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Isabella Bank Institute for Entrepreneurship

We are a dedicated institute for student entrepreneurs across campus and beyond. We aim to maximize your success by fostering your entrepreneurial mindset, promote inter-disciplinary collaboration and provide support for the creation and development of your new ventures. Jumpstart your ideas and get involved today!

Tune in for excitement!

Passion. Potential. Pitches. Don't miss any of the 2025 New Venture Challenge excitement.

Tune in Friday, April 11 at 1 p.m. for great ideas and fierce competition. Then, join the judges, mentors, spectators and teams as they see who is going home with thousands of dollars in venture financing. The awards broadcast begins at 6:30 p.m. and one team will walk away as the overall best venture. 

Start your entrepreneurial journey

Central Michigan University’s College of Business Administration is the home of the Isabella Bank Institute for Entrepreneurship and the first Department of Entrepreneurship in the state of Michigan. We are a student-centric hub where experiential, curricular, and external entrepreneurial opportunities intersect.

Our mission is to maximize student success by fostering a campus-wide entrepreneurial mindset that promotes inter-disciplinary collaboration and the creation of new ventures.

We aim to create innovative programming, boost cross-campus and ecosystem collaboration and provide a comprehensive mentoring program.

Our institute provides extracurricular opportunities and is open to all undergraduate and graduate CMU students.

Student opportunities

  • Meet experienced alumni, faculty, entrepreneurs, investors, and other business and political leaders.
  • Learn practical skills, innovative thinking, and connect with mentors and entrepreneurial resources.
  • Attend skill-building workshops and compete in pitch competitions and Hackathons.
  • Take part in special scholarship programs and travel experiences.
  • Pitch your venture at our signature New Venture Challenge event and compete for up to $20,000 in cash awards.

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      Every journey is unique. Explore the opportunities that interest you.

      Internship yields surgery e-book

      by Sanjna Jassi
      CMED student creates an e-book for brain tumor patients while interning at Yale Cancer Center.

      Career coaches probably wouldn't recommend what CMU College of Medicine student Brian Shear did during his first-year summer internship.

      When his mentor at the Smilow Cancer Hospital and Yale Cancer Center showed him the text-filled, 56-page informational binder she recently had put together for brain tumor patients, Shear immediately began thinking how he could make it better.

      The former Apple Inc. employee asked her if he could create an electronic version, carefully noting that it would be easier to read, cost less to produce than the $50 per binder and be accessible to anyone in the world.

      "Coincidentally, we were thinking about the same thing," said his mentor, Dr. Jennifer Moliterno, chief of neurosurgical oncology in the department of neurosurgery. "He had shown himself to be very capable, so we turned him loose.

      "A lot of people have ideas," Moliterno said, "but he was able to take his to completion in a matter of weeks and do a phenomenal job."

      On Sept. 29, the e-book was unveiled at the Connecticut Brain Tumor Alliance's charity walk-run.

      From Apple to Central Michigan University

      As a biology and chemistry undergraduate at George Washington University in Washington, D.C., Shear worked with an orthopedic surgeon and was considering it as a possible career. But he also was very interested in technology.

      Scrolling through Facebook one day, he saw an ad from Apple looking for someone to do marketing and development in the area. Although he didn't have a technology background, he decided he had nothing to lose by applying.

      Apple hired him because he had a different way of looking at things, his boss told him.

      While at Apple, he was able to also do some work for its health care division.

      "I always found myself drifting back to medical stuff," he said.

      The career-deciding moment for Shear occurred on a plane ride from Arizona back to D.C., when soon after takeoff the woman sitting in front of him passed out.

      Shear, along with an internal medicine physician and a lifeguard, jumped out of their seats and started working on her.

      Shear pulled off his Apple watch and put it on the woman to monitor her pulse. When the plane landed, he gave the watch to the emergency technician so doctors could have her pulse data from the flight.

      "That's when I decided that I want to go to medical school. I want to be the one using the latest technology and be a part of pushing it forward, not the one making and selling it."

      CMU: A place to "make my mark for innovation"

      When Shear started looking for a medical school, he focused on Michigan. He had fallen in love with the state while working for Apple in Ann Arbor.

      CMU caught his eye because the College of Medicine is young, has the latest technology and a team-based learning structure.

      "As a newer program, there is a greater opportunity for me to make my mark for innovation, to impact people's lives in a positive way," he said. "I looked at the College of Medicine like I would a startup business."

      CMU makes its mark on Shear

      Shear credits CMED for giving him the skills that not only helped him land the internship at Yale, but to do well enough to have his e-book idea taken seriously.

      He particularly noted the clinical skills and art of medicine classes, in which students learn to look at the human side of medicine, and his involvement with the Blue Water Angels at CMED, which helped in pitching his idea to Moliterno.

      "I allowed him to pursue the e-book because he had been doing a phenomenal job," said Moliterno, who Shear would daily observe in the operating rooms, during patient visits in her clinic and while doing rounds in the wards.

      "I have a busy neurosurgical practice, and so it's important that students who work with me are able to take initiative and excel with their own motivation. Brian went above and beyond in every realm."

      She said the hospital leaders were so impressed that they wanted him to transfer medical schools.

      "I looked into it, but it doesn't look like that's going to happen," she said. "It's good for CMU that they get to keep him."

      The electronic book is currently being reviewed by Yale's legal team with the hope of making it available by the end of the year.

      Questions?