Small Business, Innovation, and Entrepreneurship
Small Business, Innovation, and Entrepreneurship
Small Business, Innovation, and Entrepreneurship
net/publication/258165369
CITATIONS READS
69 18,630
2 authors, including:
Jean-Michel Sahut
Ecole de Commerce IDRAC
164 PUBLICATIONS 716 CITATIONS
SEE PROFILE
Some of the authors of this publication are also working on these related projects:
All content following this page was uploaded by Jean-Michel Sahut on 30 April 2015.
Abstract.
The purpose of this special issue is to examine small businesses, innovation and
entrepreneurship and show that although these three concepts have their own specific
literature and can be dealt with independently, they are closely related. From
Schumpeter to the present, a stream of literature unites the concept of entrepreneurship
with its ability to make new combinations of factors and corresponding innovations in
processes and products; similarly, in a broad stream of literature the most characteristic
dimension of entrepreneurship is closely linked to small businesses. Small and large
companies have different advantages and drawbacks with innovation, but small
businesses provide the most conducive environment for entrepreneurship and
innovation that are not necessarily sustained by the know-how and resources
characteristic of large scale production but require commitment and close cooperation
between company members.
In this introduction we show how the three topics converge in four articles dealing with
micro start-ups and innovation, institutional determinants of entrepreneurship and
determining factors in entrepreneurs’ individual characteristics.
Introduction
The three main topics that guide this special issue, “small business, innovation and
entrepreneurship”, have relevant academic, social and economic dimensions and their
own literature in the fields of sociology, psychology, economics and management. In
addition to the specific literature on these topics in each field, many works also refer
jointly to entrepreneurship and innovation, entrepreneurship and small businesses, or,
like this special issue, they refer to entrepreneurship, innovation and small businesses. It
is also often the case that when one particular research stream or study refers explicitly
to only one of these topics, one of the other two or both, underlie or are implicit in the
object of study.
1
According to Schumpeter (1934: 66-68), as entrepreneurs make new combinations of
factors “and the new combinations appear discontinuously”, innovation and economic
development can be carried out by “the same people who control the productive or
commercial process (in the enterprise)” or by “the new (innovator people)” that
generally, in a new venture or start-up small enterprise, achieve new combinations or
innovations. 1 Shane (2012: 17-18) implicitly includes innovation as an essential
characteristic of entrepreneurship and claims that “[e]ntrepreneurship involves more
than the (…) process of discovering opportunities for profit. It also involves coming up
with a business idea about how to recombine resources to exploit those opportunities”.
The second part of the definition, “the processes of discovery, evaluation, and
exploitation of opportunities”, involves the individual aspects (personality traits and
psychological characteristics) of entrepreneurs that can explain their ability to discover
opportunities and exploit them successfully (Baum and Bird, 2010; Baron, 2004; Nga
and Shamuganathan, 2010). Aspects corresponding to the corporate entrepreneur, like
the exploitation of opportunity must be organized by the corresponding combination of
factors (Hayton, 2005, 2006; Zotto and Gustafsson, 2008), with reference to the
enterprise. This second dimension of corporate entrepreneurship, may also invert the
relationship opportunity recognition-exploitation of the opportunity. Opportunity, in
some relevant cases can be created through the process by which new combinations of
factors are created. Thus, the article on volition and career choices in this special issue
helps us to understand how some people become entrepreneurs.
1
Paréntesis nuestros.
2
Finally, the third part of the definition emphasises the importance of the individual as
the engine of entrepreneurial action: “the core idea that entrepreneurship is a process
that depends on both opportunities and individuals” (Shane, 2012: 18). This aspect,
which is implicit in the first part of the definition, clearly distinguishes the field of
entrepreneurship from that of strategic management, although the contributions of
classical authors on strategic management like Andrews (1971) are useful for both
fields.
There is, however, an institutional dimension to the issue of the opportunities that
entrepreneurs must discover and make use of, which must be included. It is not only the
economic environment that conditions the opportunities as Shane (2012) emphasizes. In
addition to the economic environment the existence of informal and formal institutional
conditions (culture and legal framework) (North, 1990, 2005) constitute a background
which largely explains different economic agents’ interpretation of the future, their
objectives and conduct.
3
innovation can be incremental or radical (Lassen et al., 2006; Robson, Haugh and
Obeng, 2009), and is carried out in a complex context that includes “innovation,
venturing and strategic renewal” (Zotto and Gustafsson, 2008: 97).
As regards the entrepreneur who organizes the combination of factors and the
process of productive transformation (corporate entrepreneurship), Covin and Slevin
(1986, 1991) point out that the characteristics of this form of entrepreneurship are
innovativeness, proactiveness and risk-taking, which, in a broad sense, involves
orientation towards the development of new products and services, technologies,
administrative techniques, new forms of organizational design and incentives and new
strategies (Chell, 2008; Covin and Slevin, 1986, 1991; Lumpkin and Dess, 1996; Miller,
1983; Schafer,1990; Zotto and Gustafsson, 2008).
4
emphasize that large industrial enterprises “[have] not been simply scale-intensive (…).
By committing to the intensive long-term investment in human and organizational
resources as well as physical assets, these large enterprises can exploit the
complementarity between large-scale investment in physical capital and the sustained
capital formation in such intangible assets as human resources and technological
knowledge”, which enables these companies to “exploit the dramatic technological
innovation (…) [of] what might be considered a Third Industrial Revolution”. Finally,
Lassen et al., (2006: 364), refer to small entrepreneurs who in large R & D departments
seek and foster innovation.
However, the conditions in small enterprises for innovations that do not require size
but need close cooperation and involvement from their members may be unique and not
reproducible in large companies. Williamson (1985) emphasises this issue pointing out
that it may be more suitable for a large enterprise to assume the transaction costs in its
relationship with a small innovative company than proceed to take it over; as the
atmosphere, cultural conditions and shape of the organization would change with the
takeover, probably destroying the effective capacity to innovate. And similarly, the
innovation teams proposed by Nonaka and Takeuchi (1995) for large innovative
enterprises are not always greater than the innovation dynamics that can be generated in
a small firm whose members share the necessary knowledge and probably greater
motivation and commitment.
Below we list and briefly comment on the articles presented in this special issue.
The articles
The articles for this issue of the Small Business Economics Journal were selected from
papers delivered at a conference on Innovation, Financing & Entrepreneurship held at
HEG (Geneva, Switzerland), in collaboration with IPAG Paris, in February 2012. The
conference focused on the three tightly coupled concepts of innovation, finance and
5
entrepreneurship, and is the context in which this special issue on small businesses,
innovation and entrepreneurship has been produced.
In the first article “Born to be alive? The survival of innovative and non-innovative
French micro start-ups”, entrepreneurial action is related to certain individual and social
characteristics of the entrepreneur (age, sex, specific human capital, belonging to a
minority group, professional experience, financial resources), with a positive effect of
support networks on the start-up phase. The study reports that non innovative
companies are more successful or survive longer than innovative ones. Although this
finding may appear counterfactual, it is explained by the significant presence in the
sample of younger individuals, women, and people from minority groups, who all face a
significantly higher default risk than other entrepreneurs.
The sample for the empirical study comprises 12 771 start-ups with fewer than 10
employees. Within the more general streams of entrepreneurship literature, this article
forms part of the tradition that unites entrepreneurial action with opportunity discovery
(Shane and Venkataraman, 2000; Shane, 2012) and opportunity creation (Hayton, 2005,
2006; Helfat, 2000; Zotto and Gustafsson 2008).
6
countries, Eastern Europe and the Mediterranean area each exhibit their own
differentiating elements. These differences are also present in entrepreneurial activity.
The article uses 2008 data from the Global Entrepreneurship Monitor (GEM) and the
International Institute for Management and Development (IMD), considering a sample
of 30 countries and 36,525 individuals. The main findings demonstrate, through logistic
regression, that a favourable regulatory dimension (fewer procedures to start a
business), a favourable normative dimension (e.g., higher media attention for new
business) and a favourable cultural-cognitive dimension (better entrepreneurial skills,
less fear of business failure and better understanding of entrepreneurs) increase
entrepreneurial activity. This study contributes to the theory by furthering application of
the institutional approach in the analysis of entrepreneurship at country level; and on a
practical level, it suggests that public policy and entrepreneurship programs should be
designed according to the institutional specificities of the different countries.
Lastly, the article “Entrepreneurial intention and career choices: the role of volition”,
tackles the predictive factors that explain the emergence of an entrepreneurial project
from a psychological perspective. This research shows that entrepreneurship is
significantly linked to psychological characteristics and individual disposition towards
business and thus provides a counterpoint to the previous two articles which regard
cultural conditioning as decisive for explaining entrepreneurship.
7
According to psychology-based theoretical considerations and empirical studies, this
article finds that family and institutions also have significant influence. However, as the
article concludes, “If the entrepreneurial choice is, actually, an objective that is pursued
by a person’s will, it should pertain to personal factors rather than economic and
environmental constraints”. The article studies the psychological process that leads to
an entrepreneurial career, based on the study of attitudes, interests, inclinations,
intentions, opinions, perception of risks and rewards, motivation, values and personal
capacity or efficiency; all of which furthers understanding of young people’s interest in
entrepreneurship and shows that volition has a key role in individual commitment to an
ambitious career objective.
The theoretical proposals of this article are tested through a large sample of students
(1630 individuals) including those who have already decided upon a business project.
In the set of articles presented here, the reader can find relationships between small
businesses, innovation and entrepreneurship; the influence of social conditions (cultural,
institutional) on entrepreneurship; and the way in which personal conditions (individual,
psychological) further understanding of entrepreneurship.
Bibliography
8
Busenitz, L., Gomez, C. & Spencer, J. (2000). Country institutional profiles: Unlocking
entrepreneurial phenomena. Academy of Management Journal, (43)5, 994-1003.
Carroll, J. B. (Ed.) (1964). Language, thought, and reality: Selected writings of
Benjamin Lee Whorf, Cambridge, MA: The MIT Press.
Chandler, A. D. Jr., & Hikino, T. (1997). The large industrial enterprise and the
dynamics of modern economic growth, in Chandler, A. D. Jr., Amatori, F. &
Hikino, T. (Eds.). Big Business and the wealth of nations, USA: Cambridge
University Press, pp. 24-57.
Chell, E. (2008). The nascent entrepreneur, business development and the role of human
resources. In R. Barret & S. Mayson (Eds.), International handbook of
Entrepreneurship and HRM, Cheltenham, UK: Edward Elgar, 21-46.
Helfat, C. E. (2000). Guest editor introduction to the special issue: the evolution of firm
capabilities. Strategic Management Review, 21, 955-959.
Lumpkin, G.T. and Dess, G.G. (1996). Clarifying the entrepreneurial orientation
construct and linking it to performance, Academy of Management Review, (21)3,
135–72.
Lassen, A. H., Gertsen, F, & Riis, J. E. (2006). The nexus of corporate entrepreneurship
9
Miller, D. (1983). The correlates of entrepreneurship in three types of firms,
Management Science, (29)7, 770–791.
North, D.C. (1990). Institutions, Institutional Change and Economic Performance. New
York: Cambridge University Press.
North, D.C. (2005). Understanding the Process of Economic Change. Princeton, NJ.
Princeton University Press.
Pinillos, M. J., & Reyes, L. (2011). Relationship between individualist–collectivist
culture and entrepreneurial activity: evidence from Global Entrepreneurship Monitor
data. Small Business Economics, (37)1, 23-37.
Robson, P. J. A., Haugh, H. E. & Obeng, B. A. (2009). Entrepreneurship and innovation
in Ghana: Enterprising Africa, Small Business Economics, (32), 331-350.
Rogers, M. (2004). Networks, firm size and innovation, Small Business Economics,
(22)2, 141–153.
Schafer, D.S. (1990). Level of entrepreneurship and scanning source usage in very small
businesses, Entrepreneurship Theory and Practice, (15)2, 19–31.
Schumpeter, J. A. (1934). The theory of economic development, Cambridge, MA:
Harvard University Press.
Schumpeter, J. A. (1950). Capitalism, socialism and democracy (3rd Ed.). New York:
Harper & Row.
Scott, W.R. (2007). Institutions and Organizations: Ideas and interests, Thousand
Oaks, CA: Sage Pubications.
Shane, S. (2012). Reflections on the 2010 AMR decade Award: delivering on the
promise of entrepreneurship as a field of research, Academy of Management Review,
(37)1, 10–20.
Shane, S. & Venkataraman, S. (2000). The promise of entrepreneurship as a field of
research. Academy of Management Review, (25)1, 217-226.
10
Smith, I. H. & Woodworth, W. P. (2012). Developing social entrepreneurship and social
innovators: A social identity and self-efficacy approach, Academy of Management
learning & Education, (11)3, 390-407.
Van Stel, A., Carree, M., & Thurik, R. (2005). The effect of entrepreneurial activity on
national economic growth. Small Business Economics, (24)3, 311-321.
Williamson, O. E. (1985). The economic institutions of capitalism. Firms, markets,
relational contracting. New York: The Free Press.
Woolley, J. L. & Rottner, R. M. (2008). Innovation Policy and Nanotechnology
Entrepreneurship, Entrepreneurship Theory and Practice, (32)5, 791–811.
Zotto, C. D. & Gustafsson, V. (2008). Human resource management as an
entrepreneurial tool? In R. Barret & S. Mayson (Eds.), International handbook of
Entrepreneurship and HRM. Cheltenham, UK: Edward Elgar, 89-110.
11