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Understanding Entrepreneurship

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Independently owned and managed business that does not dominate its market ... Circuit City. Barnes & Noble. Dell Computer. ConAgra. America Online ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Understanding Entrepreneurship


1
Chapter 7
  • Understanding Entrepreneurship the Small
    Business

2
What is a Small Business?
  • Small Business Administration (SBA) 
  • Federal agency charged with assisting small
    businesses
  • Small Business 
  • Independently owned and managed business that
    does not dominate its market

3
The Importance of Small Business in the U.S.
Economy
  • Most U.S. businesses employ fewer than 100
    people.
  • Most U.S. workers are employed by small firms.

4
The Importance of Small Business
7 - 4
5
The Importance of Small Business in the U.S.
Economy
  • Job Creation
  • Innovation
  • Importance to Big Business

6
Big Business Jobs Created Lost
7 - 6
7
Popular Forms of Small-Business Enterprise
  • Services
  • Retailing
  • Construction
  • Financial
  • Insurance
  • Wholesaling
  • Transportation
  • Manufacturing

8
Small Business by Industry
7 - 8
9
Entrepreneurship
  • Although the concepts of entrepreneurship and
    small business are closely related, there are
    some important, though often subtle, differences
    between them.

10
The Distinction Between Entrepreneurship Small
Business
  • Entrepreneur 
  • Businessperson who accepts both the risks and the
    opportunities involved in creating and operating
    a new business venture

11
Entrepreneurial Characteristics
  • Most successful entrepreneurs have
    characteristics that set them apart from most
    other business ownersfor example
  • They are resourceful.
  • They have a concern for good, often personal,
    customer relations.
  • Most successful entrepreneurs also have a strong
    desire to be their own bosses.
  • Many express a need to gain control over my
    life or build for the family and believe that
    building successful businesses will help them do
    it.
  • They can also handle ambiguity and deal with
    surprises.

12
Success and Failure in Small Business
  • For every Henry Ford, Walt Disney, Mary Kay Ash,
    or Bill Gatespeople who transformed small
    businesses into major corporationsthere are many
    small business owners and entrepreneurs who fail.

13
Trends in Small Business Start-Ups
  • Thousands of new businesses are started in the
    United States every year.
  • The following five factors help account for this
    trend
  • The emergence of e-commerce
  • Entrepreneurs who cross over from big business
  • Increased opportunities for minorities and women
  • New opportunities in global enterprise
  • Improved rates of survival among small businesses

14
Reasons for Failure
  • Managerial incompetence or inexperience
  • Neglect
  • Weak control systems
  • Insufficient capital

15
Reasons for Success
  • Hard work, drive, and dedication
  • Market demand for the products or services being
    provided
  • Luck

16
Starting Operating the Small Business
  • The Internet, of course, is rewriting virtually
    all of the rules for starting and operating a
    small business.
  • Getting into business is easier and faster than
    ever before, there are many more potential
    opportunities than at any time in history, and
    the ability to gather and assimilate information
    is at an all-time high.

17
Starting the Small Business
Would-be entrepreneurs must decide how to get
into business. Should they
  • Buy Out an Existing Business?
  • Start from Scratch?

18
When starting from scratch, entrepreneurs must
determine
  • Who are my customers?
  • Where are they?
  • At what price will they buy my product?
  • In what quantities will they buy?
  • Who are my competitors?
  • How will my product differ from those of my
    competitors?

19
Where can a small business owner get necessary
information?
  • The best way to gain knowledge about a market is
    to work in it before going into business in it.
  • The local Yellow Pages or an Internet search will
    reveal many potential competitors.
  • Studying magazines, books, and web sites aimed
    specifically at small businesses can be helpful.
  • You can hire professionals to survey the market
    for.

20
Financing the Small Business
  • Common sources for funding are
  • Family Friends
  • Personal Savings
  • Banks Similar Lending Institutions
  • Investors
  • Governmental Agencies
  • Lending institutions are more likely to help
    finance the purchase of an existing business than
    a new business because the risks are better
    understood.
  • Individuals starting up new businesses, on the
    other hand, are more likely to have to rely on
    their personal resources.

21
Other Sources of Investment
  • Venture Capital Company 
  • Group of small investors that invest money in
    companies with rapid growth potential
  • Small-Business Investment Company (SBIC) 
  • A government-regulated investment company that
    borrows money from the SBA to invest in or lend
    to a small business
  • Minority Enterprise Small-Business Investment
    Company (MESBIC) 
  • Federally sponsored company that specializes in
    financing businesses that are owned and operated
    by minorities

22
SBA Financial Programs
  • Guaranteed Loans Program 
  • Program in which the SBA guarantees to repay 75
    to 85 percent of small-business commercial loans
    up to 750,000
  • Immediate Participation Loans Program 
  • Program in which small businesses are loaned
    funds put up jointly by banks and the SBA
  • Local Development Companies (LDCs) Program 
  • Program in which the SBA works with local
    for-profit or nonprofit organizations seeking to
    boost a communitys economy

23
Sources of Management Advice
  • Advisory Boards
  • Management Consultants
  • Small Business Administration (SBA)
  • Networking

24
Management Consultant 
  • Independent, outside specialist hired to help
    managers solve business problems

25
Small Business Administration
  • Service Corps of Retired Executives (SCORE) 
  • SBA program in which retired executives work with
    small businesses on a volunteer basis
  • Active Corps of Executives (ACE) 
  • SBA program in which currently employed
    executives work with small businesses on a
    volunteer basis
  • Small Business Institute (SBI) 
  • SBA program in which college and university
    students and instructors work with small-business
    owners to help solve specific problems
  • Small Business Development Center (SBDC) 
  • SBA program designed to consolidate information
    from various disciplines and make it available to
    small businesses

26
Networking
  • Interactions among businesspeople for the purpose
    of discussing mutual problems and opportunities
    and perhaps pooling resources

27
Franchising
  • Franchise
  • Arrangement in which a buyer (franchisee)
    purchases the right to sell the good or service
    of the seller (franchiser)
  • Franchisee
  • Buyer
  • Franchiser
  • Seller or parent company

28
Advantages Disadvantages of Franchising
  • ADVANTAGES
  • Franchiser (parent company) supplies financial,
    managerial, marketing assistance
  • Franchising enables small businesses to grow
    rapidly
  • Franchising risks are lower than those in
    starting a new business from scratch
  • DISADVANTAGES
  • High cost of purchasing a franchise
  • The franchisee sacrifices independence and
    creativity
  • Owning franchises provides no guarantee of success
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