
Start up
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.
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.
Are you interested in becoming an entrepreneur?
Every journey is unique. Explore the opportunities that interest you.
It was a lovely late-April afternoon on Central Michigan University’s campus. The sun shone. Maple buds popped. A bird sang. And in the grass next to Anspach Hall, students boxed off grass and photographed bones, shoes and other evidence of a grisly crime.
It was, of course, just a class assignment, a way to get first-hand experience in how crime scene professionals knit together the facts of someone’s untimely end.
In one of the boxes, Cathy Willermet, the faculty member leading the course, showed students how to use a protractor and a length of yarn to plot on graph paper where in the box a rib lay.
“Triangulation is the fastest way,” said Willermet, chairwoman of the Philosophy, Anthropology and Religion Department. Students, divided into groups for the assignment, gathered around to watch.
The students went back to their assigned boxes to give it a try themselves.
For Aaliyah Howard, who is graduating this year with an eye on a career in law, it was an opportunity to cap her undergraduate career with an elective related to something that’s always intrigued her.
She took forensics in high school, during the pandemic, so this gave her a chance to put what she learned in the classroom into practice.
It was also a great learning experience, she said. Her group mapped out the evidence in their box and sketched it out.
But she took the course because she needed an elective and one of her friends said it was a lot of fun.
This semester’s course is full, like it normally is, Willermet said. It isn’t a requirement for Howard’s degree, but it is for the forensic studies certificate.
The certificate is designed to provide students with a solid experience studying forensics and also meet the needs of future employers.
Willermet said she and Kyle Scherr, a faculty member in the Psychology Department, are eyeing a potential expansion of the program into a minor. Employers have told her they like students who pair studies in forensic science with another major like biology or psychology.
They’re also exploring opportunities for interdisciplinary study with other departments.
Explore special opportunities to learn new skills and travel the world.
Present your venture and win BIG at the New Venture Challenge.
Boost your entrepreneurial skills through our workshops, mentor meetups and pitch competitions.
Learn about the entrepreneurship makerspace on campus in Grawn Hall.
Present a 2-minute pitch at the Make-A-Pitch Competition and you could win prizes and bragging rights!
Connect with mentors and faculty who are here to support the next generation of CMU entrepreneurs.
Are you a CMU alum looking to support CMU student entrepreneurs? Learn how you can support or donate to the Entrepreneurship Institute.