Title: Dia 1
1First question
What do you define as Entrepreneurship? What is
your expectation of this module?
2Theories on Entrepreneurship
3"... most of our decisions to do something
positive, the full consequences of which will be
drawn out over many days to come, can only be
taken as a result of animal spirits - of a
spontaneous urge to action rather than inaction,
and not as the outcome of a weighted average of
quantitative benefits multiplied by quantitative
probabilities... if the animal spirits are dimmed
and the spontaneous optimism falters...
enterprise will fade and die"
- J.M Keynes The General Theory of Employment,
Interest and Money.
4Entrepreneurship for young people
- The current and next generations are well suited
for entrepreneurial activities. - Youngsters of today
- Are immersed in technology and have internalized
its power - You are passionate and challenging you welcome
change and embrace the idea of progress - Young companies born on the right side of the
digital divide, are running circles around their
older, richer and slower rivals - You are independent you are workers with little
loyalty to companies making strategic mistakes
5Minipreneur eco system
www.trendwatching.com
Today's aspiring and established MINIPRENEURS
truly have a highly developed network of
intermediaries, tools, resources, and processes
at their disposal. It's an ecosystem on a much
more elaborate scale than anyone foresaw even
five years ago when entrepreneurialism was all
the rage during the .com boom. MINIPRENEURS have
access, for peanuts, if not for free, toA.
Hardware, software, ICT and skillsB. Design,
production and manufacturingC. Monetizing
existing assetsD. MarketplacesE. AdvertisingF.
Travel G. Talent, finance, payment, logistics
6Theories on Entrepreneurship
- Why do we need theories?
- How can we define Entrepreneurship?
- Resource-based theory
- Entrepreneurs born or made?
7Why do we need theories?
- Imagine we would have a law of Entrepreneurship
just like Newtons law of gravity - Everyone would know this law and experience
unlimited success
8- would we be happy then knowing this law?
- If everyone could succeed,
- there would not be much profit in it!
9Why do we need theories?
- Theories on Entrepreneurship are not laws they
do not explain precisely what will happen with
absolute certainty in all cases risk
uncertainty - An entrepreneur with a good theory of how
entrepreneurship works is practical and
efficient. - With a good theory we can think about all the
problems and issues of new venture creation
without having to start business after business
to see what works and what does not.
10Why do we need theories?
- So, lets be glad we have theories on
Entrepreneurship, not laws!
11Definitions of Entrepreneurship
- Entrepreneurship is the creation of an innovative
economic organization for the purpose of gain or
growth under conditions of risk and uncertainty.
12- How innovative can an organization be?
- New product or service offered
- New method or technology employed
- New market targeted and opened
- New source of supply of raw materials and
resources used - New form of industrial organization created
- Innovation is not creating new things, but doing
new things with existing ones.
13Drivers of Entrepreneurship
- Risk variability of outcomes/returns
- Uncertainty the environment cannot be perfectly
known to the entrepreneur
14Resource based theory
- The resource-based theory
- Helps us to understand new venture creation
- Describes how entrepreneurs can build businesses
using their own resources and capabilities/compete
nces
15Resource based theory
- The resource-based theory says that an
entrepreneur uses resources that are - Rare
- Valuable
- Hard to copy
- Non-substitutable for a sustainable competitive
advantage - But the choice of which industry to enter and
what business to be in, is not enough to ensure
success. The nature and quality of the above
resources, capabilities and strategies the
entrepreneur possesses can lead to long-term
success.
16The RB theory helps to explain 2 common
paradoxes
- Paradox 1
- What is known to all, is an advantage to none!
- You can get smarter without getting richer if the
knowledge you posses isnt rare, valuable, hard
to copy or hard to substitute. - Intelligence alone does not always lead to
success in business.
17The RB theory helps to explain 2 common
paradoxes
You wouldnt want to belong to any club that
would have you as a member!
- Paradox 2
- Creating success in industries with large
barriers. It seems existing firms have the edge,
but certain individuals can create business. - E.g. Richard Branson, Michael OLeary, Anita
Roddick,
Because if you get in, everyone could.
183 dimensions to study entrepreneurship
- Individuals personal experience, knowledge,
education, training contributing to the
enterprise. But individuals rely on a network of
other people, other businesspeople and other
entrepreneurs. - Environments opportunities (resources) and
threats (competition). Combine resources and
configure these into success. - Organizations have a form structure. Strategy
enables to create or penetrate a market. It is
made up of people who have skills, talents,
values and beliefs.
19Sam Waltons 10 rules to follow
Founder of Walmart USA
- Commit to your business and believe in it
- Share your profits with your partners (employees)
- Motivate your partners, challenge them and keep
score - Communicate everything
- Appreciate your associates with well-chosen words
- Celebrate your success
- Listen to everyone and get them talking
- Exceed your customers expectations
- Control your expenses
- BREAK ALL THE RULES. Swim upstream. Go the other
way.
20Resource-based theory
- What is a resource any thing or quality that is
useful. - Our theory focuses on the differences that
characterize entrepreneurs and the founding of
their companies. - Firms have therefore different starting points
for resources (resource heteorgeneity) and other
firms cannot get them (resource immobility).
21Resource-based theory
- Firms usually begin with a relatively small
amount of strategically relevant resources and
skills. - Firms buy/acquire resources and skills cheaply
- gt transform the resource or skill into a product
or service - gt deploy and implement the strategy
- gt sell dearly (for more than you initially paid)
22What is the difference between competitive
advantage and sustained competitive advantage?
Creates compet. advantage
Resource Dimension
No compet. advantage
Exploits opportunity Neutralizes threats
Not suited to the environment Common
Valuable resources
Unique Costly to produce
Readily available Inexpensive
Rare resources
Unique history, causally ambiguous, socially
complex
Ordinary history Causality known Socially simple
Hard to copy resources
Not possible through similar modes, different
modes
Easily possible through similar modes, different
modes
Substitutable resources
23- Types of resources PROFIT factors
- Physical
- Reputational
- Organizational
- Financial
- Intellectual (human)
- Technological
- Are broadly defined and include all assets,
capabilities, organizational processes, firm
attributes, information and knowledge. - These resources may confer specific advantage or
none.
24Entrepreneurs born or made?
- Are you born an entrepreneur?
- Not everyone will succeed as an entrepreneur, and
sometimes the people who do succeed do so only
after a number of painful attempts. - The true test of your entrepreneurial potential
is in the marketplace, not in the classroom. - remind our little quiz
25Entrepreneurs born or made?
- David McClelland (1961) described the
entrepreneur as primarily motivated by an
overwhelming need for achievement and strong urge
to build. - (May 20, 1917March 1998) was an American
psychological theorist. Noted for his work on
achievement motivation and the conciousness, he
published a number of works from the 1950s until
the 1970s and had a hand in the creation of the
scoring system for the Thematic Apperception
Test.
26Entrepreneurs born or made?
- Collins and Moore (1970) questioned and studied
150 entrepreneurs and concluded that they are - tough, pragmatic people driven by needs of
independence and achievement. they seldom are
willing to submit to authority.
27Entrepreneurs born or made?
- Bird (1992) sees entrepreneurs as mercurial, that
is prone to insights, brainstorms, deceptions,
ingeniousness and resourcefulness. Entrepreneurs
are cunning, opportunistic, creative and
unsentimental.
28Entrepreneurs born or made?
- Cooper, Woo, Dunkelberg (1988) argue that
entrepreneurs exhibit extreme optimism in their
decision making processes. - In a study of 2.994 entrepreneurs they report
that 81 indicate their personal odds of success
as greater then 70 - and a remarkable 33 seeing odds of success of 10
out of 10.
29Entrepreneurs born or made?
- Busenitz and Barney (1997) claim entrepreneurs
are prone to overconfidence and over
generalisations.
30Entrepreneurs born or made?
- Cole (1959) found there are 4 types of
entrepreneur - the innovator
- the calculating inventor
- the over-optimistic promoter
- the organisation builder
- These types are not related to the personality
but to the type of opportunity the entrepreneur
faces.
31Entrepreneurs born or made?
- Richard Branson "Business opportunities are like
buses, there's always another one coming. - Anita Roddick "Nobody talks about
entrepreneurship as survival, but that's exactly
what it is and what nurtures creative thinking.
Running that first shop taught me business is not
financial science it's about trading buying and
selling."
32(No Transcript)
33Psychological approach
- Are there personality characteristics that help
us predict who will be an entrepreneur and who
will not? - Most frequently discussed characteristics are
- Need for achievement
- Locus of control
- Risk-taking behaviour
- Place or position where something is
particularly known to exist or happen
34Need for achievement
- The entrepreneurial need for achievement n Ach
- People with high levels of n-Ach have a strong
desire to solve problems on their own, enjoy
setting goals and achieving them through their
own efforts, and like receiving feedback on how
they are doing. They are moderate risk takers. - Scientifically, the link between n-Ach and small
business ownership has not been proven (yet).
35Locus of control
- 2 types of people
- Internals who believe that for the most part the
future is theirs to control through their own
efforts. - Externals who believe that what happens to them
is a result of fate, chance, luck or forces
beyond their control. - Are there more internals among entrepreneurs?
- gt scientifically, we are not sure
36Risk taking behaviour
- Because the task of new venture creation is
apparently fraught with risk and the financing of
these new ventures is often called risk
capital, researchers have tried to determine
whether entrepreneurs take more risks than other
business people. - In a well-known study however, risk-taking
behaviour is not a distinguishing characteristic
of entrepreneurs.
37Sociological approach
- Explaining the social conditions from which
entrepreneurs emerge. - What drives entrepreneurs towards
self-employment?
38- Negative displacement. This is the alienation of
individuals or groups from the core of society. - Because they are on the outer fringes of the
economy they are sensitive to the allure of
self-employment (think of certain ethnic groups) - gt 65 of Korean immigrants in NYC area own at
least one business. - Other negative displacements being fired from a
job/being angered or bored by current employment,
middle-age, divorce, etc.
39- Being between things, for example between
student life and career. - Positive pull from a potential partner, mentor,
parent, investor or customer. - Positive push a career path that offers
entrepreneurial opportunities or an education
that gives the appropriate knowledge and
opportunity (hoping to do that with you students
now!).
40- Situational characteristics will determine
whether the new venture takes place or not - Perceptions of desirability entrepreneurship
must be seen as desirable. This may depend on
culture, society and even religion - Perceptions of feasibility potential
entrepreneurs need examples of what is possible.
Emotional, financial and physical support is
needed.
41Individual Characteristics Personal resources
Need for achievement, locus of control,
propensity for taking risk, knowledge,
experience, reputation Sociological factors
Perceptions of desirability and feasibility, role
models and mentors, entrepreneurial parents,
networks and contacts Demographics Age, gender,
education
- Organization
- Strategies
- Generic strategies
- Cost leadership
- Differentiation
- Focus
- Isolating mechanisms
- Entry wedges
- New product/service
- Parallel competition
- Franchise entry
- Organizational culture
Environment Resources Venture capital/financial
resources availability Presence of experienced
entrepreneurs Technically skilled labor
force Accessibility of customers/suppliers Availab
ility of land, transportation, Etc..
New Venture Creation
Constraints in the environment Barriers to entry
Governmental influences, rivalry among existing
competitors, pressure from substitute products,
bargaining power of suppliers, bargaining power
of buyers