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Isabella Bank Institute for Entrepreneurship

We are a dedicated institute for student entrepreneurs across campus and beyond. We aim to maximize your success by fostering your entrepreneurial mindset, promote inter-disciplinary collaboration and provide support for the creation and development of your new ventures. Jumpstart your ideas and get involved today!

Tune in for excitement!

Passion. Potential. Pitches. Don't miss any of the 2025 New Venture Challenge excitement.

Tune in Friday, April 11 at 1 p.m. for great ideas and fierce competition. Then, join the judges, mentors, spectators and teams as they see who is going home with thousands of dollars in venture financing. The awards broadcast begins at 6:30 p.m. and one team will walk away as the overall best venture. 

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Central Michigan University’s College of Business Administration is the home of the Isabella Bank Institute for Entrepreneurship and the first Department of Entrepreneurship in the state of Michigan. We are a student-centric hub where experiential, curricular, and external entrepreneurial opportunities intersect.

Our mission is to maximize student success by fostering a campus-wide entrepreneurial mindset that promotes inter-disciplinary collaboration and the creation of new ventures.

We aim to create innovative programming, boost cross-campus and ecosystem collaboration and provide a comprehensive mentoring program.

Our institute provides extracurricular opportunities and is open to all undergraduate and graduate CMU students.

Student opportunities

  • Meet experienced alumni, faculty, entrepreneurs, investors, and other business and political leaders.
  • Learn practical skills, innovative thinking, and connect with mentors and entrepreneurial resources.
  • Attend skill-building workshops and compete in pitch competitions and Hackathons.
  • Take part in special scholarship programs and travel experiences.
  • Pitch your venture at our signature New Venture Challenge event and compete for up to $20,000 in cash awards.

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      International biosphere program adds CMU Biological Station

      by User Not Found
      ​Its name means "middle place" or "middle ground," but the newly designated Obtawaing Biosphere Reserve places Central Michigan University on an elite list of international sites dedicated to the study of sustainable development.

      ​Its name means "middle place" or "middle ground," but the newly designated Obtawaing Biosphere Reserve places Central Michigan University on an elite list of international sites dedicated to the study of sustainable development.

      The United Nations Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organization, or UNESCO, formally established the reserve in Northern Michigan in September after three years of review and planning. It encompasses CMU's Biological Station on Beaver Island.

      Biology faculty member and Institute for Great Lakes Research Director Don Uzarski was at the table to help make it happen.

      He said the designation gives CMU world recognition and opportunities for "collaboration, funding, research — you name it."

       

      UNESCO is also the organization that identifies World Heritage Sites for protection, including Yellowstone National Park, China's Great Wall and Australia's Great Barrier Reef. Uzarski said its biosphere reserve program recognizes that "people are a part of the landscape" and there's not a dichotomy between protecting the environment and economic development — we need to do both.

      "We're essentially finding smart ways to use the environment and protect the environment at the same time," he said of the UNESCO program, which has designated 686 biosphere reserves in 122 countries.

      The new Obtawaing reserve also takes in Sleeping Bear Dunes National Lakeshore, Wilderness State Park and a University of Michigan Biological Station with land near Pellston and in the Upper Peninsula. It's not a single area but several parcels totaling about 96 square miles surrounded by buffer zones comprising 11 counties roughly centered on the Straits of Mackinac.

      Being in or near the reserve doesn't restrict human activity.

      "This comes with zero regulation," Uzarski said. Instead, it's an area for study, focused on sustainability, culture and human reliance on natural systems — such as how coastal wetlands clean water entering the Great Lakes.

      "We absolutely rely on these regions," Uzarski said. "It would take an enormous amount of money to replace what they're doing."

      UNESCO first designated the U-M Biological Station a reserve in 1979. It was essentially an unpopulated natural area. The current expansion stems from the program's evolution to factor in human populations, along with a desire for more scientific partners such as CMU.

      Scientific and educational partners are key aspects of biosphere reserves, and that's where CMU's Great Lakes research leadership comes in.

      As UNESCO put it in its program summary, the CMU Biological Station "hosts undergraduate university classes on biological sciences, provides a base of operation for researchers and provides public education and outreach. Central Michigan University researchers affiliated with the Institute for Great Lakes Research conduct research throughout the Great Lakes. CMUBS researchers are integral in coordinating unified, international efforts to conserve Great Lakes coastal habitats through the Lakes Coastal Wetland Monitoring Program."

      Uzarski notes that "most of the research in the IGLR has something to do with human interaction in the Great Lakes ecosystems."

      He also credits partners in Michigan for their work to establish the expanded reserve, including Knute Nadelhoffer, Professor Emeritus and former director of UMBS at the University of Michigan as well as Jon Allan in U-M's School for the Environment and Sustainability. "We certainly didn't do this on our own," Uzarski said.

      Instead, the partners came together for a shared mission: "It's about connecting people with nature, with sustainable development, and using science to do that."

      Questions?