Dec 22, 2024  
School of Graduate Studies Calendar, 2015-2016 
    
School of Graduate Studies Calendar, 2015-2016 [-ARCHIVED CALENDAR-]

Engineering Entrepreneurship and Innovation, M.E.E.I.


The Master of Engineering Entrepreneurship and Innovation program is a fast paced program aimed at highly motivated students.

Admission


Applications for admission will be made directly through the Walter G. Booth School of Engineering Practice. In addition to the general requirements for entry into a graduate program in Engineering, candidates applying to the Master of Engineering Entrepreneurship and Innovation program must hold an Honours Bachelor’s degree in engineering or closely related discipline, with at least a B- average (equivalent to a McMaster 7.0 GPA out of 12) in the final year in all courses.

Strong letters of recommendation are also required. The delivery of the program relies heavily on the synergy created between members of student teams, and successful operation of the program requires that each cohort have an appropriate blend of skills and experience. Therefore, each applicant will be interviewed. A strong performance in the interview is a critical requirement for admission.

Candidates may be enrolled on a full- or part-time basis. Students are admitted for September only.

Prospective applicants who did not attain the required standing in their undergraduate degree, but who have at least four (4) years of relevant work experience, should discuss their situation with the appropriate program director. If the experience is deemed sufficient, the director may then recommend an interview. Evidence of ability to do graduate work will still be required. (See Sections 2.1.1 Admission Requirements for Master’s Degree  and 2.1.5 Admission of Students with Related Work Experience or Course Work Beyond the Bachelor’s Degree  in the Graduate Calendar.)

A candidate is required to complete successfully two one-term advanced engineering courses and the four compulsory Engineering Entrepreneurship and Innovation module courses. Additionally, full-time students must successfully complete SEP 771 . A faculty advisor will assist the student in selecting relevant engineering courses. Students will normally be required to complete two graduate level (700-level) engineering courses in fulfillment of the requirements for Advanced Engineering Studies. Advanced engineering studies are an integral component of the program and are offered by various departments in the Faculty of Engineering and beyond. The objective is to acquire leading-edge engineering skills and apply them to the enterprise project.

Students who take Leading Innovation and/or Entrepreneurial Opportunity Identification may be granted advanced standing for these required courses upon registration in SEP programs.

Innovation and Entrepreneurial Skills Development


Four compulsory enterprise modules will focus on providing the Master’s degree candidate basic skills to select an idea with good potential, manage the innovation process, then create and manage the business outcome. The skills will broadly cover all the business life cycle from start, growth and sustainability. The modules will develop an understanding of both the innovation and the entrepreneurial processes through lectures, workshops and hands-on work and will enable the student to fully exploit the potential of the engineering enterprise project.

Each module is considered the equivalent of a half-course as defined by the School of Graduate Studies, but will contain elements of lecture, group work, presentation and other activities as defined in the course outline. The module courses will be delivered in an intensive format; and it is expected that students will take the module courses in sequenced numerical order. The module courses are:

Engineering Enterprise Project


The Engineering Enterprise Project will run throughout the entire study period and will result in both a business and a technical plan for an engineering prototype product (ideally with an actual prototype device or software produced) with an identified customer base and a plan outlining the way to commercialization. The project will bring together the two complementary streams of activities, one technical and the other entrepreneurial, to bring an idea to the proof of concept phase. The Entrepreneurial course stream, which will run coincidentally with the advanced engineering studies, will guide the technological work performed in the research laboratory so that the concept becomes, by the end of the degree, the nucleus of a business proposition. The Engineering Enterprise Project will have three phases, which will end with project gate assessments to determine the project’s readiness to proceed to the next phase:

Phase 1 - Project Preparation


Market research to arrive at a proposed product or service with clear value proposition; define the market for the intended product or service revealing competitive threat, opportunities, and margins and volumes projections; draw up development plans for the product or service indicating the required resources and estimated investment cost; seek the resources within the university and without; build a team of support that might include a partner.

Phase 2 - Technical Research and the Development of the Engineering Prototype


Develop an engineering research plan, identifying key issues and opportunities (with the assistance of academic technical and business supervisors); conduct technical research and development; implement the engineering research plan within the research group in the host-engineering department; build a development network within the engineering research community; ready the technology for transfer to market; conduct initial market engagement to get customer feedback and reactions.

Phase 3 - Technology Transfer to Market:


Apply for IP protection; develop a path-to-market strategy; develop a business case; present to funding institutions and explore business arrangements; plan for business start-up. Each phase has two equally important components, one technical and the other business:

The Phase 3 evaluation will be a defense of your project in an oral examination to your board (technical mentor, enterprise advisor, business advisor and your business mentor). Candidates are required to complete and pass through each phase in order to graduate.

Peer Evaluation and the Enterprise Project


The ability to effectively work in a team environment is an important learning outcome of team-based project work on the Enterprise project, as in individual learning outcomes developed in a team environment. Candidates will be mentored on their progress in this aspect by their enterprise advisor based on input from their peers in the project team and from assesment of the enterprise advisor. Team member evaluations will be collected in confidence from team members by the enterprise advisor, or their designate, on a six-month basis. Every six months the Enterprise Advisor will review the performance of the individual candidate in the team with the candidate. The enterprise advisor will generate an assessment of performance. To successfully complete the program, the candidate must maintain an average rating of “Good” over the span of the enterprise project in team assesment and demonstrate individual achievement in team experienced learning outcomes.

Enterprise Development Lab


The MEEI program is constructed in such a way as to allow students from different engineering disciplines to work in a common learning environment - the Enterprise Development Lab. The Lab is equipped with state-of-the-art communications equipment designed to facilitate both internal and external collaboration with faculty, colleagues, mentors, technical supervisors and private sector representatives.