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DEGREE REGULATIONS & PROGRAMMES OF STUDY 2024/2025

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Postgraduate Course: CodeBase Bridge: Playbooks for Building Startups (fusion online) (EFIE11144)

Course Outline
SchoolEdinburgh Futures Institute CollegeCollege of Arts, Humanities and Social Sciences
Credit level (Normal year taken)SCQF Level 11 (Postgraduate)
Course typeOnline Distance Learning AvailabilityAvailable to all students
SCQF Credits10 ECTS Credits5
SummaryCodeBase Bridge is a course for students who want to learn about technology start-up thinking, innovation and entrepreneurship. The course is an introduction for students with early-stage start-up ideas, or who are just at the beginning of that ideation process. The course focuses on three key things: helping you turn an idea into a sustainable business; breaking down barriers to the start-up world by demystifying the jargon around tech entrepreneurship; and sharing toolkits and frameworks of product and service innovation to give students the power to respond to fast change and cultivate resilience in a turbulent world.
Course description Following the EFI model, the course will consist of a pre-intensive period that will introduce students to the principles of start-up culture through a series of pre-recorded videos from CodeBase member companies and entrepreneurs that have been through the start-up process. The pre-intensive period will also organise students into teams, followed by a fusion bonding experience that will galvanise them ready for the intensive sessions. Discussion boards will help students to de-mystify any jargon that they encounter.

The intensive two-day sessions will be delivered in fusion form, with students remaining in their teams. The sessions will pursue four core concepts:
1. Markets: Introductory lecture on technology markets and research, followed by challenge-based exercise in defining a social innovation opportunity.
2. Understanding Your Customers and Jobs To Be Done (JTBD) theory and its difference to other service innovation methods, introduced with a live lecture followed by group work applying JTBD theory to their idea.
3. Learning loops will be introduced with a situated example and lecture followed by group exercise in lean experimentation methods to test business ideas with real customers.
4. Business models & funding strategies will be covered by a lecture followed by an introduction to the role of pitching and Pitch Decks.

Throughout the intensive days, peer learning and development will be supported by semi-structured networking sessions to retain a sense of teamwork toward the development of a hypothetical product/service. Group pitches will provide an iterative opportunity for teams to 'play back' their ideas at the end of each intensive day, with feedback provided by other class members. By the end of day two, teams will be inspired toward an idea for a new product or service, and have insight into the tools to make it more likely to become valuable if it were pursued.

The post-intensive period will consist of individuals in each team electing to take one particular aspect of the core concepts: markets, JTBD, learning loops and business models/ investment, and develop a response that demonstrate insight and understanding.

This course is complementary to other courses that sit within the EFI portfolio that address entrepreneurship such as the EFIE11068 / EFIE11069 Education Technology & Entrepreneurship. Key differences across this course and EFIE11068 / EFIE11069 Education Technology & Entrepreneurship are the different ways in which both course place emphasis upon different aspects of Entrepreneurship. This course focused upon the development of playbooks with involvement from industrial partners and is co-led by CodeBase (Scottish based incubator), whilst the Education Technology & Entrepreneurship course focuses upon value creation and ethical tensions for products within a particular sector (Education).

Edinburgh Futures Institute (EFI) - Online Fusion Course Delivery Information:

The Edinburgh Futures Institute will teach this course in a way that enables online and on-campus students to study together. This approach (our 'fusion' teaching model) offers students flexible and inclusive ways to study, and the ability to choose whether to be on-campus or online at the level of the individual course. It also opens up ways for diverse groups of students to study together regardless of geographical location. To enable this, the course will use technologies to record and live-stream student and staff participation during their teaching and learning activities. Students should note that their interactions may be recorded and live-streamed. There will, however, be options to control whether or not your video and audio are enabled.

As part of your course, you will need access to a personal computing device. Unless otherwise stated activities will be web browser based and as a minimum we recommend a device with a physical keyboard and screen that can access the internet.
Entry Requirements (not applicable to Visiting Students)
Pre-requisites Co-requisites
Prohibited Combinations Other requirements None
Information for Visiting Students
Pre-requisitesNone
High Demand Course? Yes
Course Delivery Information
Not being delivered
Learning Outcomes
On completion of this course, the student will be able to:
  1. Demonstrate a critical understanding for the principal theories, concepts and principles within start-up culture;
  2. Critically review, consolidate and extend knowledge and thinking across an aspect of entrepreneurship derived from exposure to 'real world' start-up companies;
  3. Communicate with peers, more senior colleagues and specialists, using key terminology to explain a core concept within start-up culture;
  4. Demonstrate the ability to explain with coherence and critical insight the opportunities and limitations that a particular concept will allow a start-up company to succeed.
Reading List
Essential Reading:
The lean startup : how constant innovation creates radically successful businesses / Eric Ries. London, England: Portfolio Penguin; 2011
Disciplined entrepreneurship 24 steps to a successful startup / Bill Aulet. Hoboken, NJ : Wiley; 2013
Competing Against Luck: The Story of Innovation and Customer Choice / Clayton M. Christensen, Karen Dillon, Taddy Hall, David S. Duncan. Harper Business; 2016
The Startup Playbook: Secrets of the Fastest-Growing Startups from their Founding Entrepreneurs / David S. Kidder. Chronicle Books LLC; 2012
How to Think for Yourself, Paul Graham; 2020. Web link: http://paulgraham.com/think.html
Do Things that Don't Scale, Paul Graham; 2013. Web link: http://paulgraham.com/ds.html
How to Lose Time and Money, Paul Graham; 2010. Web link: http://paulgraham.com/selfindulgence.html
The Soul of a Start-Up, Ranjay Gulati; 2019. Web link: https://hbr.org/2019/07/the-soul-of-a-start-up
Continuous Discovery Habits: Discover Products that Create Customer Value and Business Value / Teresa Torres. Product Talk LLC.
Obviously Awesome: How to Nail Product Positioning so Customers Get It, Buy It, Love It / April Dunford. London: Ambient Press

Recommended Reading:
Running Lean: Iterate from Plan A to a Plan That Works / Ash Maurya. London, O'Reilly Media, 2012
Sense & respond: how successful organizations listen to customers and create new products continuously. Jeff Gothelf and Josh Seiden. American Library Association CHOICE: Current Reviews for Academic Libraries, 2017-06-01, Vol.54 (10), p.1541
This Is Service Design Methods: A Companion to This Is Service Design Doing / Marc Stinkdorn and Markus Edgar Hormess. London, O'Reilly, 2018.
Further Paul Graham essays: http://paulgraham.com/articles.html

Further Reading:
The hard thing about hard things: building a business when there are no easy answers / Ben Horowitz.
Horowitz, Ben, author. HarperCollins Publishers, New York, NY; 2014
Gödel, Escher, Bach: an eternal golden braid / Douglas R. Hofstadter. Hofstadter, Douglas R., 1945- London: Penguin; 2000
Additional Information
Graduate Attributes and Skills 1. Students will develop a critical awareness of theories, concepts and principles that support the development of new products and services within the contemporary culture of entrepreneurship and technology start-ups (SQ Characteristic 1).

2. Students will apply knowledge, skills and understanding gained from lectures and activities provided by entrepreneurs who have had direct experience of starting their own technology business, into the speculative development of their own company (SQ Characteristic 2).

3. Students will gain cognitive skills by applying the one or more core concepts that underpin the development of a successful product or service to their own speculative company (SQ Characteristic 3).

4. Students will develop communication, ICT and analytic skills through the presentation of ideas and principles within their teams and to other teams through the use of 'pitch decks', and through a summative essay (SQ Characteristic 4).

5. Students will gain autonomy, accountability and learn to work with others by collaborating in small groups to develop a speculative company, including the development of a shared discussion boards and through the design of a new product or service (SQ Characteristic 5).
KeywordsCodeBase,Tech Startup,Entrepreneurship
Contacts
Course organiserDr Alessandro Rosiello
Tel: (0131 6)50 8246
Email: Alessandro.Rosiello@ed.ac.uk
Course secretaryMr David Murphy
Tel:
Email: dmurphy7@ed.ac.uk
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