“…From a practical perspective, our study also contributes to the development of strategies and initiatives by interested parties; therefore, this study suggests the following implications: (1) it is important for universities to detect the motivations, capabilities, and skills (hard and soft) that contribute to the strengthening of teaching practices focused on alertness and entrepreneurial intention [154,155]; (2) university managers should seek and adapt new educational models, as well as the methodologies of successful business incubators and accelerators (North American and European) to promote university entrepreneurship [156,157]; (3) university managers should adopt and strengthen gender inclusion models for the development of innovative and technological entrepreneurship [10,158]; (4) it is important to develop and promote public policies focused on inclusion, equity, and discrimination to raise the quality of business opportunities and university entrepreneurship [159]. In these initiatives, universities, governments, business sectors, and social opinion leaders will have to be linked and articulated [160].…”