We pour considerable amounts of money into our educational systems, but we haven‟t been
able to create schools and institutions of higher education that develop people‟s innate
capacity to sense and shape their future, which I view as the single most important capability
for this century‟s knowledge and co-creation economy”. (Scharmer, 2007, p. 3)1
Many different inputs are required for successful entrepreneurship, one of the most important
being entrepreneurship skills. Motivated people need the right skills to identify entrepreneurial
opportunities and to turn their entrepreneurial projects into successful ventures. Successful
entrepreneurs follow a learning journey, which starts in education and continues with learning-bydoing
processes; both formal and informal learning inside and outside the firm.