Faculty

Christina Lubinski, Professor
Department of Business Humanities and Law, CBS
 
R. Daniel Wadhwani, Professor
Department of Business Humanities and Law, CBS
& University of Southern California, USA
 
Ewald Kibler, Associate Professor
Aalto School of Business
 
Maija Renko, Professor
Aalto School of Business
 
Anna Brattström, Associate Professor
Lund University
 
Ester Barinaga, Professor
Lund University
 
Contact hours

5 days of 6 contact hours per day. A total of 30 contact hours with a moderate workload of readings and assignments and submission of research proposal and peer review (see details under assessment below), equivalent to 5 ECTS. Students are expected to carefully engage with all readings. For required readings, they should prepare notes for class discussion and be ready to share them on peer platforms.
Optional participation in group project in groups of 2 to 3 students, applying one of the methodological approaches in the field and reporting on challenges and results, about 70 hours per person, equivalent to an additional 2.5 ECTS. For details on this option, see “Assessment” below.

Aim of the course

The course aims to equip PhD students with advanced methodological tools and frameworks to push the boundaries of entrepreneurship research. Entrepreneurship is a pluralistic and interdisciplinary domain. By exploring both established and emerging qualitative research methods in entrepreneurship, students will develop the skills to investigate this complex phenomenon and understand how it draws on a variety of different disciplines and methodological perspectives. Emphasis will be placed on grounded theory, qualitative interviews, narrative approaches, historical methods, and ethnographic approaches (including netnography). The discussion will also explore different coding strategies, visualization techniques, and the use of AI tools to uncover new insights in entrepreneurship studies and experiment with new forms of research presentations. Students will discuss how to contribute to the diverse field of entrepreneurship studies with methodologically rigorous work, how to present methodological approaches in publications, and which opportunities there exist for expanding and deepening the field. 

How the course advances the participants’ ongoing PhD projects
The field of entrepreneurship research is vast and inherently interdisciplinary, often presenting challenges for emerging scholars in clearly defining and justifying their methodological approaches, particularly in the context of publications. This course, with its focus on the frontiers of entrepreneurship research, is designed to equip participants with the skills to more effectively articulate even unconventional or innovative methodological choices. By strengthening their ability to communicate their methods clearly and persuasively, participants will be better positioned to navigate the publication process, enhancing both the quality and impact of their research.

A key component of the course is the submission of a detailed research proposal by each participant prior to the course’s start. These proposals will be reviewed and workshopped in collaboration with the course faculty, allowing students to refine their methodological frameworks and tailor them to specific academic audiences. This iterative feedback process will not only help clarify students’ approaches but also expose them to different perspectives and critiques, fostering a deeper understanding of how to position their work within the broader academic discourse. Additionally, students will engage in a peer-review exercise, where they will review and provide constructive feedback on a classmate’s proposal. This activity is designed to cultivate essential skills in peer evaluation and reflection, encouraging students to think critically about what constitutes constructive feedback. It will also help them become more adept at interpreting and responding to the reviews they receive in their own academic careers, a crucial skill in navigating the often-challenging peer-review process.

For those seeking further engagement, the course offers an optional group project, where 2-3 students collaborate on empirical research, using one of the methodological approaches covered in the course. This project, which involves approximately 70 hours of work per student, provides hands-on experience with real-world data and methodological application. The plans for these projects will be discussed during the course, offering insights not only to the group members but also to the broader class. These discussions will deepen participants' understanding of various research methods, broadening their analytical toolkit and enhancing their capacity to tackle complex research questions in their PhD projects. Through these elements, the course provides a structured, yet flexible framework that directly contributes to the advancement of participants’ PhD projects, from methodological refinement to peer engagement and empirical application.

Learning objectives

By the end of this course, students will be able to:

Learning material

All readings will be made available on Canvas. Students are encouraged to organize the readings for themselves by adding keywords and comments. Readings are split in required and recommended readings. For a full list of readings see below.

Additional video material will be posted to Canvas. 

Statement of learning activities and teaching methods

This course will be delivered through a combination of lectures, seminars, and workshops. Students will be expected to actively participate in class discussions, conduct independent research, and present their findings. Teaching will focus on the following:

Assessment

Research Proposal: Before the course starts, students will submit a proposal (2,500 words) for an empirical project that applies one or more of the methods discussed during the course. Proposals should be in the form of a method section for an entrepreneurship or management journal and should clearly demonstrate how the suggested research would expand the field of entrepreneurship studies. The proposals will be further developed in two workshops during the course. 

Within two weeks after the course ends, students submit an updated version of the research proposal based on feedback and knowledge acquired during the course. The proposal will be graded “Pass/Fail”, and subsequently submitted for feedback by one faculty member and one of the other participants (peer-to-peer feedback).

Students will review and provide feedback on a classmate’s proposal. They will write a developmental review (approx. 2-3 pages long) for one of their fellow PhD student’s updated method proposal within four weeks of receiving it. Reviews will be evaluated by the instructors as “Pass/Fail” with qualitative comments on the style of peer review.

Additional group project - 2.5 ECTS

Students have the option of participating in an additional group project (2-3 students per group, to be prepared before the course starts), engaging in empirical work with a workload of circa 70 hours per student using one of the methodological approaches discussed in the course and reporting on the results. This group project requires the group of students to agree on a project topic before the class starts, for which they will receive feedback during the course. The final submission is a 10 to 15-page report, which outlines the methodological approach (with references), describes how it has been applied to a research question or theme, which challenges the researchers have encountered, how they have addressed these challenges, and which results the project yielded. Group project ideas will be discussed during the course; final deadline for group project submissions is eight weeks after the course has ended. 

Course plan, describing the schedule of every course day, and expected involvement by the students.

Preliminary lecture plan

Day I, Method Plurality in Entrepreneurship Research

The Domain of Entrepreneurship: Why Method Plurality Matters

Exercise: Method Forensics – What Great Method Section Do

New Frontiers: Discussion

Theory-Method Fit

Peer Review and Unconventional Method Sections

Workshop: Exploring Student Research Proposals

Day II, Theorizing in Entrepreneurial Contexts

Varieties of Grounded-Theory Methods in Entrepreneurship Research

Show Me the Data! Visualization Techniques

Exercise: How Do I Use This in My Work?

Action Research for Exploring Entrepreneurship

Discussion: “Me-Search”

Confronting the Digital: Netnography and AI Research Tools

Day III, Situated and Processual Approaches to Study Entrepreneurship

Process-oriented and place-sensitive entrepreneurship research using interview and (auto)ethnographic data

Discussion and Exercise: Practical Example of Studying Situated Entrepreneurial Dynamics

Group Interviews

Exercise: Qualitative Interview Techniques

Advantages and Challenges of Video-Based Research

Day IV, Historical and Narrative Approaches to Study Entrepreneurship

Varieties of Historical Methods

Introduction to Microhistory

Exercise: Getting Ready for Rigorous Archival Research 

Rethinking Entrepreneurship: Narratives, Discourses, Ideologies

The Entrepreneurial Story

Day V, Insightful Theorizing

Discussion of (Optional) Group Projects

Navigating the Method Conversation with Critical Reviewers

Workshop: Developing Your Research Proposals 

Method Mix and Madness

Concluding Discussion

Canvas

Short description of the IT solution that the organizers intend to use for the course

We use the Learning Management System Canvas to share course materials, submit assignments, and manage discussions. For real-time collaboration, group activities and peer feedback all students will also be able to use Google Docs (integrated in the Canvas platform).

All sessions will be conducted in a hybrid format using Zoom. During the course, we plan to introduce AI solutions, such as GoZigZag and ResearchRabbit, for entrepreneurship research. We post instructional videos and guides to support students’ own work.

Readings (required and recommended)

Course Diploma
 
PhD students must participate in the entire course to be eligible for the course diploma. The diploma will be issued after the last day of the course or following any exam or assignment due after the course. It will be sent to the email address you provided during registration.
 
Registration Deadline and Conditions

The binding registration deadline is 16 October 2025. If you wish to cancel your registration, you must do so by this date. After the deadline, we will assess whether there are sufficient registrations to run the course and, if necessary, allocate seats if demand exceeds capacity.

If seats remain available after this deadline, the registration period may be extended to fill the remaining seats.

Please note that once you receive our acceptance or welcome letter, your registration becomes binding, and no refunds of the course fee will be issued.

If the number of course registrations exceed the available seats, admission will be granted on a first-come, first-served basis, or—where applicable—based on the motivation submitted at registration. Priority will be given to CBS PhD students
 
Payment Methods
 
Ensure you choose the correct payment method when finalizing your registration:
 
CBS students:
Select the payment method CBS PhD students. The course fee will be deducted from your PhD course budget.
 
Students from Other Danish Universities: 
Select the payment method Danish Electronic Invoice (EAN). Provide your EAN number, attention, and any relevant purchase (project) order number.
If you do not pay via EAN number, select Invoice to pay via electronic bank payment (+71).
 
Students from Foreign Universities:
Select the payment method Payment Card. If you are unable to pay by credit card, choose Invoice International to pay via bank transfer.