Have a brilliant app idea but no tech knowledge to build it?

 

  • Do you listen to tech bros and wonder WTF they are talking about?
  • Are you wondering if you need to learn to code?
  • Are you confused whether to hire UX designers, front end or back end developers? Do you know the difference?

What Non-Technical Founders REALLY Need To Know About Tech

Get the knowledge and confidence to go from idea to live app

 
Enrol now

Do you have an idea for an app or a web-based business, but no idea how to build it? In this course you will get an overview of the basic concepts you need to run or launch a tech startup as a non-technical founder from someone who has done it themselves.

A non-technical founder’s job is not to learn to code, but to successfully manage the technology production process and make sure it aligns with business goals. To do this successfully, non-technical founders need to understand technology workflows, learn how to ask the right questions and collaborate with designers and developers.

Sophia Matveeva teaches this course in person in London, including at London Business School. Previous course attendees used the course to get funding for their startups and transition into tech careers.

Starts on 9 November 2020

Join for only £399.99!

Enrol now

Hi, I'm Sophia

 

I'm a non-technical founder of a tech business called Enty, a retail tech platform that connects consumers, stylists and brands. The company won App of the Day by Mashable, and Grazia named Enty one of the ‘world's best fashion tech startups’.

I've set up the Tech For Non-Techies education community to help other non-technical founders go from idea to thriving product and build their dreams. 

I've contributed to the Financial Times, The Guardian and Forbes on entrepreneurship and technology. I have also guest lectured at Chicago Booth,  London Business School and the London College of Fashion to name a few.

I love helping entrepreneurs and I've advised Chicago Booth’s New Venture Challenge and the Microsoft x London College of Fashion incubator, as well as many ventures and investors.

I hold an MBA from Chicago Booth, and a BSc (Hons) in Politics from Bristol. I also speak Russian and French. 

I split my time between London and the South of France, where I play tennis and sail with huge enthusiasm and very little skill.

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Yes please, enrol me now!

Sophia's Story

 

When I got the admissions letter from Chicago Booth, I thought life was going to be sorted. Or at least my career! 

The University of Chicago Booth School of Business was consistently ranked as the global #1 business school by Business Week and The Economist, so I was feeling pretty smug.

My plan, as I wrote in my admissions essay, was to get to business school, come up with a brilliant startup idea, get a team together, get funding and leave with an MBA and a startup. Naturally, world domination would follow.

By this point, I had worked in a top financial PR company, had a stint in a private equity firm in London and worked in India. I had very little knowledge of the tech sector, but it seemed to be where all the opportunity was coming from. 

I desperately wanted to join the tech boom, and spent most of business school testing various ideas for tech startups. Eventually, the beginnings of an idea for a retail tech business began to take place.

I managed to convince some of my classmates to join me and, through sheer bloodymindedness, we got into the Chicago Booth New Venture Challenge, the top academic accelerator in the United States.

The problem was, none of my classmates actually new how to build the thing we were pitching. Naturally, we didn't get very far in the accelerator, but again, through more persistence and bloodymindedness, I managed to raise some angel funding and marched bravely towards global tech domination. 

This is when disasters began to strike. I worked with a part time CTO, who was planning to raise his Big Tech job when we had raised more money. He said words to me I did not understand.

I looked them up on Google and watched endless YouTube explanations, but that left me more confused. I signed up and paid for coding courses, which I either hated and completed or failed to finish and wallowed in guilt. 

There are plenty of courses helping you to retrain to become a developer or a data scientists, but that's not what I needed. I needed to know how to work with technical professionals to deliver a product into users' hands. 

I ended up learning how to hire and work with developers, designers and data analysts on the job. It was a hard, painful and expensive journey, but when I was going through it, there was no other way.

I began writing about what I was learning in Forbes, and when my article What Non-Technical Founders Really Need To Know About Tech reached thousands in less than a day, I realised that I was not alone.

I began giving talks to help non-technical entrepreneurs get the skills and confidence to build their tech ventures. I taught University of Chicago alumni, spoke at the Mayor of London's international trade promotion agency London and Partners and at entrepreneurial hubs like WeWork. 

One day, an MBA student from London Business School came to my talk and found it so useful, he convinced London Business School to host the course. 

Since then, the students have used this course to create their first products, get funding and get clarity for their business plans. 

I believe it is not only possible but desirable for people without computer science backgrounds to create digital products, so we can all benefit from diversity of thought and have fun, useful new tech.

Creating something new is hard enough (I know!), but tech knowledge doesn't have to be a barrier. This course will save you thousands in cash and weeks of stress. 

Give me knowledge. Give me confidence. Enrol me now!
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In this online course you will learn

 

1) The product lifecycle

  • Workflow: from idea to product. The steps to take and the professionals involved
  • How to learn what you really need and avoid the rest
  • Investors’ view

2) Product Management basics

  • What product managers do and how that fits into the job of running a startup
  • Aligning business metrics with product metrics
  • Product management interview questions

3) Design

  • Why designing for users is different to designing for beauty
  • How to test if users like and understand your designs
  • How to connect design to code

4) Development

  • Languages
  • Why one costs more than the other
  • Back end and server basics

5) Analysis, AI and the feedback loop

  • How to analyse your product for continuous improvement
  • What data scientists really do
  • Building the AI factory: the four components
  • AI algorithm: not as hard as it sounds

This course assumes no prior knowledge of technology.

This course is great for:

  • Entrepreneurs who want to build technology products but do not have technical backgrounds
  • Non-technical professionals working in tech companies
  • Business school students who want to supplement their business knowledge
  • Professionals wanting to transition to the fast-growing technology sector
  • Professionals servicing tech company clients, e.g. recruiters, lawyers, consultants
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Course Guide

Downloadable materials for each module (worth £600).

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Curated resources

Recommended reading, podcasts & videos to enhance your learning. 

Give me knowledge. Give me confidence. Sign me up!
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Nasi Rwigema, London Business School MBA

At London Business School, we built a six month programme dedicated to helping students transition into tech. Tech for Non-Techies was one of the most valuable workshops we ran through the program." 

The Details

The course will consist of five modules, split over five weeks. You will get pre-recorded videos, written material, suggested reading and homework each week to solidify your learning.

You'll also get a live Q&A and feedback session with Sophia.

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Sounds great. Sign me up!
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Lucia Marin Fabian,

Founder of Loop

I attended Tech for Non-Technical Founders and it helped me understand all the aspects involved in developing an app, and helped me get investment to build my first prototype.

Sophia explained everything in a very clear and simple way. I couldn’t recommend this workshop highly enough

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Fru Bekefi, Second Home, Community & Innovation Programme Manager 

Sophia’s ‘What non-technical founders really need to know about tech’ is excellent. Expect lots of actionable insights on what you need to know (hint, you won’t need to code) and how you can learn to work with developers and technical co-founders.

You’ll end up saving years in trial, error and making your own mistakes.

I want this too. Sign me up!
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