Entrepreneurship Journal

Weekly startup reflections, class notes, and experiments from my Intro to Entrepreneurship journey.

A sleek walnut desk neatly arranged with a closed silver laptop, a navy-blue hardcover journal opened to a page filled with tidy handwritten bullet points, and a fine black metal pen resting diagonally across the margin. Beside the journal sits a small geometric concrete planter holding a healthy green succulent. The desk is positioned near a large floor-to-ceiling window in a modern office, with soft morning daylight streaming in and casting gentle, elongated shadows across the wood grain. Captured in photographic realism from a slightly elevated angle with a shallow depth of field, the composition follows the rule of thirds, creating a calm, professional atmosphere that suggests focused weekly reflection and structured entrepreneurial thinking.
A minimalist whiteboard mounted on a smooth light-gray wall, covered with neatly drawn flowcharts, lean canvas boxes, and a bold “MVP” circled in deep blue marker at the center. Color-coded arrows in red, green, and black connect customer segments, value propositions, and revenue streams, with sticky notes in muted pastel tones aligned along the frame. Below, a slim floating shelf holds an organized row of dry-erase markers and an eraser. Soft overhead office lighting creates even illumination with gentle reflections on the whiteboard surface. Photographic realism, shot straight-on at eye level with sharp focus, emphasizes clarity and structure. The mood is analytical and energetic yet controlled, evoking disciplined startup planning and thoughtful experimentation in a professional workspace.

Meet Alex, Aspiring Entrepreneur

I’m Alex Winder, a student diving into Intro to Entrepreneurship and documenting the real story behind learning to build ventures. Each week I share honest reflections, case takeaways, and small startup experiments as I figure out what works.

About

Course Timeline And Experiments

This journal follows my semester from week one to finals, mixing class insights with real experiments. You’ll find structured reflections, quick case summaries, and small tests I run to apply entrepreneurial tools in the wild.

A sleek walnut desk neatly arranged with a closed silver laptop, a navy-blue hardcover journal opened to a page filled with tidy handwritten bullet points, and a fine black metal pen resting diagonally across the margin. Beside the journal sits a small geometric concrete planter holding a healthy green succulent. The desk is positioned near a large floor-to-ceiling window in a modern office, with soft morning daylight streaming in and casting gentle, elongated shadows across the wood grain. Captured in photographic realism from a slightly elevated angle with a shallow depth of field, the composition follows the rule of thirds, creating a calm, professional atmosphere that suggests focused weekly reflection and structured entrepreneurial thinking.