Our second annual Ignition Schools awards recognizing the colleges and universities shaping future entrepreneurs and innovators arrives at a crucial crossroads for higher education. On one hand, artificial intelligence has caused us to rethink assumptions about how far and how quickly technology can improve our society and our lives. On the other hand, a storm of skepticism brewing in a sea of disinformation has dimmed the view of many toward college educations, which some have also accused of being politically indoctrinating. That has led to unprecedented attacks on university research funding at a time when core research is needed to develop advanced solutions in such fields as healthcare, defense, and education.
The colleges that lead our list represent the diversity of education approaches that will be needed to prepare the next generation of disrupters to prevail. They include centuries-old institutions, sprawling public universities, colleges in the hearts of tech hubs, business schools with global footprints, and innovation centers helping to lift up new voices and communities.
But they all recognize that they must offer more to today’s students than the business savvy that has long defined the MBA pipeline. In addition to focusing more on adaptability in a rapidly shifting tech and economic landscape, colleges are nurturing the inventive spirit by hosting pitch competitions, celebrating industry recognition, and addressing the needs and resources of their communities.
In many cases, they have launched or forged ties with incubators and accelerators that promote networking with peers and successful entrepreneurs. These can also serve to leverage IP as the “secret sauce” providing an advantage to startups, enterprises, or thriving rural businesses without the pressures of exit-maximizing venture investors. In encouraging entrepreneurship, their programs are helping to develop the advancements of the next generation while inspiring alumni who can keep the innovation ecosystem healthy for future generations.
1. Stanford University
Stanford, California
Located in the heart of Silicon Valley, Stanford’s entrepreneurial engines have yielded incredible results. StartX funds and mentors founder teams involving at least one member of the Stanford community, while Launchpad challenges students to get their startups off the ground in 10 weeks, emphasizing action over planning.
2. University of PennsylvaniaPhiladelphia, Pennsylvania
Beyond pursuing a master’s in entrepreneurship or engineering or participating in startup clubs and competitions, students can find entrepreneurship opportunities at Penn’s Venture Lab, a hub catering to four different routes. The Founder, Explorer, Joiner, and Investor “pathways” offer resources to students curious about entrepreneurship as well as those looking to gain investing experience.>/p>
3. Harvard UniversityCambridge, Massachusetts
Through its One Harvard approach, the school’s entrepreneurship initiatives reach across its 13 colleges, leveraging an extensive network of alumni and resources. The Harvard Innovation Lab, or i-lab, is the physical space where students and alumni build community and startups with access to funding and specialized programming.
4. Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT)Cambridge, Massachusetts
When it comes to business, MIT takes advantage of its world-class science and technological research. The two disciplines merge under the Martin Trust Center for MIT Entrepreneurship, with programs and courses stemming from the Disciplined Entrepreneurship framework. Developed at MIT, the step-by-step guideline helps founders transform their research or ideas into market-ready ventures.
5. Columbia UniversityNew York, New York
Crowning Manhattan’s rapidly growing entrepreneurial scene, Columbia offers direct access to an expert network in the city, support for student ventures with groups like the Columbia Organization of Rising Entrepreneurs, and a postgraduate resource in the Columbia Startup Lab for recent alumni.>
6. University of MichiganAnn Arbor, Michigan
The Innovation Partnerships Startup Incubator helps shape the University of Michigan’s state-of-the-art IP into real-world applications. The program pairs founders from around the world with entrepreneurial mentors and provides access to world-class lab and office spaces. The incubator represents just one of the university’s business innovation programs, which include its Center for Entrepreneurship and the Zell Lurie Institute for Entrepreneurial Studies.
7. Tel Aviv UniversityTel Aviv, Israel
Consistently ranked at the top for global entrepreneurship programs, Tel Aviv University offers students access to a network situated in a global startup hub, an in-house accelerator program and funding, and courses emphasizing a hands-on approach, including one that pairs students with Israeli startups.
8. New York UniversityNew York, New York
The NYU Entrepreneurial Institute brings the university’s new founders and seasoned researchers and alumni together under a shared goal of launching startups. Community members can follow a clear path designed by the Startup Accelerator Program, including the Bootcamp, Sprint, and Launchpad phases, and continue toward a market-ready venture with seed funding and fellowships.
9. Cornell UniversityIthaca, New York
The spirit of entrepreneurship rises far above Cayuga’s waters in Ithaca, New York. Any undergraduate may pursue a minor in the field, while eLab serves as an accelerator for student-led ventures. More specialized resources are offered, too, such as the training program for female and nonbinary PhDs and postdocs and an incubator for science and engineering-based businesses.
10. University of California, BerkeleyBerkeley, California
For the sixth year in a row, PitchBook named UC Berkeley the top public university producing venture-backed startup founders. Berkeley SkyDeck, the university’s incubator and accelerator, commercializes research and provides programming and coursework through the engineering and business schools.
11. Northwestern UniversityEvanston, Illinois
At the center of Northwestern’s entrepreneurship ecosystem is the Garage, which offers mentorship, events, and workspaces to more than 3,000 Northwestern students each year. The university emphasizes science-driven startups at the Querrey InQbation Lab and rewards top initiatives with funding and exposure through VentureCat, its annual startup competition.
12. Yale UniversityNew Haven, Connecticut
Bulldogs of all disciplines are encouraged to embrace their entrepreneurial spirit at the Tsai Center for Innovative Thinking at Yale. One program, Launch, invites incoming first-year students to hear from alumni founders and collaborate in workshops, equipping them early on with the tools they need to excel as business leaders.
13. Tsinghua UniversityBeijing, China
Tsinghua University, which lies in startup hot spot Zhongguancun, Beijing, boasts the government’s support through national funding and partnerships. The institution hosts competitions such as the Great Idea Challenge and the President’s Innovation Challenge for startups and helps research efforts transform into successful commercial ventures via its private equity firm Tsinghua Holdings.
14. Duke UniversityDurham, North Carolina
Duke Innovation & Entrepreneurship emphasizes problem-solving through programs, courses, competitions, and mentorship; students can join entrepreneurial-forward campus organizations like the Cube and HackDuke. Physical resources are available too. These include spaces like the Foundry for developing ideas and building prototypes and the Innovation Co-Lab for exploring emerging technologies like 3D printing.
15. University of Texas, AustinAustin, Texas
UT Austin bridges budding entrepreneurs and Austin’s booming tech scene. The Austin Technology Incubator, the longest running of its kind, connects students with investors and experts who help commercialize their innovations. The college also supports female entrepreneurs through the Kendra Scott Women’s Entrepreneurial Leadership Institute.
16. University of WashingtonSeattle, Washington
The University of Washington has climbed the entrepreneurship rankings in recent years. The Arthur W. Buerk Center offers programming to undergraduates as well as master’s students and PhD candidates, while the CoMotion hub supports student founders from industry-targeted incubators.
17. University of Southern California (USC)Los Angeles, California
Known as the longest-running entrepreneurship program in the country, the Lloyd Greif Center for Entrepreneurial Studies at USC encourages flexible thinking in dynamic situations. Students across all industries and experience levels are encouraged to participate in coursework and programming, including a connection to the extensive network in the neighboring tech startup hub, Silicon Beach.
18. University of OxfordOxford, England
EnSpire, the hub of entrepreneurship at Oxford, encourages all community members to develop business innovation skills. The university focuses on commercializing scientific and technological research. Oxford University Innovation manages the university’s IP and helps transform the research into companies, while Oxford Science Enterprises funds and develops those companies.
19. Johns Hopkins UniversityBaltimore, Maryland
The Pava Marie LaPere Center for Entrepreneurship hosts a range of programs and funding for JHU community members. The institution is also committed to strengthening Baltimore. The President’s Venture Fellowship provides funding to recent graduates pursuing full-time startups in the city, while courses like CityLab for MBA students explore livability challenges and solutions.
20. INSEADFontainebleau, France
A graduate-only business school, INSEAD has a strong focus on fostering entrepreneurship. The Maag INSEAD Centre for Entrepreneurship offers boot camps for startups, venture competitions, and mentorship through programs like Entrepreneurs in Residence. Its LaunchPad—located in Paris’s Station F, the world’s largest startup campus—promotes alumni-led business ventures through networking events and workspaces.
21. University of TorontoToronto, Ontario
Recognized as the top university in Canada for entrepreneurship, U of T offers extensive resources to its students, faculty, and alumni. Its incubators and accelerators include the Creative Destruction Lab, which supports seed-stage tech companies with high potential, and the Entrepreneurship Hatchery, which helps students team up to develop startups.
22. University of MarylandCollege Park, Maryland
The University of Maryland’s approach to entrepreneurship builds on its strength in technology and health sciences, supporting both social and commercial ventures. The Startup Shell is a student-led incubator equipped with coworking spaces, while the President’s Entrepreneurial Fellowship offers Terrapin students a chance to bring faculty research to market.
23. University of California, San DiegoSan Diego, California
UCSD’s entrepreneurship offerings span its engineering and management schools. Students and alumni find like-minded peers and mentors amid the programs and funding of the Sullivan Center for Entrepreneurship and Innovation, where disruption is viewed as an opportunity to build positive change. Specialized offerings include the Institute for the Global Entrepreneur, which trains engineers, and the Triton Sustainability Challenge, which spotlights environmental solutions.
24. Carnegie Mellon UniversityPittsburgh, Pennsylvania
CMU community members are encouraged to submit their startups through its website to receive access to an array of resources and networks. These include the Swartz Center for Entrepreneurship’s VentureBridge, a pre-seed fund and accelerator program for full-time founders, and the Innovation Commercialization Fellows Program, which helps the university’s research evolve into marketplace offerings.
25. Babson CollegeWellesley, Massachusetts
Babson is consistently ranked at the top of the country’s universities for entrepreneurship. In addition to funding the Butler Launch Pad, a community of entrepreneurs, the small New England powerhouse launched the first U.S. business-school center dedicated to female founders: the Frank & Eileen Center for Women’s Entrepreneurial Leadership.
26. University of ChicagoChicago, Illinois
Entrepreneurship at the University of Chicago takes form at the Polsky Center for Entrepreneurship and Innovation. With accelerator programs like the New Venture Challenge, which launched Grubhub and Braintree, and incubators like Polsky Exchange, the institution takes an interdisciplinary approach to foster a collaborative entrepreneurial environment.
27. University of WaterlooWaterloo, Ontario
Structured in a co-op program that integrates work experience with academics, the University of Waterloo offers 45 for-credit programs for entrepreneurs. The university hosts four incubators and fosters corporate partnerships to drive research to commercialization. Its unique creator-owned intellectual property policy ensures that their researchers own their inventions.
28. University of CambridgeCambridge, England
According to the university, the Cambridge Cluster is the most successful technology cluster in Europe. From within that sea of incubators and innovation hubs, the 816-year-old institution offers support through mentorship, lectures, and training to aspiring founders all the way to enterprise-stage businesses.
29. Pennsylvania State University University Park, Pennsylvania
Invent Penn State is the overarching hub of all things entrepreneurial at the university, connecting students to coaches, conferences, and competitions. The LaunchBox Network provides free business resources to community members. Its statewide locations enable widespread access.
30. University of VirginiaCharlottesville, Virginia
Although a longtime supporter of entrepreneurship, UVA launched a new phase of commitment with UVA Innovates in September 2024. With the Foundry, a new student entrepreneurship hub, and Enterprise Studio, which partners with faculty, researchers, and investors to bring ideas to market, the university is amplifying the impact of its innovations.
31. Arizona State UniversityTempe, Arizona
In September, U.S. News & World Report named Arizona State the most innovative school in the U.S. for the 11th consecutive year. Business advancement is baked into the university through the J. Orin Edson Entrepreneurship and Innovation Institute, which gives students tools to get their ideas off the ground and tackle challenges, and extends to connected entrepreneurship centers at the business, engineering, and design schools.
32. HEC ParisJouy-en-Josas, France
HEC Paris supports startups, regardless of the stage or industry, through its Incubation & Acceleration Center, Deep Tech Center, and Social Entrepreneurship Center. The innovation hubs offer a slew of programming, from a six-month-long acceleration program, Women Entrepreneurs for Good, to longer HEC Challenges.
33. University of MinnesotaMinneapolis, Minnesota
The Holmes Center for Entrepreneurship works in tandem with the Carlson School of Management to ignite an entrepreneurial spirit within its members. Student-owned Atland Ventures funds early-stage tech companies while the MN Cup, the largest startup competition in the country, supports Minnesota entrepreneurs.
34. University of North Carolina, Chapel HillChapel Hill, North Carolina
In joining Innovate Carolina, the UNC community opens the door to resources that enhance and boost its innovative sparks. At the Junction, Tar Heel students and faculty, corporations, and citizen entrepreneurs can find the Launch Chapel Hill startup accelerator, mentorship, and co-working spaces. The Carolina EcoMap brings all these tools together on one platform.
35. Imperial College LondonLondon, England
The Imperial Enterprise Lab encourages its community to test ideas and launch products to drive positive change. It connects students with mentors, co-founders, and workspaces and recommends relevant books and accelerators. The institution also offers a prototyping hub through the Advanced Hackspace and resources specific to climate, tech, and global health solutions.
36. University of Illinois, Urbana-ChampaignUrbana-Champaign, Illinois
The University of Illinois encourages students to get involved in the entrepreneurial ecosystem. They can attend networking events each week at the Research Park, gain real-world experience at student-run consulting firm EntreCorps, or explore 3D printing at the Illinois MakerLab. Faculty and alumni can participate as mentors or competition judges in addition to pursuing their own innovations.
37. Texas A&M UniversityCollege Station, Texas
Texas A&M’s McFerrin Center, housed within the Mays Business School, offers programs to community trailblazers. Beyond the university-wide Aggie Pitch competition, students can meet and learn from peer entrepreneurs through a series of discussions at Entrepreneurs Exposed. Each year, the Aggie 100 celebrates the college’s entrepreneurs.
38. Princeton UniversityPrinceton, New Jersey
In October 2024, Princeton launched the Office of Innovation to strengthen its commitment to entrepreneurship, which includes educational programs, mentorship, and funding. The hub hosts Strategic Partnerships and Engagement, Technology Licensing and New Ventures, and Innovation Infrastructure and Programs, all focused on promoting the university’s innovative minds and honing the impact of its research and education.
39. Washington UniversitySt. Louis, Missouri
WashU splits its entrepreneurial offerings between its Olin School of Business and Skandalaris Center for Interdisciplinary Innovation and Entrepreneurship, both of which emphasize a hands-on approach. In addition to workshops and events, the Center operates the Student Enterprise Program, in which students run businesses that serve the WashU community, while the business school hosts competitions and pitch events like the Olin Cup.
40. University of Colorado, BoulderBoulder, Colorado
The University of Colorado offers entrepreneurial resources across each of its four campuses. Venture Partners at CU Boulder supports the commercialization of university research, and the Jake Jabs Center at CU Denver offers entrepreneurship program scholarships to students pursuing degrees, minors, or certificates.
41. Georgia Institute of TechnologyAtlanta, Georgia
Georgia Tech’s Create-X educates students about business fundamentals and provides the tools and space they need to innovate. The program’s three categories, Learn, Make, and Launch, instill entrepreneurial confidence through coursework, launch programs, and funding. Regular networking events provide students with connections and information to further refine business concepts.
42. University of California, Los Angeles Los Angeles, California
Accelerators and coursework support entrepreneurial education throughout UCLA’s schools, but Startup UCLA is the root. The hub is home to the Blackstone LaunchPad mentor network, which sets students up for innovation success; Innovation Fellows, which advances faculty projects into startups; and Bruin Impact, which drives students toward positive change through innovation.
43. Boston CollegeChestnut Hill, Massachusetts
While Boston College’s Carroll School of Management roots entrepreneurship in business fundamentals across all fields, the Shea Center for Entrepreneurship offers programs such as TechTrek@Shea, a professional development course in which students meet with senior leaders at companies such as Airbnb and Tesla and travel to business hubs like New York City and Silicon Valley.
44. McGill UniversityMontreal, Quebec
In 2024, PitchBook ranked McGill number one in Canada for both producing the greatest number of successful undergraduate startups and supporting the most female entrepreneurs. McGill’s Dobson Centre for Entrepreneurship supports the community’s entrepreneurial minds through resources like the X-1 Accelerator and the annual Dobson Cup competition for seed funding.
45. London Business SchoolLondon, England
Located in a European startup hub, LBS offers its students an array of unique entrepreneurial development options. These include Global Experiences, which introduces students to international business approaches and cultures through panels and workshops. Others include the INcubator program and Entrepreneurship Summer School.
46. Purdue UniversityWest Lafayette, Indiana
Purdue Innovates is a bustling network targeting each stage of the startup process. Students find their footing through the incubator and grow through programs like Firestarter and Market Readiness. Meanwhile, seasoned entrepreneurs scale their ideas through the accelerator. And the Alumni Entrepreneurship Network provides long-term connections.
47. Iowa State UniversityAmes, Iowa
In 1996, philanthropist and entrepreneur John Pappajohn funded the Pappajohn Center for Entrepreneurship at Iowa State, laying the foundation for what has become an innovation ecosystem. The Student Innovation Center and the ISU Research Park complement the entrepreneurship center, with all three supporting the university’s creative and motivated self-starters.
48. Boston UniversityBoston, Massachusetts
From teaching technology creation and commercialization to fundamentals of interactive media, the urban campus overlooking the Charles overlooks little in developing entrepreneurial acumen. Through seed grants, a summer accelerator, and mentorship, students are encouraged to build the future. BU also hosts Idea Con, the only cross-college innovation conference in the world.
49. Georgetown UniversityWashington, D.C.
Georgetown’s entrepreneurship program leverages its unmatched proximity to the seat of government power. Venture in the Capital—the university’s first student-led conference—hosts forums at which attendees discuss the intersection of entrepreneurship and public policy. The founder spirit extends into the community, too. The Pivot Program offers a certificate in business and entrepreneurship to those who have been incarcerated.
50. University of FloridaGainesville, Florida
UF’s Entrepreneurship and Innovation Center aims to instill a sunbaked entrepreneurial spirit into its community through the core principles “every student an entrepreneur” and “total entrepreneurial immersion.” The center hosts competitions like the UF AI Days Gator Tank for AI businesses and offers an incubator, accelerator, and “dreammaker” through the Gator Hatchery.
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