Introducing the School of Technology, Innovation, and Entrepreneurship

New undergraduate degrees meet West Valley business needs
The entrepreneurial leadership program, offered exclusively on the West campus, gives students a broad foundation in business and focuses on starting, leading, and managing entrepreneurial organizations. Potential career paths include working in entrepreneurial-minded roles in existing organizations as well as creating or joining new ventures and small businesses of all types.
Both new degrees have a foundation in business data analytics instead of calculus. “We recognize that there are several practical business careers that don’t require higher-level math courses,” explains Michele Pfund, senior associate dean of undergraduate programs. “Offering more accessible paths to earn a business degree is key to meeting employer and community needs.”
Highly ranked supply chain program to get in-person home





Director of TIE and Senior Associate Dean of Faculty
New centers marry research and impact
W. P. Carey will also launch the Center for Experiential Learning within TIE. Just as innovation is critical in business, it is also important in education. The center will connect students with practical, applied experiences in support of for-profit and not-for-profit companies.
Gopalakrishnan Mohan, the new director of TIE and senior associate dean of faculty, is looking forward to the influence of the new school. “Our commitment to serving our students and community is self-evident through TIE,” he says. “From the new degree programs that are holistically changing the fundamentals of business and research activities that engage with local business, W. P. Carey is leading impactful innovation in the West Valley.”
wpcarey.asu.edu/tie-school.