“This Is A Digital Bootcamp For Neglected Startups!”

  • Entrepreneurs: Training helps fill in the gaps to qualify for funding

  • Investors: More qualified startups expand the funnel of opportunity

  • Mentors: Sign up to share your expertise with a global audience

TRAINING      |     BOOKS     |     PODCASTS     |     CERTIFICATIONS     |     COMMUNITY

Crucible Venture Academy is the next generation of training for startups. Digital modules empower business owners with best practices to reduce the risk of failure and chart the course to success. Investors base their decisions on your progress.

 

Experience the wisdom of our experts through videos, podcasts, transcripts and quizzes.

Mentoring anywhere you are…..24/7….365.

 

Building a Company Culture So People Thrive

Garry Ridge - CEO of WD-40

Garry encourages leaders to empower employees with a culture that brings out their best and steers the company to success.

After each video lecture, Venture Academy members are able to:

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The Essentials of Branding

USD Professor Justine Rapp

Developing Patent Strategy

Chris DiLeo - Partner Knobbe

What is Servant Leadership

Jana De Anda - VP Trendsource

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Venture Academy Podcast Collection

The Venture Academy Podcast Collection is the "must hear" business podcast for aspiring entrepreneurs, venture teams and small businesses. 

Past episodes include unique topics such as: Cultivating a Company Culture and The Power of Velocity: How Speed to Market is Changing Everything About Market Fit

Follow us here to learn more. Here’s a sample:

 
 

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Venture Academy Book List

The Venture Academy list of recommended books was created for anyone interested in going deep on subjects like leadership, work-life balance and business analytics.


Thought leaders recommend books from their own shelves, sharing about their insights and applications. Sometimes, there’s nothing like an old-fashioned paper book, a cup of coffee and a warm fire to get the juices going. We think you’ll enjoy what you find here.

Here’s a sample…

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The Checklist Manifesto by Atul Gawande

Reviewed by matt fistonich

Over the past decade, through his writing in The New Yorker magazine and his books Complications and Better, Atul Gawande has made a name for himself as a writer of exquisitely crafted meditations on the problems and challenges of modern medicine. His latest book, The Checklist Manifesto, begins on familiar ground, with his experiences as a surgeon. But before long it becomes clear that he is really interested in a problem that afflicts virtually every aspect of the modern world–and that is how professionals deal with the increasing complexity of their responsibilities. It has been years since I read a book so powerful and so thought-provoking.

Gawande begins by making a distinction between errors of ignorance (mistakes we make because we don’t know enough), and errors of ineptitude (mistakes we made because we don’t make proper use of what we know). Failure in the modern world, he writes, is really about the second of these errors, and he walks us through a series of examples from medicine showing how the routine tasks of surgeons have now become so incredibly complicated that mistakes of one kind or another are virtually inevitable: it’s just too easy for an otherwise competent doctor to miss a step, or forget to ask a key question or, in the stress and pressure of the moment, to fail to plan properly for every eventuality. Gawande then visits with pilots and the people who build skyscrapers and comes back with a solution. Experts need checklists–literally–written guides that walk them through the key steps in any complex procedure. In the last section of the book, Gawande shows how his research team has taken this idea, developed a safe surgery checklist, and applied it around the world, with staggering success.

The danger, in a review as short as this, is that it makes Gawande’s book seem narrow in focus or prosaic in its conclusions. It is neither. Gawande is a gorgeous writer and storyteller, and the aims of this book are ambitious. Gawande thinks that the modern world requires us to revisit what we mean by expertise: that experts need help, and that progress depends on experts having the humility to concede that they need help.