Title: A Reflective Introduction to Entrepreneurship
1A Reflective Introduction to Entrepreneurship
- Homero Galicia
- Kauffman Campus Initiative
- University of Texas at El Paso
2- It is not about starting a business, rather it is
about finding the entrepreneur within you.
3Common Reasons for Starting a Business
- Capitalize on technical expertise
- Under-employed
- Limited job opportunities
- Unhappy with boss
- Belief that can do job better than employer
Are these the right reasons?
4E-Myth
- Small businesses are started by entrepreneurs
risking capital to make a profit.
5Reality 1
- An entrepreneur is an inventor, although few
inventors are entrepreneurs. - Inventors ask what is missing in this picture and
answer it by inventing the missing piece that
make the picture whole.
Gerber, M.E., Awakening the Entrepreneur Within
How Ordinary People Can Create Extraordinary
Companies, Collins, 2008.
6Reality 2
- Entrepreneurs do not buy business
opportunitiesthey create them. - Business opportunities are invented by
technicians or mangers. - They may not have aspirations to be entrepreneurs.
Gerber, M.E., Awakening the Entrepreneur Within
How Ordinary People Can Create Extraordinary
Companies, Collins, 2008.
7Reality 3
- Invention is contagious.
- People love to experience an original business
idea that has been successfully manifested in
the world. - The entrepreneur loves accolades, lives for the
successful manifestation of the invention, and
finds joy only when the audience and the business
truly come together as originally envisioned.
Gerber, M.E., Awakening the Entrepreneur Within
How Ordinary People Can Create Extraordinary
Companies, Collins, 2008.
8Reality 4
- To be an entrepreneur, the success of the
inventionthe businessis measured by growth. The
faster the business grows, the more successful
the invention. - Entrepreneurs create businesses that thrive.
Gerber, M.E., Awakening the Entrepreneur Within
How Ordinary People Can Create Extraordinary
Companies, Collins, 2008.
9Reality 5
- Everyone possesses the ability to be an
entrepreneur, to invent, to conceive a great idea
for a new business, and to create an original
business based upon a simple explosive idea.
Gerber, M.E., Awakening the Entrepreneur Within
How Ordinary People Can Create Extraordinary
Companies, Collins, 2008.
10What is entrepreneurship?
- A process through which individuals and teams
create value by bringing together unique packages
of resource inputs to exploit opportunities in
the environment. It can occur in any organization
context and result in a variety of possible
outcomes - New venture
- Products
- Services
- Processes
- Markets
- Technologies
Its mostly about simple people with simple
dreams who can turn these dreams into realities.
An entrepreneur can both dream and do.
Morris, M.H., Entrepreneurial Intensity
Sustainable Advantage for Individuals, Organizatio
ns and Societies, Quorum Books, 1998.
11Entrepreneurship Process
- Identify an opportunity
- Develop the concept
- Determine the required resources
- Acquire the necessary resources
- Implement and manage
- Harvest the venture
Morris, M.H., Entrepreneurial Intensity
Sustainable Advantage for Individuals, Organizatio
ns and Societies, Quorum Books, 1998.
12Social Entrepreneur-1
- Identifies and solves social problems on a large
scale - Creates and transforms whole industry (as
business entrepreneur) - Acts as change agents for society
- Seizes opportunities other miss to improve
systems - Invents and disseminates new approaches
- Advances sustainable solutions that create social
value.
The New Heroes, a production of Oregon Public
Broadcasting and Malone-Grove Productions, Inc.
, 2005.
13Social Entrepreneur-2
- Seeks to generate social value rather than
profits (unlike business entrepreneurs) - Targets work toward sweeping, long-term changes
not just immediate, small-scale effects
The New Heroes, a production of Oregon Public
Broadcasting and Malone-Grove Productions, Inc.
, 2005.
14Corporate Entrepreneurship
- Process whereby an individual or a group of
individuals in association with an existing
organization, create a new organization, or
instigate renewal or innovation within that
organization.
- Other terms
- Corporate entrepreneurship
- Intrepreneuring
- Internal corporate entrepreneurship
- Corporate venturing
(Sharma and Christman, 1999)
15Discussion Objectives
- Encourage the discovery of the entrepreneur
within - Begin to put structure to your personal passion
or dream
Think Share Report
16Discussion Entrepreneur within
- Review discussion questions
- Review time limits
- Think 5 minutes
- Share 5 minutes each
- 3 minutes to present
- 2 minutes for questions and discussion
- Report 10 minutes
- Break class into groups of three
- Assign role of timekeeper
- No judgment of responses!