Close, HBA ’81
President and CEO, Pelmorex Media Inc.
Bob Dhillon, EMBA ’98
Founder, President and CEO,
Mainstreet Equity Corp
Stephen Gunn, MBA ’81
Chairman and CEO, Sleep
Country Canada
Pamela Jefery, HBA ’84, MBA ’88
President, The Jefery Group Ltd.
Melinda Lehman, MBA ’94
Managing Director, Happen
Pierre Morrissette, MBA ’72
Founder and Executive Chair,
Pelmorex Media Inc.
Eric Morse
Associate Dean, Programs,
Ivey Business School
Alexa Nick, MBA ’95
Managing Director, BottomLine Group;
Owner, myPractice
Kelsey Ramsden, MBA ’04
President, Belvedere Place
Development; Founder, SparkPlay™,
and Kelsey Ramsden Inc.
Larry Rosen, LLB/MBA ’82
Chairman and CEO, Harry Rosen Inc.
John Rothschild, MBA ’73
CEO, Prime Restaurants of Canada Inc.
Paul Sabourin, MBA ’80
Chairman and CIO, Polar Securities Inc.
David Simpson, MBA ’88
Executive Director, Pierre L. Morrissette
Institute for Entrepreneurship,
Director, Business Families Centre,
Ivey Business School
Stephen Suske, MBA ’77
President and CEO, Suske Capital
Management
Michael White, MBA ’00
President, IBK Capital Corp.
David Wright, HBA ’83,
Advisory Council Chair
Global Community
I had the pleasure of hosting two signi?cant
events for the Global Ivey community this
past year. In November, the Morrissette
Institute held a Global Ivey Day celebration
for entrepreneurs in Toronto, which
featured a panel of our graduates who
had recently launched a new business. It
was an inspiring day for all. Later in April,
in my role as Director of Ivey’s Business
Families Centre, we were pleased to host
our 10th National Family Business Day
with guest, former Prime Minister Paul
Martin. Martin’s message resonated
with me when he discussed both his own
entrepreneurial career and the importance
of family business. The global reality is we
need more entrepreneurs, and most of the
world’s businesses are organized around
family ownership, so understanding that
dynamic is crucial.
The activities at the Morrissette Institute,
supported by the tremendous legacy gift
by Pierre Morrissette and the hard work of
a great staf and faculty, serve to enhance
Ivey’s global brand. It is an Institute that I
am proud to lead.
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Program
Excellence
New Venture Project brings out
the best in young entrepreneurs
Ivey’s budding entrepreneurs experience the challenges of the real world through
the New Venture Project (NVP), a program that takes them through the entire
practice of launching a business.
The team-based ?eld project takes
students through the process of developing
and re?ning an idea for a new venture,
researching and analyzing the opportunity,
writing a business plan, and pitching that
plan to a panel of entrepreneurs, business
executives, or potential investors.
This approach challenges students’
thinking, tests their creativity, and provides
expert guidance for bringing their ideas
to life.
Promising teams looking to move
forward with their ventures also have the
opportunity to continue their progress at
Toronto’s MaRS Commons through the
Ivey-MaRS Partnership.
Lindsay Sittler,
HBA ’14, in the
New Venture
Project program
2013/2014 PI ERRE L. MORRI SSETTE I NSTI TUTE FOR ENTREPRENEURSHI P ANNUAL REPORT | 7
Here are some of the
student experiences
in 2013/14:
ACCELERATING THE PATH
TO ENTREPRENEURSHIP
The student: Brandon Vlaar, HBA ’14.
Fellow team members: Eric Fong, Chantal
Rapport, and Enoch Tieu, all HBA ’14.
Their business idea: Tokynn – A mobile
application that enables people to
purchase and send gift codes to others for
redemption of food and beverage items
from a selection of restaurants and bars.
The major takeaway: Draw from your
experiences and put those learnings into
your business.
Brandon Vlaar, HBA ’14, was born into an
entrepreneurial family and showed signs of
the entrepreneurial spirit at a young age.
At age 10, he started a skateboard
deck import business to bring low-cost
skateboards to his local community. At
age 12, he launched an online video game
business that enabled people to buy
fully levelled-up World of Warcraft game
characters. During high school, he
co-founded, with Ryan DeCaire, HBA ’14,
the Swing Fore Dreams Golf Tournament,
which raised $22,000 for McMaster
Children’s Hospital over four years.
By the time he arrived at Ivey, he was set
on becoming an entrepreneur, but said he
knew a formal education was important.
He took every entrepreneurial course
he could, and said he found the NVP
program particularly rewarding.
He cites the mentorship from Paul Hayman,
HBA ’81, holder of the John R. Currie
Executive Entrepreneur-in-Residence, and
NVP co-director, as invaluable.
“It’s unbelievable that we had access to an
executive and entrepreneur with this much
experience. He was an incredible resource,”
said Vlaar. “He inspired us to build the
best business we could and make it as
legitimate as possible from the beginning.
He taught us to pull from our experiences
and what we were taught in our case
classes – whether it was pricing models,
marketing, or expansion strategy – and
apply these learnings to our business. We
pushed our ideas as far as we could and
there was a huge push for us to become the
best versions of ourselves.”
The experience paid of. Vlaar’s team
successfully launched Tokynn, a mobile
application that allows people to buy gift
codes for products from London, Ontario-
based vendors, to share with others.
Although Tokynn is still running as a pet
project and has drawn interest from
potential investors, Vlaar’s team members
have moved on to other careers.
Vlaar and Cato Pastoll, HBA ’14, plan to
launch another business called Lending
Loop in fall 2014. Lending Loop is an online
marketplace that enables individuals to
lend money to local businesses, eliminating
involvement from banks.
While Vlaar said entrepreneurship was
always on his radar, he credits his Ivey
education for accelerating his move in
that direction.
“I de?nitely don’t think I would be starting
something so soon if it wasn’t for the NVP
program. NVP gave me the con?dence
that I needed to believe I can take an idea,
execute on it, and turn it into something,”
he said. “I still use all the resources Ivey
has ofered us to accelerate the business-
building process.”
FORGING CONNECTIONS THAT MAKE
A DIFFERENCE
The student: Nick Goel, HBA ’14.
Fellow team members: Prabhjot Basraon,
Evan Galpin, and Kaitlyn Lee, all HBA ’14.
Their business idea: An electronic
lock system for houses that uses radio-
frequency identi?cation (RFID) technology
for added ease of use.
The major takeaway: Connections matter.
When Nick Goel and his NVP team had
an idea to improve the current electronic
home lock devices by implementing a new
technology, they learned there is an uphill
battle to go from idea to execution.
They talked to bankers and suppliers. They
read every bit of research they could ?nd
on the radio-frequency identi?cation (RFID)
technology they planned to use, which
would make the devices more efcient
than current models using Bluetooth and
Wi? technology because their product
requires less battery power and works
faster. Speaking with other individuals who
had launched related products allowed the
team to learn from others’ experiences and
was a critical component in their success.
“Everybody has ideas, but not everyone can
implement them efectively,” he said. “Being
in the right position and talking to as many
people as possible is what sets you apart.”
Tokynn members (L-R) Enoch Tieu, Brandon Vlaar, Chantal Rapport, and Eric Fong.
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PROGRAM E XCE L L E NCE
In fact, Goel said one of his mentors in the
NVP program had developed RFID tags
for the shoes used by Boston Marathon
runners, to track when they crossed the
?nish line. This mentor connected the team
with a supplier in South Africa who could
make a working prototype for the product.
“The best part of the program was being
paired with mentors in the industry. If we
didn’t have these mentors, we wouldn’t
have made it as far as we did,” he said.
“When you have mentors who have done
it before and have tried the exact same
product or a similar technology with
diferent business models, you can learn
from their experiences and understand
what’s efective or inefective.”
Goel said the expert panel judging their
project gave positive feedback on their
business plan and presentation and other
individuals have also been interested in
helping the team to further develop the
project.
Although the team is still considering
taking the business idea further, Goel
and teammate Evan Galpin are working
together on other business ideas that they
might launch in the future.
Goel’s family has a business that he may
want to be part of or else he said he may
start one on his own. But either way, he
said the NVP program prepared him for
entrepreneurship in the real world and
fueled his interest in it.
“We spent more time on this project than
on any other course at Ivey. Not because we
had to, but because we wanted to,” he said.
New Entrepreneurs-in-Residence bring wealth
of experience to New Venture Project program
Paul Hayman, HBA ’81, and Bill Wignall have two things in common, which made them
ideal partners to lead Ivey’s New Venture Project (NVP) program.
One, they are both “serial entrepreneurs” who have led several successful companies.
Two, they both ?nd it rewarding to share their entrepreneurial experience with up-and-
coming young entrepreneurs.
Together they made a great team to guide HBA and MBA students enrolled in the NVP
program to develop their entrepreneurial ideas and business plans. During the 2013-
2014 academic year, Hayman oversaw the HBA NVP program, while Wignall worked
with both MBA and HBA students.
Hayman and Wignall joined the Morrissette Institute as co-Directors of the NVP
program and became holders of the John R. Currie Executive Entrepreneurs-in-
Residence in 2013. They replaced Ron Close, HBA ’81, who left Ivey for a role as CEO of
Pelmorex Media Inc. The Entrepreneurship-in-Residence program engages leaders in
senior management or startups to share their expertise with students.
“I like being around young people who are full of energy and excitement. I ?nd it
inspirational,” said Wignall. “My educational experience had a big impact on my life,
so this is just part of giving back and doing the right thing.”
Although Hayman is a successful entrepreneur, he says there are many lessons to be
gained from his failures as well.
“I’ve had some failures, but that’s inevitable when you push your edge. I’m a great
believer that all problems are just problems waiting to be solved,” he said. “I bring
curiosity and self-awareness to the process. The more self-aware you are, the less likely
you’ll have a massive failure.”
Hayman ran a College Pro franchise while in Ivey’s HBA program, and then became
a Chartered Accountant with PricewaterhouseCoopers. Due to his entrepreneurial
experience, he was made CEO and charged with turning around the company’s ailing
U.S. operation. He later was Executive Vice President of TFC, a Toronto-based holding
company, and led numerous companies. He is currently the CEO of Inclyne Inc., a real
estate asset sourcing company headquartered in Denver, Colorado and also operates
Con Brio Farm, an equestrian business in London, Ontario.
Wignall worked in a variety of areas with Canadian high-tech giant Nortel. He has since
led several global high-tech companies including Telezone, Electronics Workbench,
Truition, and Sangoma Technologies.
For more on the Ivey Entrepreneur-in-Residence program, visit go.ivey.ca/eir
Paul Hayman,
one of Ivey’s new
Entrepreneurs-
in-Residence
Nick Goel, HBA ’14
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Life as an EIR is an exhilarating ride
Getting involved is Steve Suske’s way of
giving back to Ivey.
Not just a few hours here and there,
Suske’s idea of giving back is to invest
meaningful time and energy into
developing the next generation of Ivey
entrepreneurs. After joining the Advisory
Council of the Morrissette Institute
?ve years ago, he was asked to mentor
groups of students as an Entrepreneur-in-
Residence (EIR) in the New Venture Project
(NVP) program.
At the time, Suske, MBA ’77 was the CEO of
Chartwell Retirement Residences. Despite a
busy schedule, he didn’t hesitate to accept
the ofer and it has been an exhilarating
ride ever since.
The NVP program is an entrepreneurial
?eld project that takes students through
the process of developing a business idea,
and seeing it through to presentation to an
external review panel of potential investors.
While some revisions to the program are
planned for the coming year, the basic
premise remains the same and, most
importantly, the students will continue to
receive mentorship from some of Canada’s
top entrepreneurs.
Suske certainly falls into this class of elite
Canadian entrepreneurs. He is the founder
of Chartwell Retirement Residences and
Regal Lifestyle Communities, both listed
on the TSX, as well as three privately held
seniors housing companies, the most
recent of which is Sussex Retirement
Living. He is now the CEO of Suske Capital,
a private equity ?rm that invests primarily
in the development of seniors housing
in North America, but also in renewable
energy and emerging technology
companies, such as Polski Solar S.A.
and StrategyFit.
“I am an entrepreneur and always have
been,” said Suske. “So I thought it would
be a great opportunity to give back to Ivey,
because the School has been really good to
me. It has opened a lot of doors.”
Every year, Suske mentors two groups of
MBA and HBA students. “I’ve had some
great groups along the way,” Suske said.
“The groups really get involved with the EIR
and are a joy to work with.”
Suske said he ?nds the ?nal presentations
incredibly enjoyable, as they provide a
window into the upcoming generation
of entrepreneurs and their ideas. “Ivey
students are really bright, enthusiastic,
and full of great ideas. It’s an exhilarating
experience for a guy like me to go back and
see such a high calibre of students at Ivey,”
said Suske, who has recently hired two
HBA students to help with his numerous
ventures at Suske Capital.
Being part of the EIR program also provides
a unique opportunity to network with other
Ivey entrepreneurs who share the same
passion for mentoring and giving back to
the School. “I’ve developed some great
relationships with other EIRs over the
years. It’s an added bene?t because they
are part of Ivey’s strong network,”
said Suske.
“It’s an exhilarating experience,” he
concluded. “You work with brilliant
students, highly accomplished EIRs and
insightful professors on some really
exciting projects. I look forward to being
involved for many years to come and
strongly recommend other Ivey alumni
to give back by getting involved in Ivey’s
EIR program.”
Read more about NVP on page 6.
Learn more about the program at
go.ivey.ca/NVP.
Steve Suske,
MBA ’77,
CEO, Suske Capital
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First Indian contender takes top prize in
IBK Capital-Ivey Business Plan Competition
Talk about a grand entrance.
Team Zostel, a team from Calcutta, India and the ?rst non-North American team to
participate in the IBK Capital-Ivey Business Plan Competition won the 16th annual
competition and went home $20,000 richer.
The competition, which ran January 24-25, 2014 at Ivey Business School and the
Spencer Leadership Centre, brought together 12 entrepreneurial teams from top
graduate schools including University of Louisville, University of Arkansas, University
of Manitoba, and York University. After two rounds of presentations to 22 judges with
experience in entrepreneurial and venture capital projects, Team Zostel won for their
idea for a hostel ofering amenities such as air-conditioning and access to power
and Wi-Fi to India’s burgeoning backpacker and tourist industry. The win was a huge
reward for the team, which had to raise money for ?ights, food, and lodging to travel
12,000 kilometres to compete in the competition
“Having an opportunity to test the waters in foreign territory and presenting it in front
of a highly experienced and neutral audience was strong enough motivation,” said
Team Zostel representative Akhil Malik.
In addition to entrepreneurial advice from judges, the event also included
presentations from four guest speakers: Albert Behr, President and CEO of Behr and
Associates; Daniel Kaute, President and CEO of Environmental Waste International;
Stephen Gunn, MBA ’81, co-founder, Chairman and CEO of Sleep Country Canada and
an Advisory Council member (see page 5); and David Simpson, Executive Director of
the Morrissette Institute and Director, Business Families Centre.
The IBK Capital-Ivey Business Plan Competition is supported by IBK Capital Corp.,
founded by Bill White, MBA ’69, and currently led by Michael White, MBA ’00.
For more on Ivey’s business plan competitions, visit go.ivey.ca/bizplancomp
Entrepreneur earns
chance to take
organization to the
next level
It wasn’t a business plan, elevator pitch or
any of the typical assets that draw attention
to a budding entrepreneurial venture.
Instead it was a strong video submission
and media push that created interest in
Braden Douglas’ business, Relevention
Marketing Inc. - a fast-growing marketing
?rm in Abbotsford, British Columbia.
Douglas was the winner of the inaugural
FutureShifters Video Contest, which
was launched by Ivey and KPMG’s
QuantumShift™ program in late 2013,
with the winner announced early in 2014.
The contest invited aspiring Canadian
entrepreneurs to create videos about their
businesses with the winner getting an
invitation to the program.
QuantumShift™ is a rigorous ?ve-day
developmental experience that challenges
Canada’s most promising entrepreneurs to
take their businesses to the next level. Only
40 entrepreneurs are accepted into the
exclusive invitation-only program annually.
The video contest allowed entrepreneurs
with smaller and less-established
businesses to vie for a spot in the program.
Douglas earned the judges’ votes by
outlining how QuantumShift™ could
efectively expand his business in Canada. In
his video, he explained that his ?rm has only
tapped one per cent of its potential market.
He won a place in the QuantumShift™ 2014
program, May 4-9, 2014.
PROGRAM E XCE L L E NCE
Michael White,Team Zostel representatives Akhil Malik and Paavan Nanda, and
David Simpson
Braden Douglas, Founder and
Principal of Relevention Marketing Inc.
World’s top entrepreneurial
minds gather at Ivey for
Babson research conference
When you bring together 300 of the world’s
best entrepreneurship researchers to share
their insights and ideas, the potential for
innovation and collaboration is enormous.
That’s why the Morrissette Institute was
proud to host the 34th Annual Babson
College Entrepreneurship Research
Conference (BCERC) June 4-7, 2014,
which attracted more than 300 professors
and doctoral students to Ivey’s London,
Ontario campus. The conference is widely
considered the world’s premier conference
for entrepreneurship research and rotates
annually among top business schools in
Europe and North America.
Hosting the conference was a chance for
the Institute to gain momentum on the
world stage as well as forge connections
with leading entrepreneurship academics.
“The conference gave us an opportunity
to showcase all that we have to ofer here
at Ivey, to attract future faculty members
and doctoral students, and to highlight
our case writing and outreach activities,
said Professor Simon Parker, Director of
Ivey’s Entrepreneurship Cross-Enterprise
Leadership Centre and Co-Director of the
2014 BCERC Conference. “Entrepreneurship
research is something that we do very well
and we are very interested in turning our
research ?ndings into useful advice for
entrepreneurs and policymakers.”
The event included two and a half days of
traditional conference sessions, a Doctoral
Consortium Program, and a gala awards
dinner featuring a performance from
Cirque Éloize.
Associate Professor Rob Mitchell, Donald
G. & Elizabeth R. Ness Faculty Fellow in
Entrepreneurship, was among the award
winners for his research on fear of failure
(see article on page 15).
Thought
Leadership
Pierre Morrissette, MBA ’72, and
Associate Professor Rob Mitchell
speaking with a researcher at the
Babson research conference.
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More than 300 professors and
doctoral students attended the
Babson research conference at Ivey
“Attending the conference, I felt proud of Ivey, Western, and the Institute for what
we have been doing over the past decade. This was an opportunity to showcase our
progress to the entrepreneurship academic community from around the world.”
– Pierre Morrissette, MBA ’72, Executive Chairman, Pelmorex Media Inc.
T HOUGHT L E ADE RSHI P
For more on the Babson Conference, visit go.ivey.ca/Babson2014
2013/2014 PI ERRE L. MORRI SSETTE I NSTI TUTE FOR ENTREPRENEURSHI P ANNUAL REPORT | 13
Top entrepreneurship researchers
share their ?ndings
Visiting researchers attending the 34th Annual Babson College Entrepreneurship Research Conference (BCERC) shared their insights on
some of the most important and pressing issues facing entrepreneurs in the 21st century.
The event featured 237 presentations and many of the papers presented at BCERC go on to appear as articles in top journals in the ?eld.
HE RE ARE SOME OF T HE F I NDI NGS SHARE D:
WHO: Andrew Corbett, Associate
Professor of Entrepreneurship,
Babson College
RESEARCH TOPIC: Designing
organizations for corporate
entrepreneurship
When it comes to bringing an
entrepreneurial mindset to large
corporations, you have to put the right
people in the right roles.
Andrew Corbett’s research on more than a
dozen Fortune 100 companies over a three-
year period showed that pushing people to
originate an idea and carry it every step of
the way to execution often doesn’t work.
Instead you need to create speci?c roles
and put the people best suited for those
roles in place.
“The roles we have for people are too
monstrous and too diversi?ed,” he said.
“There are better ways to create roles and
organize and design an organization so
that ?rms can consistently compete and
develop breakthrough innovation.”
WHO: Richard Hunt, Assistant Professor
of Strategy and Entrepreneurship,
Virginia Polytechnic Institute
RESEARCH TOPIC: The
entrepreneurship industry
What does entrepreneurship have in
common with tourism? They can both be
looked at as industries or a collection of
many diferent components.
In fact, Richard Hunt’s research revealed
entrepreneurship is a $12-billion global
industry and one of the top 10 fastest
growing industries over the past 15 years.
However, this entrepreneurship industry
can have a counter-intuitive in?uence,
motivating more people to create
companies even if they don’t have the
skills to keep the companies a?oat for the
long term.
“It appears to stimulate lots of ‘Can-do’
attitudes and individuals who believe that
their network or management acumen is
stronger than it is,” he said. “What it shows
is there are no shortcuts to being able to
found and operate a successful business.”
WHO: Sharon Alvarez, Koch Chair in
Entrepreneurship, University of Denver
RESEARCH TOPIC: Entrepreneurship
and the aha moment
Entrepreneurs often describe how they
derived their ideas as an “aha” moment,
but in fact, with further prodding, you’ll
learn those ideas took a long time to
gestate. The entrepreneurs may have
done some research. They likely had
conversations with potential customers
or suppliers. By no means did the ideas
happen overnight.
The research of Sharon Alvarez shows
the entrepreneurial process is a series of
events, not just one event.
“People think of it as being like when
Thomas Edison invented the light bulb,
but, in fact even that wasn’t such a smooth
transition. When we went from gas to
electricity, people were afraid it would
damage their eyes so the original light
bulbs were only 15 watts so they wouldn’t
make people afraid,” she said. “It was
not an aha moment. It was a series of
experiments. Entrepreneurship is also a
series of developments.”
14 | 2013/2014 PI ERRE L. MORRI SSETTE I NSTI TUTE FOR ENTREPRENEURSHI P ANNUAL REPORT
T HOUGHT L E ADE RSHI P
Babson research conference
in the media
Globe and Mail, May 29, 2014
Professor Simon Parker discussed the honour in hosting the
Babson research conference.
Read the article: go.ivey.ca/globeandmailbabson
CTV London, June 7, 2014
Professor Simon Parker outlined details of the Babson
research conference and why now is the time to be
an entrepreneur.
Watch the interview: go.ivey.ca/ctvbabson
Canadian Business, June 18, 2014
Einar Lier Madsen, a researcher at the Nordland Research
Institute in Norway, discussed why adding family members to
your company could be bad for business. Her research was
presented at the Babson Conference.
Read the article: go.ivey.ca/canadianbusinessbabson
Tweets bout the
Babson College
Entrepreneurship
Research
Conference at Ivey
Cases on Entrepreneurship
• General Mills Canada: Building a Culture of
Innovation (A), J. Robert Mitchell, Ken Mark,
Product Number: 9B14M015, 1/24/2014
The leadership at General Mills Canada knew the company
needed to move from an analysis-based, detail-oriented culture
to one that was more conducive to innovation. But building a
culture of innovation was challenging. The case looks at the
actions leaders might take to build a culture of innovation in the
face of uncertainty.
• Growing Tentree: Social Enterprise, Social Media and
Environmental Sustainability, Peter W. Moroz, Simon Parker,
Edward Gamble, Product Number: 9B14M030, 03/24/2014
Tentree was built on a sustainable and environmental philosophy,
but growing demand was putting that philosophy in jeopardy. The
case looks at ways to break into new markets and discusses the
con?ict between commercial imperatives and a social mission.
• Social Enterprise for Sustainable Communities: Ontario,
Canada, Oana Branzei, Marlene J. Le Ber, Patrick Shulist,
Product Number 9B1M046, 05/07/2014
Recognizing that communities might have reduced social
supports in the aftermath of the 2008 ?nancial crisis, Ottawa,
London, and Sarnia joined with Ivey Business School to develop
a process and tools to help communities create viable social
enterprises. The case looks at the dynamics of social constraint
and social opportunity as well as the role not-for-pro?t
organizations can play in accelerating social transformation.
Simon Parker speaks with CTV London’s Gerry Dewan
Generations of Ivey Entrepreneurs gathered
at Toronto’s Malaparte on November 14th to
celebrate Global Ivey Day and the growth of
entrepreneurship at Ivey. The Entrepreneurs
Breakfast also included a panel discussion with
recent graduates Sarah Landstreet, MBA ’13,
Trevor Koverko, HBA ’12, Simon Choy, HBA ’10,
and Andrew Tai, HBA ’08.
50
2013/2014 PI ERRE L. MORRI SSETTE I NSTI TUTE FOR ENTREPRENEURSHI P ANNUAL REPORT | 15
Research on entrepreneurship
that’s making an impact
Whether gauging how entrepreneurs perform, where they locate, or what drives them to success, researchers with the Morrissette
Institute’s Entrepreneurship Cross-Enterprise Leadership Centre are making an impact on the latest thinking on entrepreneurship.
HE RE ARE HI GHL I GHTS OF T HE RESE ARCH I N 2 01 3 / 1 4 T HAT I S MAKI NG A DI F F E RE NCE .
WHO: Professor Simon Parker, Director,
Entrepreneurship Cross-Enterprise
Leadership Centre
FINDING: Intrapreneurs don’t have an
edge over entrepreneurs
Intrapreneurs, those “internal
entrepreneurs” who set up a new venture
within an existing company, may get of
to a quicker start than entrepreneurs, but
entrepreneurs eventually close the gap.
Parker and co-author Matthias
Tietz, PhD ’13, Assistant Professor of
Entrepreneurship, IE Business School,
compared the factors associated with
entrepreneurial and intrapreneurial
activity. Parker and Tietz (who did his PhD
at Ivey) found entrepreneurs catch up to
intrapreneurs after three or four years and,
in the long run, there is little diference
between the two.
WHO: Assistant Professor Larry Plummer
FINDING: Location is king
Location, location, location may be the
real estate agents’ mantra, referring to
the fact that geography matters when
?nding a home. The same holds true for
entrepreneurs, said Plummer, who is
researching why companies start where
they do and how those decisions afect how
the companies perform.
Plummer has already looked at high-tech
startups in Oklahoma and found the farther
away they were from a metropolitan area,
the less likely they were to receive venture
capital funding. In fact, some companies try
to imitate or look like city-based startups to
acquire such funding. He is now turning his
attention to Canadian entrepreneurs and
said his long-term goal is to create a set of
principles that will help any entrepreneur in
any industry to pick a good location.
WHO: Associate Professor Rob Mitchell,
Donald G. & Elizabeth R. Ness Faculty
Fellow in Entrepreneurship
FINDING: Fear of failure leads
entrepreneurs to opportunities
Although fear is known to stop people
in their tracks, in some cases it leads
entrepreneurs to opportunities.
Mitchell, along with his co-authors
Professor James C. Hayton and PhD
Candidate Gabriella Cacciotti of Warwick
Business School, Post-Doctoral Research
Fellow Andreas Giazitzoglu of Anglia
Ruskin University, and Ivey PhD Candidate
Chris Ainge, interviewed more than 60
entrepreneurs from Canada and the U.K.
on how they react to fear of failure. They
found, in some cases, the fear motivates
them to put more efort into achieving their
goals, rather than avoiding them.
Their paper “Understanding Fear of Failure
in Entrepreneurship: A Cognitive Process
Framework,” won the National Federation
of Independent Business Award for the
Best Paper for Excellence in Research on
the General Topic of Entrepreneurship, at
the 2014 Babson College Entrepreneurship
Research Conference at Ivey in June 2014
(see page 11).
16 | 2013/2014 PI ERRE L. MORRI SSETTE I NSTI TUTE FOR ENTREPRENEURSHI P ANNUAL REPORT
Entrepreneurship research
making an impact on Italy
Small businesses and entrepreneurs play
critical roles in driving economies forward.
But are they enough to turn around Italy’s
grim economic picture?
Professor Simon Parker, Director,
Entrepreneurship Cross-Enterprise
Leadership Centre, investigated the
issue as part of a research team for the
Organization for Economic Co-operation
and Development (OECD).
The team prepared a report on small- and
medium-sized enterprises (SMEs) and
entrepreneurship in Italy for the OECD’s
Centre for Entrepreneurship, SMEs and
Local Development. The report includes
policy recommendations for the Italian
government to encourage more enterprise,
in hope of boosting the economy. Italy has
been in recession for more than ?ve years
and its national debt and unemployment
rate are ongoing challenges.
Global
Community
Professor Simon Parker, Director, Entrepreneurship Cross-Enterprise Leadership Centre
2013/2014 PI ERRE L. MORRI SSETTE I NSTI TUTE FOR ENTREPRENEURSHI P ANNUAL REPORT | 17
“Entrepreneurs tend to create more
jobs than large ?rms, and they’re a
very important source of innovation in
the economy,” said Parker. “Like most
countries, Italy has a large number of very
small companies that aren’t very innovative
and exciting, but it also has a strong core of
medium-sized ?rms that are world-beaters
at what they do. Many people we spoke to
felt that this potential was being wasted.”
Among the ?ndings and recommendations,
the report addresses three major issues:
1. The problem: Italy has a sophisticated
credit market, but there is little venture
capital and angel ?nancing available
because its court system makes it
difcult to enforce contracts.
The solution: Parker’s team
suggested the Italian government
set up parallel courts to deal
speci?cally with investment disputes.
It also recommended ?ne-tuning tax
incentives for innovation and improving
commercialization practices to transfer
university expertise to commercial
innovation;
2. The problem: Foreign Direct
Investment (FDI) in Italy is low.
The solution: Parker’s team calls for
reform of the courts to ensure SMEs
capture more FDI;
3. The problem: SMEs have focused
their export eforts primarily on
Europe, rather than exploring
additional markets.
The solution: Parker’s team
recommended a German model of
“?rm pools” that work with a
government agency dedicated to
opening new markets.
The research project was an opportunity to
raise Ivey’s pro?le in Europe as well as have
real-world impact.
Former Prime Minister
highlights strengths of
family business at
10th anniversary celebration
Ivey’s Business Families Centre marked the 10th anniversary of its annual family
business day celebration with an address from former Canadian Prime Minister and
established entrepreneur Paul Martin.
He shared his experiences transitioning back into family business from public service
at the 10th Annual National Family Business Day Celebration at the Hilton Hotel in
London, Ontario on April 11, 2014. The event is jointly hosted by the Business
Families Centre and the Canadian Association of Family Enterprise (CAFE)
Southwestern Ontario, and also includes award presentations to southwestern
Ontario family businesses.
Martin has worked with some of Canada’s most successful business families,
including the Desmarais Family (Power Corporation of Canada). He gave advice on
passing on leadership of a family business to the next generation, particularly the role
of mentorship.
“Senior people are able to take younger people and teach them the skills of
management,” he said.
Martin said family businesses are often sustainable because their core values align
from generation to generation.
In addition to Martin’s presentation, London, Ontario-based Mofatt & Powell Limited
was named the Southwestern Ontario Family Enterprise of the Year.
Former Prime Minister Paul Martin and Business Families Centre Director
David Simpson at the 10th Annual Business Family Day Celebration in April 2014
18 | 2013/2014 PI ERRE L. MORRI SSETTE I NSTI TUTE FOR ENTREPRENEURSHI P ANNUAL REPORT
GLOBAL COMMUNI T Y
Ivey alumna named Canada’s top
female entrepreneur in 2013
Kelsey Ramsden, MBA ’04, runs three
successful businesses, one which is
a multi-million-dollar enterprise in
Kelowna, B.C., 4,000 kilometres away
from her London, Ontario home.
No wonder she was named top female
entrepreneur in 2013 for the second
consecutive year in PROFIT and
Chatelaine Magazine’s Top 100 Canadian
Female Entrepreneurs list.
Ramsden, an Entrepreneurship Advisory
Council member, ?rst made her mark
with Belvedere Place Development Ltd.,
a civil-construction company launched
in 2005 in Kelowna, B.C. The company’s
success earned her the top spot on the
Top 100 Canadian Female Entrepreneurs
list in 2012. She is also well-known
for SparkPlay™, an educational-toy
subscription service founded in 2012.
Her recent venture is Kelsey Ramsden
Inc., a startup management consultancy
launched in 2013 that advises fellow
entrepreneurs via one-on-one meetings,
blogs and public appearances.
In addition to Ramsden, the following
Ivey alumnae and QuantumShift™
Fellows made the PROFIT and Chatelaine
Magazine’s Top 100 Canadian Female
Entrepreneurs list:
Shannon Bowden-Smed, QS ’04
Victoria Sopik, QS ’09
PJ Ferguson, QS ’04
Teresa Spinelli, QS ’11
Madeleine Paquin, HBA ’84
Mandy Farmer, QS ’11
Eveline Charles, QS ’07; and
Sandra Oliver, EMBA ’97
Kelsey Ramsden, MBA ’04, speaking at Ivey’s MBA Convocation in April 2014
In the Media
Financial Post, March 24, 2014
Writer Mary Teresa Bitti provides a behind-
the-scenes look at the pitch from Deland
Jessop, Kalpesh Rathod, and Adam Cooper,
all MBA ’02, for their business, Counting
Sheep Cofee, on CBC Television’s
Dragons’ Den.
Read the article: go.ivey.ca/
?nancialpostdragonsden
Globe and Mail, March 13, 2014
David Simpson, Executive Director of the
Morrissette Institute and Director of Ivey’s
Business Families Centre, discussed why
Canadian MBA students are pursuing
entrepreneurship, while Sarah Landstreet,
MBA ’13, shares how Ivey’s program
prepared her for launching her business,
Georgette Packaging.
Read the article: go.ivey.ca/
globeandmailmbaentrepreneurs
Globe and Mail, February 19, 2014
Mallorie Brodie, HBA ’13, discusses
Bridgit, the cloud-based smartphone
application she developed to help unveil
construction defects.
Read the article: go.ivey.ca/
malloriebrodie
Globe and Mail, October 3, 2013
Professor Eric Morse, Associate Dean,
Programs, and Cameron Heaps, QS ’04,
discuss Heaps’ business, Steam
Whistle Brewing Inc. as a case study
for entrepreneurs.
Read the article: go.ivey.ca/
steamwhistle
Financial Post, August 14, 2013
Associate Professor Rob Mitchell discusses
the bene?t of exchange programs for
fostering the entrepreneurial spirit, while
Ryan Bruehlmann, HBA ’08, and Rick Taylor,
HBA ’08, MBA ’11, discuss how the idea for
their luxury clothing line, FERKNOT, was
prompted by an exchange trip to Hong Kong.
Read the article: go.ivey.ca/ferknot
Pierre L. Morrissette Institute for Entrepreneurship
www.ivey.uwo.ca/entrepreneurship
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London, ON, Canada
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doc_296612756.pdf
Detailed data pertaining to 2013 2014 annual report pierre l. morrissette institute for entrepreneurship.
2013/2014 Annual Report
PIERRE L. MORRISSETTE INSTITUTE FOR ENTREPRENEURSHIP
A Year to Celebrate
2013/2014
Ivey has been shaping entrepreneurial and family business leaders for nearly 20 years.
Beginning in 1995, under the banner of the Institute for Entrepreneurship, Innovation
& Growth, and then through the generosity of Pierre L. Morrissette, MBA ’72,
our commitment to entrepreneurship and family business has always been a
strength at Ivey. Thanks to a $2.5-million donation from Morissette, the Pierre L.
Morrissette Institute for Entrepreneurship was created in 2007 to develop the best in
entrepreneurial resources, both in the classroom, through such programs as the
New Venture Project, and through ground-breaking research that positions Ivey as
the go-to-place for practitioners.
Now Ivey and the Morrissette Institute have taken the next step with the hosting of
the 34th annual Babson College Entrepreneurship Research Conference. Its success
has marked Ivey as a global brand for entrepreneurship research and education.
This has been an extraordinary year of achievements in all areas.
SEPTEMBER
Paul Hayman, HBA ’81, began his tenure as
Ivey’s Executive Entrepreneur-in-Residence
for HBAs completing the New Venture Project
(NVP). Hayman joined Bill Wignall who had
been providing guidance to the MBA students
since April 2013. The 2013 class of NVP
included more than 200 HBA and
MBA students.
DECEMBER
Ivey and KPMG’s QuantumShift™
program launched the inaugural
FutureShifters Video Contest,
which invited aspiring Canadian
entrepreneurs to create videos about
their businesses with the winner
getting an invitation to the program.
OCTOBER
Kelsey Ramsden, MBA ’04,
was honoured as PROFIT and
Chatelaine Magazine’s top
Canadian female entrepreneur
for the second consecutive year.
2013
Highlights of 2013/2014
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2013 I VEY ANNUAL REPORT | 3
JUNE
More than 300 of the world’s
best entrepreneurship
researchers visited Ivey for the
34th annual Babson College
Entrepreneurship Research
Conference June 4-7, 2014.
JANUARY
A team from the Indian Institute
of Management-Calcutta won
the 16th annual IBK Capital Ivey
Business Plan Competition in
January, becoming the ?rst
winner outside of North America.
2014
Inside the Pierre L. Morrissette
Institute for Entrepreneurship annual report
4
Message from the
Executive Director
5
Meet our Advisory Council
6
Program Excellence
11
Thought Leadership
16
Global Community
Highlights of 2013/2014
APRIL
Former Prime Minister Paul Martin helped
Ivey celebrate the 10th Annual National Family
Business Day Celebration, hosted by the
Canadian Association of Family Enterprise,
Southwestern Ontario (CAFE) and Ivey’s
Business Families Centre.
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What a great time to be an Ivey
Entrepreneur! It has been an honour
to serve as Executive Director of the
Morrissette Institute this past year. More
than ever, Ivey students now recognize that
barriers to establishing new enterprises
are lower than ever and the support
mechanisms available to assist launching
a business are here. The global economic
uncertainty only served notice to the
broader Ivey Community of the need to
unleash the entrepreneurial potential
within the Ivey network. The Morrissette
Institute supports Ivey’s leadership
position in entrepreneurship by facilitating
the launching of businesses, the strategic
growth of entrepreneurial ?rms, and the
transitions of entrepreneurial families.
Some highlights of the year include:
Program Excellence
The Morrissette Institute supported
the development of a complete suite
of electives in Entrepreneurship, which
are now in tremendous demand with
40 per cent of Ivey students taking
entrepreneurial courses and 36 students
receiving certi?cates in Entrepreneurship.
Our Entrepreneurs-in-Residence, Bill
Wignall and Paul Hayman, supported by
80 virtual Entrepreneur-in-Residence
mentors, assisted more than 200 students
in creating business plans in the New
Venture Project. Several of these teams
were “market ready” and advanced into
the MaRS Incubator Ecosystem, an Ivey-
sponsored program to assist launch-ready
students. The QuantumShift™ program for
high-growth entrepreneurs, led by
Professor Eric Morse, has celebrated 10
years of success and, as a result of the
program, more than 500 entrepreneurs are
growing their businesses all across Canada.
Thought Leadership
Research excellence at the Morrissette
Institute is led by Professor Simon Parker
and this year the achievements exceeded
expectations. In addition to signi?cant
output from our strong group of professors
and PhD students, Ivey had the honour
of hosting the world’s leading academic
conference for entrepreneurial research,
the Babson College Entrepreneurship
Research Conference. For the ?rst time in
26 years in Canada, this conference of the
best researchers in the ?eld joined Ivey
professors in this celebration of the ?eld of
entrepreneurial research.
Message from
the Executive Director
David Simpson,
MBA ’88,
Executive Director,
Pierre L. Morrissette
Institute for
Entrepreneurship
Director, Business
Families Centre
2013/2014 PI ERRE L. MORRI SSETTE I NSTI TUTE FOR ENTREPRENEURSHI P ANNUAL REPORT | 5
Meet our
Advisory
Council
The Advisory Council of the
Pierre L. Morrissette Institute for
Entrepreneurship acts as a powerful
and visible body of leadership,
in?uence, and support within the
constituencies the Institute serves.
Chair
David Wright, HBA ’83
President, Agora Consulting
Partners Inc.
Members
Ian Aitken, HBA ’87
Managing Partner,
Pembroke Management Ltd.
Bruce Barker
Partner, Bennett Jones LLP
Andrew Barnicke, HBA ’83
President, Abbey Road Ventures Inc.
Michael Boyd, MBA ’76
Corporate Advisor and Director
Connie Clerici, QS ’08
President and CEO, Closing the
Gap Healthcare Group
Ron Close, HBA ’81
President and CEO, Pelmorex Media Inc.
Bob Dhillon, EMBA ’98
Founder, President and CEO,
Mainstreet Equity Corp
Stephen Gunn, MBA ’81
Chairman and CEO, Sleep
Country Canada
Pamela Jefery, HBA ’84, MBA ’88
President, The Jefery Group Ltd.
Melinda Lehman, MBA ’94
Managing Director, Happen
Pierre Morrissette, MBA ’72
Founder and Executive Chair,
Pelmorex Media Inc.
Eric Morse
Associate Dean, Programs,
Ivey Business School
Alexa Nick, MBA ’95
Managing Director, BottomLine Group;
Owner, myPractice
Kelsey Ramsden, MBA ’04
President, Belvedere Place
Development; Founder, SparkPlay™,
and Kelsey Ramsden Inc.
Larry Rosen, LLB/MBA ’82
Chairman and CEO, Harry Rosen Inc.
John Rothschild, MBA ’73
CEO, Prime Restaurants of Canada Inc.
Paul Sabourin, MBA ’80
Chairman and CIO, Polar Securities Inc.
David Simpson, MBA ’88
Executive Director, Pierre L. Morrissette
Institute for Entrepreneurship,
Director, Business Families Centre,
Ivey Business School
Stephen Suske, MBA ’77
President and CEO, Suske Capital
Management
Michael White, MBA ’00
President, IBK Capital Corp.
David Wright, HBA ’83,
Advisory Council Chair
Global Community
I had the pleasure of hosting two signi?cant
events for the Global Ivey community this
past year. In November, the Morrissette
Institute held a Global Ivey Day celebration
for entrepreneurs in Toronto, which
featured a panel of our graduates who
had recently launched a new business. It
was an inspiring day for all. Later in April,
in my role as Director of Ivey’s Business
Families Centre, we were pleased to host
our 10th National Family Business Day
with guest, former Prime Minister Paul
Martin. Martin’s message resonated
with me when he discussed both his own
entrepreneurial career and the importance
of family business. The global reality is we
need more entrepreneurs, and most of the
world’s businesses are organized around
family ownership, so understanding that
dynamic is crucial.
The activities at the Morrissette Institute,
supported by the tremendous legacy gift
by Pierre Morrissette and the hard work of
a great staf and faculty, serve to enhance
Ivey’s global brand. It is an Institute that I
am proud to lead.
6 | 2013/2014 PI ERRE L. MORRI SSETTE I NSTI TUTE FOR ENTREPRENEURSHI P ANNUAL REPORT
Program
Excellence
New Venture Project brings out
the best in young entrepreneurs
Ivey’s budding entrepreneurs experience the challenges of the real world through
the New Venture Project (NVP), a program that takes them through the entire
practice of launching a business.
The team-based ?eld project takes
students through the process of developing
and re?ning an idea for a new venture,
researching and analyzing the opportunity,
writing a business plan, and pitching that
plan to a panel of entrepreneurs, business
executives, or potential investors.
This approach challenges students’
thinking, tests their creativity, and provides
expert guidance for bringing their ideas
to life.
Promising teams looking to move
forward with their ventures also have the
opportunity to continue their progress at
Toronto’s MaRS Commons through the
Ivey-MaRS Partnership.
Lindsay Sittler,
HBA ’14, in the
New Venture
Project program
2013/2014 PI ERRE L. MORRI SSETTE I NSTI TUTE FOR ENTREPRENEURSHI P ANNUAL REPORT | 7
Here are some of the
student experiences
in 2013/14:
ACCELERATING THE PATH
TO ENTREPRENEURSHIP
The student: Brandon Vlaar, HBA ’14.
Fellow team members: Eric Fong, Chantal
Rapport, and Enoch Tieu, all HBA ’14.
Their business idea: Tokynn – A mobile
application that enables people to
purchase and send gift codes to others for
redemption of food and beverage items
from a selection of restaurants and bars.
The major takeaway: Draw from your
experiences and put those learnings into
your business.
Brandon Vlaar, HBA ’14, was born into an
entrepreneurial family and showed signs of
the entrepreneurial spirit at a young age.
At age 10, he started a skateboard
deck import business to bring low-cost
skateboards to his local community. At
age 12, he launched an online video game
business that enabled people to buy
fully levelled-up World of Warcraft game
characters. During high school, he
co-founded, with Ryan DeCaire, HBA ’14,
the Swing Fore Dreams Golf Tournament,
which raised $22,000 for McMaster
Children’s Hospital over four years.
By the time he arrived at Ivey, he was set
on becoming an entrepreneur, but said he
knew a formal education was important.
He took every entrepreneurial course
he could, and said he found the NVP
program particularly rewarding.
He cites the mentorship from Paul Hayman,
HBA ’81, holder of the John R. Currie
Executive Entrepreneur-in-Residence, and
NVP co-director, as invaluable.
“It’s unbelievable that we had access to an
executive and entrepreneur with this much
experience. He was an incredible resource,”
said Vlaar. “He inspired us to build the
best business we could and make it as
legitimate as possible from the beginning.
He taught us to pull from our experiences
and what we were taught in our case
classes – whether it was pricing models,
marketing, or expansion strategy – and
apply these learnings to our business. We
pushed our ideas as far as we could and
there was a huge push for us to become the
best versions of ourselves.”
The experience paid of. Vlaar’s team
successfully launched Tokynn, a mobile
application that allows people to buy gift
codes for products from London, Ontario-
based vendors, to share with others.
Although Tokynn is still running as a pet
project and has drawn interest from
potential investors, Vlaar’s team members
have moved on to other careers.
Vlaar and Cato Pastoll, HBA ’14, plan to
launch another business called Lending
Loop in fall 2014. Lending Loop is an online
marketplace that enables individuals to
lend money to local businesses, eliminating
involvement from banks.
While Vlaar said entrepreneurship was
always on his radar, he credits his Ivey
education for accelerating his move in
that direction.
“I de?nitely don’t think I would be starting
something so soon if it wasn’t for the NVP
program. NVP gave me the con?dence
that I needed to believe I can take an idea,
execute on it, and turn it into something,”
he said. “I still use all the resources Ivey
has ofered us to accelerate the business-
building process.”
FORGING CONNECTIONS THAT MAKE
A DIFFERENCE
The student: Nick Goel, HBA ’14.
Fellow team members: Prabhjot Basraon,
Evan Galpin, and Kaitlyn Lee, all HBA ’14.
Their business idea: An electronic
lock system for houses that uses radio-
frequency identi?cation (RFID) technology
for added ease of use.
The major takeaway: Connections matter.
When Nick Goel and his NVP team had
an idea to improve the current electronic
home lock devices by implementing a new
technology, they learned there is an uphill
battle to go from idea to execution.
They talked to bankers and suppliers. They
read every bit of research they could ?nd
on the radio-frequency identi?cation (RFID)
technology they planned to use, which
would make the devices more efcient
than current models using Bluetooth and
Wi? technology because their product
requires less battery power and works
faster. Speaking with other individuals who
had launched related products allowed the
team to learn from others’ experiences and
was a critical component in their success.
“Everybody has ideas, but not everyone can
implement them efectively,” he said. “Being
in the right position and talking to as many
people as possible is what sets you apart.”
Tokynn members (L-R) Enoch Tieu, Brandon Vlaar, Chantal Rapport, and Eric Fong.
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PROGRAM E XCE L L E NCE
In fact, Goel said one of his mentors in the
NVP program had developed RFID tags
for the shoes used by Boston Marathon
runners, to track when they crossed the
?nish line. This mentor connected the team
with a supplier in South Africa who could
make a working prototype for the product.
“The best part of the program was being
paired with mentors in the industry. If we
didn’t have these mentors, we wouldn’t
have made it as far as we did,” he said.
“When you have mentors who have done
it before and have tried the exact same
product or a similar technology with
diferent business models, you can learn
from their experiences and understand
what’s efective or inefective.”
Goel said the expert panel judging their
project gave positive feedback on their
business plan and presentation and other
individuals have also been interested in
helping the team to further develop the
project.
Although the team is still considering
taking the business idea further, Goel
and teammate Evan Galpin are working
together on other business ideas that they
might launch in the future.
Goel’s family has a business that he may
want to be part of or else he said he may
start one on his own. But either way, he
said the NVP program prepared him for
entrepreneurship in the real world and
fueled his interest in it.
“We spent more time on this project than
on any other course at Ivey. Not because we
had to, but because we wanted to,” he said.
New Entrepreneurs-in-Residence bring wealth
of experience to New Venture Project program
Paul Hayman, HBA ’81, and Bill Wignall have two things in common, which made them
ideal partners to lead Ivey’s New Venture Project (NVP) program.
One, they are both “serial entrepreneurs” who have led several successful companies.
Two, they both ?nd it rewarding to share their entrepreneurial experience with up-and-
coming young entrepreneurs.
Together they made a great team to guide HBA and MBA students enrolled in the NVP
program to develop their entrepreneurial ideas and business plans. During the 2013-
2014 academic year, Hayman oversaw the HBA NVP program, while Wignall worked
with both MBA and HBA students.
Hayman and Wignall joined the Morrissette Institute as co-Directors of the NVP
program and became holders of the John R. Currie Executive Entrepreneurs-in-
Residence in 2013. They replaced Ron Close, HBA ’81, who left Ivey for a role as CEO of
Pelmorex Media Inc. The Entrepreneurship-in-Residence program engages leaders in
senior management or startups to share their expertise with students.
“I like being around young people who are full of energy and excitement. I ?nd it
inspirational,” said Wignall. “My educational experience had a big impact on my life,
so this is just part of giving back and doing the right thing.”
Although Hayman is a successful entrepreneur, he says there are many lessons to be
gained from his failures as well.
“I’ve had some failures, but that’s inevitable when you push your edge. I’m a great
believer that all problems are just problems waiting to be solved,” he said. “I bring
curiosity and self-awareness to the process. The more self-aware you are, the less likely
you’ll have a massive failure.”
Hayman ran a College Pro franchise while in Ivey’s HBA program, and then became
a Chartered Accountant with PricewaterhouseCoopers. Due to his entrepreneurial
experience, he was made CEO and charged with turning around the company’s ailing
U.S. operation. He later was Executive Vice President of TFC, a Toronto-based holding
company, and led numerous companies. He is currently the CEO of Inclyne Inc., a real
estate asset sourcing company headquartered in Denver, Colorado and also operates
Con Brio Farm, an equestrian business in London, Ontario.
Wignall worked in a variety of areas with Canadian high-tech giant Nortel. He has since
led several global high-tech companies including Telezone, Electronics Workbench,
Truition, and Sangoma Technologies.
For more on the Ivey Entrepreneur-in-Residence program, visit go.ivey.ca/eir
Paul Hayman,
one of Ivey’s new
Entrepreneurs-
in-Residence
Nick Goel, HBA ’14
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Life as an EIR is an exhilarating ride
Getting involved is Steve Suske’s way of
giving back to Ivey.
Not just a few hours here and there,
Suske’s idea of giving back is to invest
meaningful time and energy into
developing the next generation of Ivey
entrepreneurs. After joining the Advisory
Council of the Morrissette Institute
?ve years ago, he was asked to mentor
groups of students as an Entrepreneur-in-
Residence (EIR) in the New Venture Project
(NVP) program.
At the time, Suske, MBA ’77 was the CEO of
Chartwell Retirement Residences. Despite a
busy schedule, he didn’t hesitate to accept
the ofer and it has been an exhilarating
ride ever since.
The NVP program is an entrepreneurial
?eld project that takes students through
the process of developing a business idea,
and seeing it through to presentation to an
external review panel of potential investors.
While some revisions to the program are
planned for the coming year, the basic
premise remains the same and, most
importantly, the students will continue to
receive mentorship from some of Canada’s
top entrepreneurs.
Suske certainly falls into this class of elite
Canadian entrepreneurs. He is the founder
of Chartwell Retirement Residences and
Regal Lifestyle Communities, both listed
on the TSX, as well as three privately held
seniors housing companies, the most
recent of which is Sussex Retirement
Living. He is now the CEO of Suske Capital,
a private equity ?rm that invests primarily
in the development of seniors housing
in North America, but also in renewable
energy and emerging technology
companies, such as Polski Solar S.A.
and StrategyFit.
“I am an entrepreneur and always have
been,” said Suske. “So I thought it would
be a great opportunity to give back to Ivey,
because the School has been really good to
me. It has opened a lot of doors.”
Every year, Suske mentors two groups of
MBA and HBA students. “I’ve had some
great groups along the way,” Suske said.
“The groups really get involved with the EIR
and are a joy to work with.”
Suske said he ?nds the ?nal presentations
incredibly enjoyable, as they provide a
window into the upcoming generation
of entrepreneurs and their ideas. “Ivey
students are really bright, enthusiastic,
and full of great ideas. It’s an exhilarating
experience for a guy like me to go back and
see such a high calibre of students at Ivey,”
said Suske, who has recently hired two
HBA students to help with his numerous
ventures at Suske Capital.
Being part of the EIR program also provides
a unique opportunity to network with other
Ivey entrepreneurs who share the same
passion for mentoring and giving back to
the School. “I’ve developed some great
relationships with other EIRs over the
years. It’s an added bene?t because they
are part of Ivey’s strong network,”
said Suske.
“It’s an exhilarating experience,” he
concluded. “You work with brilliant
students, highly accomplished EIRs and
insightful professors on some really
exciting projects. I look forward to being
involved for many years to come and
strongly recommend other Ivey alumni
to give back by getting involved in Ivey’s
EIR program.”
Read more about NVP on page 6.
Learn more about the program at
go.ivey.ca/NVP.
Steve Suske,
MBA ’77,
CEO, Suske Capital
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First Indian contender takes top prize in
IBK Capital-Ivey Business Plan Competition
Talk about a grand entrance.
Team Zostel, a team from Calcutta, India and the ?rst non-North American team to
participate in the IBK Capital-Ivey Business Plan Competition won the 16th annual
competition and went home $20,000 richer.
The competition, which ran January 24-25, 2014 at Ivey Business School and the
Spencer Leadership Centre, brought together 12 entrepreneurial teams from top
graduate schools including University of Louisville, University of Arkansas, University
of Manitoba, and York University. After two rounds of presentations to 22 judges with
experience in entrepreneurial and venture capital projects, Team Zostel won for their
idea for a hostel ofering amenities such as air-conditioning and access to power
and Wi-Fi to India’s burgeoning backpacker and tourist industry. The win was a huge
reward for the team, which had to raise money for ?ights, food, and lodging to travel
12,000 kilometres to compete in the competition
“Having an opportunity to test the waters in foreign territory and presenting it in front
of a highly experienced and neutral audience was strong enough motivation,” said
Team Zostel representative Akhil Malik.
In addition to entrepreneurial advice from judges, the event also included
presentations from four guest speakers: Albert Behr, President and CEO of Behr and
Associates; Daniel Kaute, President and CEO of Environmental Waste International;
Stephen Gunn, MBA ’81, co-founder, Chairman and CEO of Sleep Country Canada and
an Advisory Council member (see page 5); and David Simpson, Executive Director of
the Morrissette Institute and Director, Business Families Centre.
The IBK Capital-Ivey Business Plan Competition is supported by IBK Capital Corp.,
founded by Bill White, MBA ’69, and currently led by Michael White, MBA ’00.
For more on Ivey’s business plan competitions, visit go.ivey.ca/bizplancomp
Entrepreneur earns
chance to take
organization to the
next level
It wasn’t a business plan, elevator pitch or
any of the typical assets that draw attention
to a budding entrepreneurial venture.
Instead it was a strong video submission
and media push that created interest in
Braden Douglas’ business, Relevention
Marketing Inc. - a fast-growing marketing
?rm in Abbotsford, British Columbia.
Douglas was the winner of the inaugural
FutureShifters Video Contest, which
was launched by Ivey and KPMG’s
QuantumShift™ program in late 2013,
with the winner announced early in 2014.
The contest invited aspiring Canadian
entrepreneurs to create videos about their
businesses with the winner getting an
invitation to the program.
QuantumShift™ is a rigorous ?ve-day
developmental experience that challenges
Canada’s most promising entrepreneurs to
take their businesses to the next level. Only
40 entrepreneurs are accepted into the
exclusive invitation-only program annually.
The video contest allowed entrepreneurs
with smaller and less-established
businesses to vie for a spot in the program.
Douglas earned the judges’ votes by
outlining how QuantumShift™ could
efectively expand his business in Canada. In
his video, he explained that his ?rm has only
tapped one per cent of its potential market.
He won a place in the QuantumShift™ 2014
program, May 4-9, 2014.
PROGRAM E XCE L L E NCE
Michael White,Team Zostel representatives Akhil Malik and Paavan Nanda, and
David Simpson
Braden Douglas, Founder and
Principal of Relevention Marketing Inc.
World’s top entrepreneurial
minds gather at Ivey for
Babson research conference
When you bring together 300 of the world’s
best entrepreneurship researchers to share
their insights and ideas, the potential for
innovation and collaboration is enormous.
That’s why the Morrissette Institute was
proud to host the 34th Annual Babson
College Entrepreneurship Research
Conference (BCERC) June 4-7, 2014,
which attracted more than 300 professors
and doctoral students to Ivey’s London,
Ontario campus. The conference is widely
considered the world’s premier conference
for entrepreneurship research and rotates
annually among top business schools in
Europe and North America.
Hosting the conference was a chance for
the Institute to gain momentum on the
world stage as well as forge connections
with leading entrepreneurship academics.
“The conference gave us an opportunity
to showcase all that we have to ofer here
at Ivey, to attract future faculty members
and doctoral students, and to highlight
our case writing and outreach activities,
said Professor Simon Parker, Director of
Ivey’s Entrepreneurship Cross-Enterprise
Leadership Centre and Co-Director of the
2014 BCERC Conference. “Entrepreneurship
research is something that we do very well
and we are very interested in turning our
research ?ndings into useful advice for
entrepreneurs and policymakers.”
The event included two and a half days of
traditional conference sessions, a Doctoral
Consortium Program, and a gala awards
dinner featuring a performance from
Cirque Éloize.
Associate Professor Rob Mitchell, Donald
G. & Elizabeth R. Ness Faculty Fellow in
Entrepreneurship, was among the award
winners for his research on fear of failure
(see article on page 15).
Thought
Leadership
Pierre Morrissette, MBA ’72, and
Associate Professor Rob Mitchell
speaking with a researcher at the
Babson research conference.
2013/2014 PI ERRE L. MORRI SSETTE I NSTI TUTE FOR ENTREPRENEURSHI P ANNUAL REPORT | 11
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More than 300 professors and
doctoral students attended the
Babson research conference at Ivey
“Attending the conference, I felt proud of Ivey, Western, and the Institute for what
we have been doing over the past decade. This was an opportunity to showcase our
progress to the entrepreneurship academic community from around the world.”
– Pierre Morrissette, MBA ’72, Executive Chairman, Pelmorex Media Inc.
T HOUGHT L E ADE RSHI P
For more on the Babson Conference, visit go.ivey.ca/Babson2014
2013/2014 PI ERRE L. MORRI SSETTE I NSTI TUTE FOR ENTREPRENEURSHI P ANNUAL REPORT | 13
Top entrepreneurship researchers
share their ?ndings
Visiting researchers attending the 34th Annual Babson College Entrepreneurship Research Conference (BCERC) shared their insights on
some of the most important and pressing issues facing entrepreneurs in the 21st century.
The event featured 237 presentations and many of the papers presented at BCERC go on to appear as articles in top journals in the ?eld.
HE RE ARE SOME OF T HE F I NDI NGS SHARE D:
WHO: Andrew Corbett, Associate
Professor of Entrepreneurship,
Babson College
RESEARCH TOPIC: Designing
organizations for corporate
entrepreneurship
When it comes to bringing an
entrepreneurial mindset to large
corporations, you have to put the right
people in the right roles.
Andrew Corbett’s research on more than a
dozen Fortune 100 companies over a three-
year period showed that pushing people to
originate an idea and carry it every step of
the way to execution often doesn’t work.
Instead you need to create speci?c roles
and put the people best suited for those
roles in place.
“The roles we have for people are too
monstrous and too diversi?ed,” he said.
“There are better ways to create roles and
organize and design an organization so
that ?rms can consistently compete and
develop breakthrough innovation.”
WHO: Richard Hunt, Assistant Professor
of Strategy and Entrepreneurship,
Virginia Polytechnic Institute
RESEARCH TOPIC: The
entrepreneurship industry
What does entrepreneurship have in
common with tourism? They can both be
looked at as industries or a collection of
many diferent components.
In fact, Richard Hunt’s research revealed
entrepreneurship is a $12-billion global
industry and one of the top 10 fastest
growing industries over the past 15 years.
However, this entrepreneurship industry
can have a counter-intuitive in?uence,
motivating more people to create
companies even if they don’t have the
skills to keep the companies a?oat for the
long term.
“It appears to stimulate lots of ‘Can-do’
attitudes and individuals who believe that
their network or management acumen is
stronger than it is,” he said. “What it shows
is there are no shortcuts to being able to
found and operate a successful business.”
WHO: Sharon Alvarez, Koch Chair in
Entrepreneurship, University of Denver
RESEARCH TOPIC: Entrepreneurship
and the aha moment
Entrepreneurs often describe how they
derived their ideas as an “aha” moment,
but in fact, with further prodding, you’ll
learn those ideas took a long time to
gestate. The entrepreneurs may have
done some research. They likely had
conversations with potential customers
or suppliers. By no means did the ideas
happen overnight.
The research of Sharon Alvarez shows
the entrepreneurial process is a series of
events, not just one event.
“People think of it as being like when
Thomas Edison invented the light bulb,
but, in fact even that wasn’t such a smooth
transition. When we went from gas to
electricity, people were afraid it would
damage their eyes so the original light
bulbs were only 15 watts so they wouldn’t
make people afraid,” she said. “It was
not an aha moment. It was a series of
experiments. Entrepreneurship is also a
series of developments.”
14 | 2013/2014 PI ERRE L. MORRI SSETTE I NSTI TUTE FOR ENTREPRENEURSHI P ANNUAL REPORT
T HOUGHT L E ADE RSHI P
Babson research conference
in the media
Globe and Mail, May 29, 2014
Professor Simon Parker discussed the honour in hosting the
Babson research conference.
Read the article: go.ivey.ca/globeandmailbabson
CTV London, June 7, 2014
Professor Simon Parker outlined details of the Babson
research conference and why now is the time to be
an entrepreneur.
Watch the interview: go.ivey.ca/ctvbabson
Canadian Business, June 18, 2014
Einar Lier Madsen, a researcher at the Nordland Research
Institute in Norway, discussed why adding family members to
your company could be bad for business. Her research was
presented at the Babson Conference.
Read the article: go.ivey.ca/canadianbusinessbabson
Tweets bout the
Babson College
Entrepreneurship
Research
Conference at Ivey
Cases on Entrepreneurship
• General Mills Canada: Building a Culture of
Innovation (A), J. Robert Mitchell, Ken Mark,
Product Number: 9B14M015, 1/24/2014
The leadership at General Mills Canada knew the company
needed to move from an analysis-based, detail-oriented culture
to one that was more conducive to innovation. But building a
culture of innovation was challenging. The case looks at the
actions leaders might take to build a culture of innovation in the
face of uncertainty.
• Growing Tentree: Social Enterprise, Social Media and
Environmental Sustainability, Peter W. Moroz, Simon Parker,
Edward Gamble, Product Number: 9B14M030, 03/24/2014
Tentree was built on a sustainable and environmental philosophy,
but growing demand was putting that philosophy in jeopardy. The
case looks at ways to break into new markets and discusses the
con?ict between commercial imperatives and a social mission.
• Social Enterprise for Sustainable Communities: Ontario,
Canada, Oana Branzei, Marlene J. Le Ber, Patrick Shulist,
Product Number 9B1M046, 05/07/2014
Recognizing that communities might have reduced social
supports in the aftermath of the 2008 ?nancial crisis, Ottawa,
London, and Sarnia joined with Ivey Business School to develop
a process and tools to help communities create viable social
enterprises. The case looks at the dynamics of social constraint
and social opportunity as well as the role not-for-pro?t
organizations can play in accelerating social transformation.
Simon Parker speaks with CTV London’s Gerry Dewan
Generations of Ivey Entrepreneurs gathered
at Toronto’s Malaparte on November 14th to
celebrate Global Ivey Day and the growth of
entrepreneurship at Ivey. The Entrepreneurs
Breakfast also included a panel discussion with
recent graduates Sarah Landstreet, MBA ’13,
Trevor Koverko, HBA ’12, Simon Choy, HBA ’10,
and Andrew Tai, HBA ’08.
50
2013/2014 PI ERRE L. MORRI SSETTE I NSTI TUTE FOR ENTREPRENEURSHI P ANNUAL REPORT | 15
Research on entrepreneurship
that’s making an impact
Whether gauging how entrepreneurs perform, where they locate, or what drives them to success, researchers with the Morrissette
Institute’s Entrepreneurship Cross-Enterprise Leadership Centre are making an impact on the latest thinking on entrepreneurship.
HE RE ARE HI GHL I GHTS OF T HE RESE ARCH I N 2 01 3 / 1 4 T HAT I S MAKI NG A DI F F E RE NCE .
WHO: Professor Simon Parker, Director,
Entrepreneurship Cross-Enterprise
Leadership Centre
FINDING: Intrapreneurs don’t have an
edge over entrepreneurs
Intrapreneurs, those “internal
entrepreneurs” who set up a new venture
within an existing company, may get of
to a quicker start than entrepreneurs, but
entrepreneurs eventually close the gap.
Parker and co-author Matthias
Tietz, PhD ’13, Assistant Professor of
Entrepreneurship, IE Business School,
compared the factors associated with
entrepreneurial and intrapreneurial
activity. Parker and Tietz (who did his PhD
at Ivey) found entrepreneurs catch up to
intrapreneurs after three or four years and,
in the long run, there is little diference
between the two.
WHO: Assistant Professor Larry Plummer
FINDING: Location is king
Location, location, location may be the
real estate agents’ mantra, referring to
the fact that geography matters when
?nding a home. The same holds true for
entrepreneurs, said Plummer, who is
researching why companies start where
they do and how those decisions afect how
the companies perform.
Plummer has already looked at high-tech
startups in Oklahoma and found the farther
away they were from a metropolitan area,
the less likely they were to receive venture
capital funding. In fact, some companies try
to imitate or look like city-based startups to
acquire such funding. He is now turning his
attention to Canadian entrepreneurs and
said his long-term goal is to create a set of
principles that will help any entrepreneur in
any industry to pick a good location.
WHO: Associate Professor Rob Mitchell,
Donald G. & Elizabeth R. Ness Faculty
Fellow in Entrepreneurship
FINDING: Fear of failure leads
entrepreneurs to opportunities
Although fear is known to stop people
in their tracks, in some cases it leads
entrepreneurs to opportunities.
Mitchell, along with his co-authors
Professor James C. Hayton and PhD
Candidate Gabriella Cacciotti of Warwick
Business School, Post-Doctoral Research
Fellow Andreas Giazitzoglu of Anglia
Ruskin University, and Ivey PhD Candidate
Chris Ainge, interviewed more than 60
entrepreneurs from Canada and the U.K.
on how they react to fear of failure. They
found, in some cases, the fear motivates
them to put more efort into achieving their
goals, rather than avoiding them.
Their paper “Understanding Fear of Failure
in Entrepreneurship: A Cognitive Process
Framework,” won the National Federation
of Independent Business Award for the
Best Paper for Excellence in Research on
the General Topic of Entrepreneurship, at
the 2014 Babson College Entrepreneurship
Research Conference at Ivey in June 2014
(see page 11).
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Entrepreneurship research
making an impact on Italy
Small businesses and entrepreneurs play
critical roles in driving economies forward.
But are they enough to turn around Italy’s
grim economic picture?
Professor Simon Parker, Director,
Entrepreneurship Cross-Enterprise
Leadership Centre, investigated the
issue as part of a research team for the
Organization for Economic Co-operation
and Development (OECD).
The team prepared a report on small- and
medium-sized enterprises (SMEs) and
entrepreneurship in Italy for the OECD’s
Centre for Entrepreneurship, SMEs and
Local Development. The report includes
policy recommendations for the Italian
government to encourage more enterprise,
in hope of boosting the economy. Italy has
been in recession for more than ?ve years
and its national debt and unemployment
rate are ongoing challenges.
Global
Community
Professor Simon Parker, Director, Entrepreneurship Cross-Enterprise Leadership Centre
2013/2014 PI ERRE L. MORRI SSETTE I NSTI TUTE FOR ENTREPRENEURSHI P ANNUAL REPORT | 17
“Entrepreneurs tend to create more
jobs than large ?rms, and they’re a
very important source of innovation in
the economy,” said Parker. “Like most
countries, Italy has a large number of very
small companies that aren’t very innovative
and exciting, but it also has a strong core of
medium-sized ?rms that are world-beaters
at what they do. Many people we spoke to
felt that this potential was being wasted.”
Among the ?ndings and recommendations,
the report addresses three major issues:
1. The problem: Italy has a sophisticated
credit market, but there is little venture
capital and angel ?nancing available
because its court system makes it
difcult to enforce contracts.
The solution: Parker’s team
suggested the Italian government
set up parallel courts to deal
speci?cally with investment disputes.
It also recommended ?ne-tuning tax
incentives for innovation and improving
commercialization practices to transfer
university expertise to commercial
innovation;
2. The problem: Foreign Direct
Investment (FDI) in Italy is low.
The solution: Parker’s team calls for
reform of the courts to ensure SMEs
capture more FDI;
3. The problem: SMEs have focused
their export eforts primarily on
Europe, rather than exploring
additional markets.
The solution: Parker’s team
recommended a German model of
“?rm pools” that work with a
government agency dedicated to
opening new markets.
The research project was an opportunity to
raise Ivey’s pro?le in Europe as well as have
real-world impact.
Former Prime Minister
highlights strengths of
family business at
10th anniversary celebration
Ivey’s Business Families Centre marked the 10th anniversary of its annual family
business day celebration with an address from former Canadian Prime Minister and
established entrepreneur Paul Martin.
He shared his experiences transitioning back into family business from public service
at the 10th Annual National Family Business Day Celebration at the Hilton Hotel in
London, Ontario on April 11, 2014. The event is jointly hosted by the Business
Families Centre and the Canadian Association of Family Enterprise (CAFE)
Southwestern Ontario, and also includes award presentations to southwestern
Ontario family businesses.
Martin has worked with some of Canada’s most successful business families,
including the Desmarais Family (Power Corporation of Canada). He gave advice on
passing on leadership of a family business to the next generation, particularly the role
of mentorship.
“Senior people are able to take younger people and teach them the skills of
management,” he said.
Martin said family businesses are often sustainable because their core values align
from generation to generation.
In addition to Martin’s presentation, London, Ontario-based Mofatt & Powell Limited
was named the Southwestern Ontario Family Enterprise of the Year.
Former Prime Minister Paul Martin and Business Families Centre Director
David Simpson at the 10th Annual Business Family Day Celebration in April 2014
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GLOBAL COMMUNI T Y
Ivey alumna named Canada’s top
female entrepreneur in 2013
Kelsey Ramsden, MBA ’04, runs three
successful businesses, one which is
a multi-million-dollar enterprise in
Kelowna, B.C., 4,000 kilometres away
from her London, Ontario home.
No wonder she was named top female
entrepreneur in 2013 for the second
consecutive year in PROFIT and
Chatelaine Magazine’s Top 100 Canadian
Female Entrepreneurs list.
Ramsden, an Entrepreneurship Advisory
Council member, ?rst made her mark
with Belvedere Place Development Ltd.,
a civil-construction company launched
in 2005 in Kelowna, B.C. The company’s
success earned her the top spot on the
Top 100 Canadian Female Entrepreneurs
list in 2012. She is also well-known
for SparkPlay™, an educational-toy
subscription service founded in 2012.
Her recent venture is Kelsey Ramsden
Inc., a startup management consultancy
launched in 2013 that advises fellow
entrepreneurs via one-on-one meetings,
blogs and public appearances.
In addition to Ramsden, the following
Ivey alumnae and QuantumShift™
Fellows made the PROFIT and Chatelaine
Magazine’s Top 100 Canadian Female
Entrepreneurs list:
Shannon Bowden-Smed, QS ’04
Victoria Sopik, QS ’09
PJ Ferguson, QS ’04
Teresa Spinelli, QS ’11
Madeleine Paquin, HBA ’84
Mandy Farmer, QS ’11
Eveline Charles, QS ’07; and
Sandra Oliver, EMBA ’97
Kelsey Ramsden, MBA ’04, speaking at Ivey’s MBA Convocation in April 2014
In the Media
Financial Post, March 24, 2014
Writer Mary Teresa Bitti provides a behind-
the-scenes look at the pitch from Deland
Jessop, Kalpesh Rathod, and Adam Cooper,
all MBA ’02, for their business, Counting
Sheep Cofee, on CBC Television’s
Dragons’ Den.
Read the article: go.ivey.ca/
?nancialpostdragonsden
Globe and Mail, March 13, 2014
David Simpson, Executive Director of the
Morrissette Institute and Director of Ivey’s
Business Families Centre, discussed why
Canadian MBA students are pursuing
entrepreneurship, while Sarah Landstreet,
MBA ’13, shares how Ivey’s program
prepared her for launching her business,
Georgette Packaging.
Read the article: go.ivey.ca/
globeandmailmbaentrepreneurs
Globe and Mail, February 19, 2014
Mallorie Brodie, HBA ’13, discusses
Bridgit, the cloud-based smartphone
application she developed to help unveil
construction defects.
Read the article: go.ivey.ca/
malloriebrodie
Globe and Mail, October 3, 2013
Professor Eric Morse, Associate Dean,
Programs, and Cameron Heaps, QS ’04,
discuss Heaps’ business, Steam
Whistle Brewing Inc. as a case study
for entrepreneurs.
Read the article: go.ivey.ca/
steamwhistle
Financial Post, August 14, 2013
Associate Professor Rob Mitchell discusses
the bene?t of exchange programs for
fostering the entrepreneurial spirit, while
Ryan Bruehlmann, HBA ’08, and Rick Taylor,
HBA ’08, MBA ’11, discuss how the idea for
their luxury clothing line, FERKNOT, was
prompted by an exchange trip to Hong Kong.
Read the article: go.ivey.ca/ferknot
Pierre L. Morrissette Institute for Entrepreneurship
www.ivey.uwo.ca/entrepreneurship
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