Real software, not slides
Students learn manufacturing, inventory, eCommerce, accounting, and supply chain on professional ERP — the same category of tools used by real businesses.
What if students learned business by actually running one? Using professional ERP software, students manufacture products, manage inventory, operate online stores, and trade with other student-run companies — in a live business economy.
Not a traditional business class. A hands-on entrepreneurial experience where students operate real companies using the same software trusted by businesses worldwide.
Students learn manufacturing, inventory, eCommerce, accounting, and supply chain on professional ERP — the same category of tools used by real businesses.
Companies buy and sell from each other, negotiate pricing, hire service providers, and track profits. Students learn how businesses interact, not just how they work internally.
Every student leaves with documented operations, financial reports, and project artifacts — concrete evidence of leadership, problem-solving, and applied learning.
Each student takes on a real business function and contributes to a working company. Roles rotate so students experience how every part of a business connects.
Sets company direction, coordinates teams, makes strategic decisions, and is accountable for overall performance.
Designs production workflows, manages bills of materials, and ensures products are built efficiently and on schedule.
Tracks stock levels, manages warehouses, and coordinates with suppliers to keep production running without overstocking.
Negotiates with other student-run companies, sources materials, and closes sales — learning real B2B and B2C dynamics.
Builds and runs the company's online store, develops product positioning, and drives demand through marketing campaigns.
Manages the books, tracks revenue and expenses, prepares financial reports, and analyzes profitability across product lines.
Handles customer relationships, resolves issues, and coordinates fulfillment — the human side of operations.
Buy and sell products. Manage manufacturing workflows. Hire service providers. Negotiate pricing. Solve operational challenges. Track profits and performance — across a network of student-run companies that depend on one another.
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