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Enterprise and Entrepreneurship

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Aim: To introduce the concepts of 'enterprise' and ' ... Persuasiveness. Planning. Negotiating. Decision taking. Enterprise in individuals (cont. ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Enterprise and Entrepreneurship


1
Enterprise and Entrepreneurship
2
Enterprise and Entrepreneurship
  • Aim To introduce the concepts of enterprise
    and entrepreneurship, including their
    interrelationships, and to examine the most
    relevant factors of influence on them.

3
Once upon a time
  • agriculture main source of employment
  • Industrial Revolution
  • Wall Street Crash 1929
  • Job creation schemes relatively successful in UK
  • Second World War and after full employment
  • 1970s and 80s dramatic increase in unemployment
  • Changes in industry increasing output through
    increased productivity NOT through additional
    employment.

4
Once upon a time (cont.)
  • David Birch The Job Generation Process (1979)
  • study of employment situation in USA
  • Small firms (lt100 employees) created 80 of net
    new jobs in early 70s USA.
  • Findings dismissed by many
  • Seminal study
  • Replicated by others
  • Put spotlight on small business development
  • Led to increasing support for small business
    sector

5
Once upon a time (cont.)
  • Charles Handy, The Future of Work (1984)
  • Changes in expectations of normal working life
  • In many countries services were beginning to
    overtake manufacturing in their contribution to
    GDP.
  • Long-term employment replaced by more flexible
    employment practices
  • Also
  • ICT
  • Knowledge important rather than physical effort
  • Location less relevant

6
  • What has all this got to do with enterprise?

7
  • Trend to contract out tasks rather than employ
    people
  • ? people will have to be more proactive in
    securing an adequate income
  • ? an increasing number of people will be offering
    their skills, either alone or in small units
  • ? Less dependence on government

8
  • In what context have you come across or used the
    term enterprise?

9
Definition of Enterprise
  • Two definitions (OECD)
  • One which can be termed a narrow one, regards
    enterprise as business entrepreneurialism, and
    sees its promotion and development within
    education and training systems as an issue of
    curriculum development which enables young people
    to learn, usually on an experiential basis, about
    business start-up and management.
  • The second approach, which can be termed the
    broad one, regards enterprise as a group of
    qualities and competencies that enable
    individuals, organisations, communities,
    societies and cultures to be flexible, creative,
    and adaptable in the face of, and as contributors
    to, rapid social and economic change.

10
The narrow view of enterprise
  • Richard Chantillon coined the term
    Entrepreneur in 1734 (entreprendre to
    undertake).
  • Joseph Schumpeter saw innovation as fundamental
    to the entrepreneurial process of wealth creation
    (1928)
  • challenged classical economics
  • saw entrepreneurs as self-interested individuals
    who established short-term monopolies through
    innovation.
  • creative destruction innovation by new
    generation of entrepreneurs, creating new demand.
  • further development of Kondratieffs long waves

11
The narrow view of enterprise (cont.)
  • Which of these waves do you think you can
    identify?

12
The narrow view of enterprise (cont.)
  • Kondratieffs long waves (1925)
  • 1770s/80s Textiles
  • 1830/40s Steam engine iron and steel
  • 1880s/90s Electrical engineering
  • 1930s/40s Cars, petrochemicals
  • 1980s/90s Computing, information services

13
The narrow view of enterprise (cont.)
  • Schumpeters view of innovation
  • Introducing a new good
  • Utilising a new process
  • Penetrating a new market
  • Identifying new sources of supply of raw
    materials.
  • Creating new types of industrial organisation.

14
The narrow view of enterprise (cont.)
  • Peter Drucker
  • Like Schumpeter, sees innovation as central to
    entrepreneurial activity.
  • Sees innovation as a discipline capable of being
    learned and capable of being practised.
  • Identifies seven sources of opportunity for firms
    in search of innovation 4 internal to the
    firm/industry, 3 external.

15
The narrow view of enterprise (cont.)
  • Internal opportunities
  • The unexpected success/failure/event
  • The incongruity between what was supposed to
    happen and what actually happened.
  • The inadequacy in underlying processes taken for
    granted but relatively easy to improve.
  • The changes in industry/market structure often
    unexpected .

16
The narrow view of enterprise (cont.)
  • External opportunities
  • Demographic changes changes in birth rates, life
    expectancy, medical breakthroughs etc.
  • Changes in perception, mood and meaning economic
    cycles, fashion fads, cultural changes.
  • New knowledge scientific and general.

17
The narrow view of enterprise (cont.)
  • Central role of entrepreneur/entrepreneurship in
    business/economic activities accepted.
  • Definitions of entrepreneur(ship) vary widely
  • In the context of economic development
    enterprise and entrepreneurship are often used
    synonymously.

18
The broad view of enterprise
  • Enterprise in individuals
  • Entrepreneurial or enterprising characteristics
    can be defined
  • in terms of behaviour
  • as associated skills
  • as personal attributes.
  • (Gibb, 1993)

19
Enterprise in individuals (cont.)
  • Enterprising behaviours
  • Acting independently on own initiative
  • Actively seeking to achieve goals
  • Flexibly responding to challenges
  • Coping with and enjoying uncertainty
  • Taking risky actions in uncertain environments
  • Solving problems/conflicts creatively
  • Opportunity seeking
  • Commitment to make things happen
  • Persuading others

20
Enterprise in individuals (cont.)
  • Associated skills
  • Problem solving
  • Creativity
  • Persuasiveness
  • Planning
  • Negotiating
  • Decision taking

21
Enterprise in individuals (cont.)
  • Personal attributes
  • Self-confident
  • Autonomous
  • Achievement oriented
  • Versatile
  • Dynamic
  • Resourceful
  • (Gibb, 1993)

22
Enterprise in individuals (cont.)
  • Entrepreneurs display similar characteristics
  • No agreement over what they are and how many
    exist
  • Hornaday (1982) identifies more than 40
  • Timmons et al. identifies 19
  • Lessem suggests there are several types of
    entrepreneur, depending on their personality
    traits

23
Enterprise in individuals (cont.)
  • The main traits/characteristics of the
    entrepreneur are
  • Need for achievement
  • Risk taking
  • Locus of control
  • Desire for independence/autonomy
  • Creativity
  • Intuition

24
Antecedent influences
  • Difficult to prove relevance of antecedent
    influences due to large number of uncontrollable
    variables.
  • Research results often contradictory
  • Some influences appear to be more relevant for
    start-ups, others for growth businesses

25
Antecedent influences (cont.)
  • Family
  • Positive influence if a parent is in business
  • Employment/Unemployment
  • Firms founded by unemployed individuals tend to
    grow more slowly than those whose founders were
    in employment.
  • Education
  • Positive association between educational
    attainment and starting-up a business and, even
    stronger, fast growth firms.
  • Role of education and training in developing
    enterprise skills

26
Entrepreneur vs small business owner
  • Small business venture
  • independently owned and operated
  • not dominant in its field
  • does not engage in any new marketing or
    innovative practices.
  • Entrepreunerial venture
  • engages in at least one of Schumpeters
    categories of behaviour.
  • principal goals are profitability and growth
  • characterised by innovative strategic practices

27
Entrepreneur vs small business owner (cont.)
  • Entrepreneur
  • Establishes and manages a business for the
    principal purpose of profit and growth.
  • Characterised by innovative behaviour
  • Employs strategic management practices.
  • (Carland et al., quoted in Beaver)
  • Small business owner
  • Establishes and manages a business for the
    principal purpose of furthering personal goals.
  • Business must be the primary source of income.
  • Owner perceives the business as an extension of
    his/her personality, intricately bound with
    family needs.

28
Intrapreneurship
  • the process in which innovative products or
    processes are developed by creating an
    entrepreneurial culture within an organisation.
  • (Kirby)
  • the term intrapreneur was invented to describe
    those individuals who operated as entrepreneurs
    within existing organisations.
  • (Jones-Evans)

29
Intrapreneurship (cont.)
  • Intrapreneurs must have relevant managerial
    skills and
  • entrepreneurial skills.
  • Managerial skills
  • Ability to adopt a multidisciplinary role
  • Understanding the environment
  • Encouragement of open discussion
  • Creation of new options
  • Building a coalition of supporters

30
Intrapreneurship (cont.)
  • Entrepreneurial skills
  • Vision and flexibility
  • Action orientation
  • Dedication
  • Persistence in overcoming failure
  • Setting self-determined goals
  • Jones-Evans

31
International comparisons
  • The USA is generally considered to be the role
    model for entrepreneurial culture.
  • The most widely used dimensions of culture are
    (still) those developed by Hofstede (1981).

32
Hofstede (cont.)
  • Cultural differences are expressed in four
    dimensions
  •  Power distance
  • The extent to which the less powerful members of
    institutions and organisations within a country
    expect and accept that power is distributed
    unequally.

33
Hofstede (cont.)
  • Individualism vs. collectivism
  •  Individualism
  • Societies in which the ties between individuals
    are loose everyone is expected to look after
    himself or herself and his or her immediate
    family.
  • Collectivism
  • Societies in which people from birth onwards are
    integrated into strong, cohesive ingroups, which
    throughout peoples lifetime continue to protect
    them in exchange for unquestioning loyalty.

34
Hofstede (cont.)
  • Masculinity vs. femininity
  •  Masculinity
  • Societies in which social gender roles are
    clearly distinct.
  • Femininity
  • Societies in which gender roles overlap (i.e.
    both men and women are supposed to be modest,
    tender and concerned with the quality of life)

35
Hofstede (cont.)
  • Uncertainty avoidance
  • the extent to which the members of a culture feel
    threatened by uncertain or unknown situations.
  • Long-term Orientation (Confucian Dynamism)
  • not part of the original study
  • Confucian tradition emphasises long-term
    orientation thrift, perseverance

36
  • How would you relate these dimensions of culture
    to enterprise/entrepreneurialism?

37
Hofstede (cont.)
  • Position of USA in Hofstedes indices
  •  Power distance bottom quartile
  • Individualism No.1
  • Masculinity top quartile
  • Uncertainty avoidance bottom quartile

38
Hofstede (cont.)
  • PS
  • Hofstedes data collected 1968-72
  • Culture changes
  • UKs cultural dimensions similar to USA.
  • Level of entrepreneurship/enterprise?!?

39
Summary
  • Enterprise and Entrepreneurship
  • The development of an enterprise culture
  • The broad view of enterprise
  • The narrow view of enterprise
  • Enterprise in individuals
  • External factors
  • Intrapreneurship
  • International comparisons

40
Further Reading
  • Gibb, A., 1993, The Enterprise Culture and
    Education, International Small Business Journal,
    Vol.11. No. 3, pp.11-34.

41
  • 1. Prepare for discussion in seminar
  • Entrepreneurs are born and not made!
  • 2. Module website
  • http//www.busmgt.ulst.ac.uk/modules/bmg409c1/bmg4
    09c1.html
  • 3. Notice-board outside L224.
  • 4. E-mail me from an address which you check on a
    regular basis.
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