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Future Tech Leaders Dive into New Program

Students in the new joint MS/MBA: Engineering Sciences Program have the opportunity to participate in five design cycles, which build the skills needed to take a product concept from hunch to launch.
Lying in bed each morning, Emily Batt (MS/MBA 2020) yearned to sleep a little longer, but had
no way of knowing when her roommate would finish her seemingly endless shower. That frustration inspired a team project in the new MS/MBA: Engineering Sciences Program, offered jointly
by HBS and the Harvard John A. Paulson School
of Engineering and Applied Sciences (SEAS). With just three days to complete a prototype, Batt’s team created a connected device and mobile app that delays a smartphone alarm from sounding until the shower is free.
Batt’s ingenuity is emblematic of the 29 students from around the world who comprise the first cohort, which started last fall. The two-year program, which confers both an MBA and a Master of Science in Engineering Sciences, is designed to train future leaders of technology ventures by combining their passion for innovation and engineering with an in-depth understanding of management and leadership.
“These students want to build things and lead companies that make the world a better place.
The program gives them the insights and tools
to take their ideas to the next level,” notes Thomas Eisenmann, faculty co-chair of the program and
the Howard H. Stevenson Professor of Business Administration at HBS.
Through courses in business and engineering,
as well as specially designed integrated courses co-taught by HBS and SEAS faculty, students hone their technical expertise and gain the business
skills needed to commercialize an idea or lead a tech venture. They practice design thinking, build prototypes, and pitch their ideas to potential investors. During the summer, they work on their own startup concepts or intern at technology ventures.
Eisenmann explains some of the distinctive characteristics of the program: “The students have access to a host of entrepreneurship resources, including HBS’s Rock Center for Entrepreneurship and the Harvard Innovation Labs; the chance to experience five design cycles; and the opportunity to tap into Harvard’s vast network of leaders and founders.”
All of the students bring strong technical backgrounds to the program—from fields including computer science, aerospace, health care, robotics, and the military—as well as experience in designing or developing technology-intensive products.
Batt, a former product manager and mechanical engineer, thought that the MS/MBA program would suit her wide-ranging interests. “I didn’t want
to abandon the technical rigor and science that
I love, but I wanted the big-picture perspective
and the opportunity to determine how I can best use my strengths to make an impact,” she explains.
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