Title: THEORIES OF ENTREPRENEURSHIP: THE END OF THE HEROIC ENTREPRENEUR
1THEORIES OF ENTREPRENEURSHIP THE END OF THE
HEROIC ENTREPRENEUR
- JEAN CLARKE
- LEEDS UNIVERSITY BUSINESS SCHOOL
2AIMS OF THE LECTURE
- To discuss your views on entrepreneurship
- To examine entrepreneurship in the UK
- To consider some ideas about entrepreneurship
- To show the importance of moving from thinking
about entrepreneurship as just single individuals - To understand entrepreneurship as a process
- To engage in practical activities around
entrepreneurship
3VIEWS ON ENTREPRENEURSHIP?
- Divide into groups of five people and discuss
- Can you point to examples of entrepreneurship in
any aspect of your life? - What is entrepreneurship?
- How would you define an entrepreneur?
- Who would you identify as an entrepreneur?
- Draw out the differences between entrepreneurs
and entrepreneurship
4 ENTREPRENEURSHIP PERSONALITY OR PROCESS?
- Created
- Virgin music label
- Virgin Atlantic Airways
- Virgin Cola
- Virgin Mega Stores
SPECIAL PERSONALITY?
or
EFFECTIVE ACTIVITIES?
5ENTREPRENEURSHIP IN THE UK SOME BACKGROUND
- 1970s - Crisis in UK economy, large companies
inflexible and slow. (Bolton, 1971) - 1980s Growth of small firm sector, Enterprise
culture - 1990s to Now entrepreneurship growing in
importance as a response to rapidly changing
global economy - Extended to health, policing and education at all
levels - entrepreneurial child - Governments want to find special individuals
psychological profiling techniques (Carr and
Beaver, 2002)
6ENTREPRENEURSHIP IN UK SOME BACKGROUND Global
Entrepreneurship Monitor (2005 )
- UK has one of the most manageable administrative
regimes for start-up in EU - register within a
day - Region with the highest level of independent
start-ups is London (8.3 of adult population),
lowest is the North East - Business Angel activity is highest in London
South East - London has a substantially higher proportion of
the regional population expecting to start a
business over the next 3 years (14.9) - Respondents in South East are most positive about
start-up opportunities 46.5
7TOTAL ENTREPRENEURIAL ACTIVITY BY GENDER
Source Global Entrepreneurship Monitor 2005
8ENTREPRENEURSHIP IN THE UK SOME CHALLENGES
- Encourage more enterprise in disadvantaged
communities and under-represented groups - Improve access to finance and support
- Make available suitable Education and training
for entrepreneurship - N.B. Movement away from entrepreneurship as
special individual - entrepreneurship as
Process - Limits development of entrepreneurs as
entrepreneurs are seen as born not made
9ECONOMIC VIEW OF ENTREPRENEUR
- To understand why there is a focus on
personality rather than skills look at history
of entrepreneurship theory - nobody can hope to understand the economic
phenomenon of anyepoch who has not adequate
command of the historical facts (Schumpeter,
1934 36) - French tradition - the Physiocrats Cantillon
(1755) - Foresight to assume uncertainty
- Reacts to profit opportunities
- Bears uncertainty
- Brings about a balance between supplies demands
10ECONOMIC VIEW OF ENTREPRENEUR
- The Modern Austrian Tradition Main
representative Kirzner (1973) - The entrepreneur as a coordinating agent who is
capable of exploiting unnoticed opportunities due
to his/her special alertness. - Has knowledge not available to everybody which
leads to creative discoveries - Facilitates exchange between suppliers and
customers - Profit as reward for recognising a market
opportunity acting as middleman
11ECONOMIC VIEW OF ENTREPRENEURS
- Schumpeter (1934)
- Entrepreneur as innovator, creator and catalyst
for change - Only certain extraordinary people have the
ability to be entrepreneurs and they bring about
extraordinary events - Brings about change through introduction of new
technological process/product - About dream/vision and impulse to fight
- Creative destruction of existing combinations of
resources
12THE ECONOMIC ENTREPRENEUR A SPECIAL INDIVIDUAL
- Various Epochs and traditions have contradicted
and criticised one another - At odds with economic principles which tend to be
able to predict, repeat analysis backed up by
natural scientific laws - Theories are specific to the context in which
they are created - However, at one point they all agree the focus on
the entrepreneur as special individual (Chell,
1991)
13PSYCHOLOGICAL PROFILING OF ENTREPRENEUR
- THE TRAIT APPROACH
- Need for Achievement
- Locus of Control
- Risk-taking
- Innovation and creativity
- General Personality Scales 16PF, The Big Five
- CONSTRUCTION OF THE TRAIT APPROACH
- Biased towards Western culture
- Gender-biased,
- Ethnocentric (Chell, 2001)
14PSYCHOLOGICAL PROFILING OF ENTREPRENEUR
- PSYCHOANALYTIC APPROACHES
- Conflicts, difficulties or losses in childhood,
motivates entrepreneurs to succeed - In particular absent father, poverty, illness
etc - To think about developing entrepreneurship in
this way brings ethical questions to the fore - Criticised for only describing extremes and not
accounting for the majority of entrepreneurs - Variety of reasons behind set-up e.g. life-style
choice, fulfilling dream, loss of long-term
employment etc. (Chell, 1991)
15PSYCHOLOGICAL PROFILING OF ENTREPRENEUR
- COGNITIVE STUDIES
- Propose to focus on the behaviours of
entrepreneurs rather than their personalities - Entrepreneurs have certain heuristics, schemas
that allow him/her to examine the environment and
find existing opportunities (Mitchell, 2002) - However, now focus on special thinking
- Still focuses on entrepreneur as having special
abilities rather than focusing on the process of
entrepreneurship - Impossible to develop such schemas need a
different approach
16ENTREPRENEURSHIP AS ACTION A DIFFERENT APPROACH
- Psych studies treat entrepreneur as disconnected
from context - Individuals not distinct from their activities -
they are part of and create the systems within
which they are situated - Focus on what the entrepreneur does, not who
the entrepreneur is (Gartner, 1988) - This view leaves open the possibility of
developing entrepreneurship in individuals - Entrepreneurs made not born (Chell, 2001)
17ENTREPRENEURSHIP AS ACTION
- As a process, not an attribute of a person
(Stevenson and Jarillo, 1990) - An individual is not always entrepreneurial, may
be team-effort - Necessity vs. opportunity entrepreneurship
- Innovations as a response to the need for making
un-programmed decisions - Transcends the limits imposed by the owner
manager - Possible at any stage of the life cycle of a
business enterprise (Handy, 2004)
18THE ENTREPRENEURIAL PROCESS 9 KEY ACTIVITIES
9. Financial, Social capital
1.Motivation to make a difference
2. Spotting opportunities
4.Dealing with Obstacles
8. Controlling the business
7. Using Networks extensively
3. Finding The resources required
5.Showing Determination in the face of adversity
6.Managing risk
19THE ENTREPRENEURIAL PROCESS
- Responding to opportunities in context
- Finding out about your market
- Planning effectively
- Finding the resources required
- Using networks
- Managing risk
- Financial and social capital
- Managing the business effectively
20GROUP TASK ENTREPRENEURIAL CASES
- Teams of 5 individuals
- Discuss the cases which have been set in front of
you - Discuss how you could see the cases as both
individual personality trait or rather necessity
ordinary people who have been put into
extraordinary situations - E.g. Others in context
- E.g. Necessity of situation
- Second partlist the processes that these
individuals went through to make sure their
venture succeeded.