Entrepreneurship · Alaska
Entrepreneurship colleges in Alaska
CampusPin lists 8 U.S. colleges in Alaska that offer Entrepreneurship programs. Compare tuition, acceptance rate, and enrollment in the table below, every figure links back to the institution's official IPEDS data.
Entrepreneurship teaches you to start, finance, and run your own venture, suiting people who want to turn an idea into a working business and manage it day to day.
Schools in Alaska that offer Entrepreneurship
Alaska Bible College
Palmer, AK · University · Private
Tuition
$10,930
Acceptance
100%
Enrollment
34
Alaska Career College
Anchorage, AK · Community College · Private
Tuition
$10,976
Acceptance
100%
Enrollment
255
Alaska Christian College
Soldotna, AK · Community College · Private
Tuition
$9,014
Acceptance
89%
Enrollment
60
Alaska Pacific University
Anchorage, AK · University · Private
Tuition
$20,760
Acceptance
86%
Enrollment
541
Charter College
Anchorage, AK · University · Private
Tuition
$18,678
Acceptance
100%
Enrollment
2,277
University of Alaska Anchorage
Anchorage, AK · University · Public
Tuition
$7,566
Acceptance
67%
Enrollment
7,550
University of Alaska Fairbanks
Fairbanks, AK · University · Public
Tuition
$8,640
Acceptance
100%
Enrollment
5,029
University of Alaska Southeast
Juneau, AK · University · Public
Tuition
$6,960
Acceptance
63%
Enrollment
1,160
Entrepreneurship programs in Alaska: by the numbers
A quick comparison of the 8 schools listed above, drawn from each institution's published IPEDS data.
Schools listed
8
Public / private
3 / 5
Universities / 2-year
6 / 2
Cities represented
5
In-state tuition range
$6,960–$20,760
Median in-state tuition
$9,972
Lowest published in-state tuition
University of Alaska Southeast
$6,960
Most selective
University of Alaska Southeast
63% acceptance
Largest by enrollment
University of Alaska Anchorage
7,550 students
Figures reflect the schools currently listed and each institution's most recent reported data. Verify current tuition and admissions details with the school before applying.
What you'll study in a Entrepreneurship program
- Opportunity recognition and customer discovery
- New-venture financing, fundraising, and pitching to investors
- Business model design and lean startup validation
- Writing and defending a full business plan
- Founder-level accounting, cash-flow, and bootstrapping decisions
- Product and market development for early-stage ventures
- Small-business and family-enterprise operations
- Sales, pricing, and go-to-market strategy
- Venture capstone, incubator, and live consulting projects
Where a Entrepreneurship degree can lead
- Founder and Owner
- Small Business Manager
- Startup Operations Lead
- Business Development Manager
- Product Manager
- Franchise Owner
Typical pay: Early-career wages vary by employer, region, and experience (BLS, 2024 general and operations managers median $102,950).
Entrepreneurship prepares you to build and operate your own business rather than fill a defined role inside someone else's. You learn how to spot an unmet need, test whether people will actually pay for a solution, write a business plan, and assemble the money and people to launch it. Coursework runs across the functions a founder personally owns: validating customers, pricing and selling a product, reading cash flow and a balance sheet, raising money from lenders or investors, and steering the venture once it has employees and revenue. This is the applied, owner's-seat cousin of a general business administration degree, which trains you to manage established firms; entrepreneurship centers on creating something new and carrying the risk of getting it off the ground, and it differs from a finance or marketing major by treating those subjects as tools a founder uses rather than as separate careers.
The credential is most often a bachelor's degree, sometimes offered as a concentration within a broader business program, and many schools cap it with a capstone in which student teams pitch a real venture to a panel of investors or mentors. Programs lean on experiential work: business-plan competitions, incubator or accelerator placements, mentorship from working founders, and small-business consulting projects with local clients. There is no license to start a company, though specific ventures may need permits, registrations, or industry approvals that you should verify for your field and state, and it is worth confirming the accreditation status of the business program you are considering. Graduates start and run their own companies, take early operating roles at young firms, buy or operate franchises, lead business development, or move into corporate roles that reward people who can build a product or unit from nothing.
In federal data for the closely related occupation of general and operations managers, the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics reports a 2024 median wage of $102,950 and projects employment to grow about 4.4% from 2024 to 2034; a bachelor's degree is the typical entry-level education for that occupation. National figures are occupation-wide medians across all experience levels, not starting wages or graduate outcomes.
Entrepreneurship in other states
Find more Entrepreneurship schools
Use CampusPin's filter-first search to narrow 8+ Entrepreneurship programs in Alaska by tuition, school size, acceptance rate, and campus setting.