The Founding Fathers [Spring 1999]
The Entrepreneurship Club at the University of Minnesota
was founded in the spring semester of 1999. A group of eight students
and an academic advisor, Alan Fine, had a vision for a new club
in the Carlson School of Management. Once officially formed, the
Entrepreneurship Club was headed by President Chris Stenzel and
Vice President Nathan White. Ahmed Siddiqui was the first Director
of Business Events and worked closely with Floyd Adelman, President
of Inner Circle, to bring exciting small business CEO's to speak
every week. This format paved the way to what the Entrepreneurship
Club is today. That first semester the club held its first meeting
which was a huge success-student interest for the club was soaring!
Initial Meetings
[Fall 1999 - Spring 2000]
As fall semester 1999 began, Entrepreneurship Club held
an election for the Vice President position as Nathan White had
graduated. Matt Nelson became the new Vice President and later became
President when Chris Stenzl stepped down. The first club meeting
was standing room only and featured Scott Bayless, CEO Cyrus Intersoft
and Ulyssis Telemedia. The club went on to host a total of eight
speakers that semester including the owner of Bruegger's Bagels
in Minnesota, the president of TCF Bank, and other successful CEOs.
Waseem Azizi became Vice President after Matt Nelson accepted the
role as the President. Later, Nadia Eldeeb became Vice President
after Waseem Azizi's departure. When Spring semester 2000 began,
Cory Wendt became the second Director of Business Events after Ahmed
Siddiqui moved on to be the VP of Intelligence. Cory Wendt expanded
the format to have two speakers a week, by holding meetings on Wednesdays
and Thursdays. The club continued to grow in student membership.
Spring semester 2000 allowed the club to continue its great speaker
lineup with nine new CEOs and business owners from the Twin Cities.
Matt Nelson resigned as President due to conflicting interests with
his external employment. Cory Wendt, previously the Director of
Business Events, moved into the President position. The semester
finished strong, but the club faced an uphill battle to continue
attracting students.
Start - Up
Squad - Spring 2001
After hearing the successes of all of the speakers throughout
the year, students were itching to start their own businesses. Jesse
Zettel felt there was a need for a forum where students can discuss
their ideas with fellow students and CEO's without fear that their
ideas will be stolen. Thus the Start - Up Squad was born, with key
contributions from Jesse Zettel, BJ Durtsche, Ahmed Siddiqui, Karl
Svendsen, Jeff Wenz, and Sam Rosen. The Start - Up Squad met on
Tuesday evenings when people were ready to present, and was a huge
success, leading to a similar activity with involvement from the
newly formed Entrepreneurship Alumni Club in 2003.
1st Annual
CEO Dinner - Spring 2001
Through enormous growth of the club since 1999, and the
large number of speakers that spoke to the organization, it was
time for a Thank You dinner for the CEO's called the CEO Dinner.
In Spring of 2001, the first dinner was held at the Calhoun Beach
Club with entertainment from the executive board featuring the now
famous Entrepreneurship Club Introductory Powerpoint presentation
prepared by Jesse Zettel, Ahmed Siddiqui, and Tony Janowiec. The
night was a huge success with great support from the CEO's and Faculty/Staff
of the Carlson School. This was the event that truly put the Entrepreneurship
Club on map; marking the end of a tremendous year of explosive growth
and excitement.
Rebounding
Growth
In fall semester 2001, former Chief Financial Officer Tony Janowiec
became the club's new President. Chief Web Officer of two years,
B. J. Durtsche took on the additional duties of Vice President while
still maintaining the club's extremely popular website www.ceomakers.com.
Once again the club was flourishing with tons of student interest
and involvement. The number of meetings with incredible speakers
continued to grow with a total of twenty-one! The Wednesday and
Thursday weekly meetings have accompanied the needs of students
with classes and impressed our many speakers and other Carlson School
faculty and staff.
Tony Janowiec graduated December 2001. B. J. Durtsche became the
new President with Steven Snyder, former VP of Marketing, as the
Vice President. The dynamic duo continued to expand the club's presence
throughout the entire University and especially in Carlson. The
club had become the largest club in the Carlson School of Management,
if not the largest of the entire University. Clearly, with meetings
twice a week and a total of twenty-five meetings for just spring
semester 2001 the Entrepreneurship Club at the University of Minnesota
has become the most active club on campus! Spring semester 2001
was also home to the Second Annual CEO Dinner; again, the event
was a major success for the club, students, CEOs, and the Carlson
School! Richard Schulze, Founder Best Buy, was a highlight speaker
of the semester.
Fall semester 2002 was not unlike the other fall semesters: attendance
skyrocketed, meetings twice a week, social events abounded, and
Entrepreneurship Club was always the talk at Carlson! Former club
President Cory Wendt was one of our featured speakers as he now
owns an Alaskan resort!
In December 2002, B. J. Durtsche's Presidency term was up and Justin
Porter, former Chief Web Officer became the new President. Steve
Snyder was re-elected as Vice President for his third semester in
the position.
In December 2003, Justin Porter's Presidency term came to a close
and former Vice President Britta Anderson became our new President.
The club is continually growing in all aspects. It continually offers
students an experience they will never receive in any classroom.
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