#1 again! Olin’s MBA entrepreneurship program tops P&Q ranking in 3rd year

  • October 25, 2021
  • By Kurt Greenbaum
  • 3 minute read

For the third consecutive year, WashU Olin placed #1 on Poets & Quants ranking of MBA entrepreneurship programs. Indeed, “this year it wasn’t close at all. You all won by a lot,” according to one person connected with P&Q’s ranking process.

The online business school news journal debuted the ranking in 2019 and each year Olin’s entrepreneurship program has ranked #1 (see the 2019 story here and the 2020 story here).

“I am beyond gratified—but not surprised—to learn that WashU Olin’s MBA entrepreneurship program has again topped the Poets & Quants ranking,” said Mark P. Taylor, dean of Olin Business School. “Our decisive claim on that ranking this year is a testament to the priority we place on sparking the entrepreneurial spirit in our students. We count entrepreneurship among Olin’s four pillars of excellence, and we take care to imbue that spirit throughout our course offerings and programs.”

Following publication of the site’s ranking, editors from Poets & Quants hosted a livestream event at 11 a.m. CT today (see video below) to formally unveil the results and interview Dean Taylor and Doug Villhard, professor of practice in entrepreneurship and academic director of the entrepreneurship platform.

Then, on November 17, P&Q has lined up an afternoon of livestream events focused on entrepreneurship education. Events include a panel discussion with several Olin students and alumni who are startup founders.

Decisively leading the pack

“It’s hard for any one school to stay on top for three consecutive years, particularly in a field that has seen many schools double down on their commitments to entrepreneurship,” P&Q wrote in its ranking story. “But Olin pulled off a three-peat with little difficulty.”

The P&Q ranking was based on an analysis of 16 components of a school’s entrepreneurship program. They included dimensions such as the number of startups launched, available elective courses in entrepreneurship, students in entrepreneurship clubs, the percentage of MBAs taking related courses and the percentage of faculty teaching related courses.

WashU Olin placed first in only two of those dimensions. As P&Q wrote: “WashU won top honors for having the highest percentage of MBAs launching companies (2017-2020), and the highest percentage of MBA students involved in a startup this past year.” Given that showing, Olin’s first place overall suggests steadiness and consistency across the P&Q methodology, rather than significant ups and down across categories.

“We came in strong across the board because we have a culture of innovation and an entrepreneurial spirit infused throughout the school,” Villhard said. “And our student body is diverse, thus our startup founders are also diverse. Which makes for really rich ideas and a really special place to advance one’s entrepreneurial pursuits.”

Innovating within innovation

WashU Olin topped the list with a total weighted score of 100. Babson College in Wellesley, Massachusetts, took second with a score of 82.67. Rounding out the top five in P&Q’s ranking were Rice University in Houston; ESADE in Barcelona; and IE Business School in Madrid.

Olin’s program benefits by its connections within the school and across the campus, including a strong collaboration between Villhard and II Luscri, managing director of WashU’s Skandalaris Center for Interdisciplinary Innovation and Entrepreneurship. Luscri is also assistant vice provost for innovation and entrepreneurship for WashU.

“I’m proud of and thankful for the leadership Doug, II and the entire Olin team provide in this area,” Taylor said.

That collaboration has led to innovations in the program, some implemented only in the past year. They include new courses such as Innovation for Healthcare, Innovation for Defense and Acquisition Entrepreneurship. Another new course, aimed at star student startup founders in the digital and tech space, is known colloquially as “The League,” an accelerator of ideas that features coaching from Olin’s “Mount Rushmore” of the most successful WashU graduates in the field.

Best MBA Programs For Entrepreneurship


Dean Mark Taylor and Doug Villhard appear with P&Q’s Nathan Allen to discuss the 2021 entrepreneurship ranking.

About the Author


Kurt Greenbaum

Kurt Greenbaum

As communications director for WashU Olin Business School, my job is to find and share great stories about our students, faculty, staff, and alumni. I've worked for the Consortium for Graduate Study in Management as communications director and as a journalist for the St. Louis Post-Dispatch, Sun-Sentinel in South Florida and the Chicago Tribune.

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