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STRATEGIC ENTREPRENEURSHIP

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Title: STRATEGIC ENTREPRENEURSHIP


1
STRATEGIC ENTREPRENEURSHIP
A Decicion-Making Approach to New Venture
Creation and Management
  • Philip A. Wickham

2
The nature of entrepreneurship
  • An understanding of the main approaches to
    understanding the nature of entrepreneurship. In
    particular, the dinstinction between the
    entrepreneur as a performer of managerial tasks,
    as an agent of economic change and as a
    personality.

3
Landau's classification ofentrepreneurial types
4
(No Transcript)
5
The nature of entrepreneurship
  • There is no universally agreed definition of
    entrepreneurship. The wide variety of definitions
    in the literature emphasise three aspects
  • the entrepreneur as an economic agent generating
    particular economic effects
  • the entrepreneur as an individual of a particular
    personality and
  • the entrepreneur as a manager undertaking
    particular tasks.
  • An entrepreneur is best regarded as a manager who
    pursues opportunity and drives change to create
    new value.
  • The entrepreneurial venture is distinguished from
    the small business by virtue of being based on a
    significant innovation, having the potential for
    growth, and having clear strategic objectives.

6
  • Entrepreneurship is about bringing about change
    and making the difference. In a narrower sense,
    entrepreneurship is about exploiting innovation
    in order to create value which cannot always be
    measured in purely financial terms.

7
  • The entrepreneur is concerned with identifying
    the potential for change. He or she exists in a
    state of tension between the actual and the
    possible, that is, between what is and what might
    be. This tension is manifest in three dimensions
    the financial, the personal and the social.

8
Beyond profit entrepreneurship in the social and
public domains
  • An appreciation that an understanding of
    entrepreneurship can help make non-profit making
    activities more successful.
  • Entrepreneurship is a style of management
  • Entrepreneurs are managers who are very effective
    and pursuing opportunity and creating change
  • Entrepreneurship is a social as well as an
    economic activity
  • The motivation of the entrepreneur are varied and
    go beyond a desire to make money they also
    involve a desire to create a new and better
    world.

9
Who becomes an entrepreneur?
  • The inventor
  • The unfulfilled manager
  • The displaced manager
  • The young professional
  • The excluded

10
Factors influencing entrepreneurial performance
11
Innovation and the exploitation of opportunity
  • New products
  • New services
  • New production techniques
  • New operating practices
  • New ways of delivering the product or service
  • to the customer
  • New means of informing the customer about the
    product
  • New ways of managing relationships within the
    organisation
  • New ways of managing relationships between
    organisations
  • Multiple innovation

12
Resources available to the entrepreneur
  • Financial resources
  • Resources which can take the form of cash
  • Human resources
  • People, skills, knowledge, etc.
  • Operating resources
  • Facilities such as buildings, vehicles, office
    equipment, machinery and raw materials, etc.

13
The meaning of success
  • Success can be best understood in terms of four
    interacting aspects
  • The performance of the venture
  • The people who have expectations from the venture
  • The nature of those expectations
  • Actual outcomes relative to expectations

14
Measuring success and setting objectives
  • Absolute fincancial performance
  • Financial performance ratios
  • Financial liquidity ratios
  • Absolute stock market performance
  • Stock market ratios
  • Market presence
  • Growth
  • Innovation
  • Customer assessment

15
Understanding failure
  • The business continues to exist as a legal entity
    under the control of the entrepreneur
  • The business continues to exist as an independent
    entity but the entrepreneur loses control
  • The business does not continue to exist as an
    independent entity.

16
Business strategy is...
  • Strategy content
  • The product range
  • Market scope
  • Competetive approach

17
The strategy for the venture
  • A strategy is the means by which the venture will
    achieve its aims.
  • Strategy content defines the products the venture
    will offer, the customer groups to be targeted
    and the way in which the venture will compete
    within its markets.
  • Strategy process defines the way in which the
    venture will make decisions about strategy
    content to adopt.
  • A well-defined strategy aids the venture by
    defining the means by which it will achieve its
    goals in the marketplace.
  • A strategy acts as a guide for the decision
    making and provides a common language for the
    venture's stakeholders.
  • Entrepreneurs often express their venture's
    strategy in the form of heuristics.

18
The business planan entrepreneurial tool
  • A recognition of the influence of formal
  • planning on the performance of the
  • entrepreneurial venture.

19
The role of the business plan
  • The activity of creating a formal business plan
  • consumes both time and resources.
  • There are four mechanisms by which
  • business plan might aid the
  • performance of the venture.

20
The role of the business plan The four
mechanisms
  • By working as a tool for analysis
  • By working as a tool for synthesis
  • By working as a tool for communication
  • By working as a call to action

21
What a business plan should include
  • Mission
  • Overwiew of key objectives
  • The market environment
  • Strategy
  • Financial forecast
  • Activity
  • People

22
The strategic window
  • The strategic window is a visual metaphor which
    allows entrepreneurs to make sense of the
    opportunities they pursue.
  • The five stages of the strategic window are
    spotting, locating, measuring, opening and
    closing.
  • A business environment is full of opportunities
    because existing businesses always leave gaps.
    There is always the potential to create new value
    ? the strategic window.

23
Seeing the window scanning for opportunity
  • Types of opportunities available
  • The new product
  • The new service
  • New means of production
  • New distribution route
  • Improved service
  • Relationship building

24
Locating the window
  • Locating the window means developing a position
    for the new venture and its offerings to the
    marketplace.
  • Strategic positioning relates to the way the
    venture fits in the marketplace in relation to
    its stage in the value addition chain the
    customer groups it serves the customer needs it
    addresses and the technology it adopts to serve
    its customers.
  • Market positioning relates to the way the
    venture's offerings fit in the markeplace in
    relation to the offerings of competitors.

25
Measuring the window
  • Measuring means developing an understanding as to
    the size of the opportunity and what it might be
    worth.
  • A business opportunity is analysed by qualitative
    methods which answer 'what' and 'why' questions
    and quantitative methods which asnwer 'how much'
    and 'how many' questions.
  • Information can be expensive. Effective
    entrepreneurs weight the value of information
    against the cost of obtaining it. Information is
    regarded as an investment in the business.

26
Opening the window
  • Opening the window means gaining the commitment
    of stakeholders and actually starting the
    venture.
  • The key commitments are financial support from
    the investors productive support from emplyees
    and network contacts agreements to provide
    inputs by suppliers and agreement to purchase
    outputs by customers.

27
Closing the window
  • Closing means creating a competitive advantage so
    that the venture can go on exploiting the
    opportunity in the face of competitive pressures.
  • A competitive advantage is something the business
    can do that is valuable for the customer which
    competitors find difficult to match.
  • A competitive advantage has a source within the
    business. The key sources are lower costs
    knowledge of the product and market stronger
    relationships within the network and a more
    flexible and responsive organisational structure.
  • A competitive advantage must be actively
    maintained if it is to be sustainable.

28
Gaining financial support
  • Financial support is a critical factor in the
    success of a new ventue.
  • Suppliers of investment capital are differntiated
    by the amount of capital they will supply, the
    risks they will undertake and the way in which
    they will expect to see their investment mature.
  • Investors select investment opportunities by
    filtering them fof suitability. This filtering
    process has formal analysis and informal
    "intuitive" aspects.
  • The vast majority of investment proposals are
    rejected.

29
The dimensions of business growth
  • The process of growth

30
The process of growth
  • Financial
  • growth in income, expenditure and profits
  • Strategic
  • growth in market presence and competetive
    advantages
  • Structural
  • growth in organisational form, process and
    sturcture
  • Organisational
  • growth in organisations culture and attitudes

31
Strategies for expansion
  • Expanding the business means increasing the
    amount of
  • trade it undertakes. Expansion from any base can
    be
  • achieved in one of four ways, by increasing core
  • markets, by lauching new products, by entering
    new
  • markets and by acquiring established business.

32
Organisational growth and development
  • Organisational growth, like organisation itself,
    is best understood through metaphors of change.
  • Growth is an important objectives for the
    venture. The growth objective must be considered
    in the light of the ventures market potential,
    its strategic capabilities, its resources and
    risks it wishes to undertake.
  • Growth must be both planned for, and controlled
    by, the entrepreneur, both in terms of rate and
    direction.

33
Leadership, power and motivation in the
entrepreneurial venture
34
Leadership, power and motivation in the
entrepreneurial venture
  • Leadership, power and motivation are interrelated
    and interdependent tools which the entrepreneur
    can use to control the venture and given it
    direction.
  • Leadership is the power to focus and direct the
    organisation.
  • Power is the ability to influence the cource of
    actions whitin the organisation.
  • Motivation is the ability to encourage an
    individual to take a particular cource of action

35
Consolidating the venture
  • Consolidation involves changes to the financial,
    strategic, structural and organisational dynamic
    of the venture.
  • Consolidation offers the venture a chance to
    create a defendable copetetive position in the
    marketplace. This offers the promise of rewarding
    the commitment stakeholders have shown towards
    the venture.
  • Intrapreneurism is a form of management which,
    potentially, offers the venture a way of
    combining the flexibility and responsiveness of
    the entrepreneurial with the market power and
    reduced risk of the established organisation.

36
The changing role of the entrepreneur in the
consolidated organisation
  • The roles of the entrepreneur and the chief
    executive are subtly different, althought they
    overlap in many ways. The entrepreneur is more
    interested in creating change, and may be more
    willing to take risks than the role of chief
    executive properly calls for. This can expose the
    mature venture to unnecessary risk.
  • Consolidation gives entrepreneurs an opportunity
    to specialise their roles within their
    organisations.
  • Effective entrepreneurs manage the process of
    succession (the handing over of power within the
    venture) when it is time for them to move on.

37
The roles of the entrepreneur in the mature
organisation
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