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Dingman Center
History Facilitator of
Enterprise in the Mid-Atlantic Region
“Our mission
is to make entrepreneurship
accessible by offering resources
that take a person through the whole
life cycle of starting a business.
We want students to experience
business success, and we do this by
actively supporting student-run
enterprises, offering events that
bring regional entrepreneurs and
students together, and becoming a
focal point for developing
campus-wide entrepreneurial
activities.” —Asher Epstein,
Dingman Center Director
One of the earliest entrepreneurship
centers in the country, the Dingman
Center has dedicated itself to
facilitating, supporting, and
encouraging entrepreneurial growth in
the Mid-Atlantic region. Many graduates
have gone on to start companies in the
United States and abroad.
“It takes entrepreneurs to instill an
entrepreneurial culture,” says
entrepreneur and Dingman Center Founder
Rudy Lamone. So, in 1986, when Lamone
set out to establish an entrepreneurial
support center for the business school,
he found a willing partner in
Michael D.
Dingman, founder of the Signal
Corporation, now part of Honeywell
International. With a generous grant
from Mr. Dingman, the Dingman Center
emerged as a top-ranked entrepreneurship
center due to the efforts of Mr. Lamone
and future directors Charles Heller
(1990-1999), and Don Spero (2000-2004).
Both Heller and Lamone were recipients
of the Ernst and Young
Entrepreneur-of-the-Year award for their
work in support of entrepreneurship, the
first time in the history of the awards
that two individuals from the same
organization were honored. Under the
current leadership of Managing Director
Asher Epstein (Smith MBA), the Dingman
Center has continued as a national
catalyst in the evolving arena of
entrepreneurial practice.
The Dingman Center
Has a History of ‘Firsts'
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The
Center's Capital Access Program was
the first to bring real investors
together with real student and
non-student companies.
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The
Dingman Center was among the first
to create and teach undergraduate
and graduate courses in the field of
entrepreneurship.
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The
Dingman Center developed some of the
first courses in business
biotechnology and technology
entrepreneurship.
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The
Dingman Center was the first to
organize a national meeting of
leading entrepreneurship centers in
the U.S., thus creating the National
Consortium of Entrepreneurship
Centers, a 180 member organization.
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The
Dingman Center was the first to provide
workshops, seminars, and training
programs for the regional
entrepreneurial community.
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The
Dingman Center was among the first
recipients of Kaufman and Coleman
Foundation grants to support the
Center's programs.
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The
Dingman Center was the first center
on campus to establish faculty
summer research awards.
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It
is the only Center where two of its
leaders have received the Ernst &
Young Entrepreneur of the Year
Award.
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The
Dingman Center was the first of 5
Centers chosen to receive the NASDAQ
award for Center of Excellence in
Entrepreneurship.
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