Kuratko 8 e CH 01
Kuratko 8 e CH 01
Kuratko 8 e CH 01
Donald F. Kuratko
Chapter 1
The Revolutionary Impact of
Entrepreneurship
produced more steel than all of Great Britain at one point was born to a poor
handloom weaver in Scotland.
He grew up in poverty, living in a one-room house, often sleeping to forget the
misery of hunger. To fight starvation, his family migrated to the US. His first
job was at age 13 as a bobbin boy, changing spools of thread in a cotton
mill 12 hours a day, 6 days a week in a Pittsburgh cotton factory . In his
spare time, he would read works of Robert Burns and historical Scottish heroes
like Robert the Bruce, William Wallace, and Rob Roy. His next job was as a
telegraph messenger boy. A true entrepreneur, he was a hardworker, and soon
was promoted as an operator. Colonel James Anderson, who opened his personal
library of 400 volumes to working boys each Saturday night, gave a good boost
to Carnegies education and passion for reading. He did a series of railroad jobs.
There, he learnt about the industry and business in general. It was during this
stint that he began making investments in steel and oil companies that earned
him huge returns. By 1889, Carnegie Steel Corporation was the largest of
its kind in the world. He went on to become become the richest man in the
world.
Known as one of builders of America who helped shape the nation, in 1901, he
sold Carnegie Steel to JP Morgan for $480 million and became a philanthropist.
He donated millions to the New York Public Library, established the Carnegie
Institute of Technology in Pittsburgh, which is now known as CarnegieMellon University, created the Carnegie Foundation for the Advancement of
Teaching, and formed the Carnegie Endowment for International Peace.
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Chapter Objectives
1.
2.
3.
4.
5.
6.
7.
EntrepreneursChallenging the
Unknown
Entrepreneurs
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Entrepreneurs versus
Small Business Owners: A Distinction
Small Businesses Owners
Manage their businesses by expecting stable sales,
profits, and growth
May never grow very large
Less aggressive
No new innovative practices
Entrepreneurs
Entrepreneurship: A Mindset
Entrepreneurship is more than the mere
creation of business:
Seeking opportunities
following
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A Summary Description
of Entrepreneurship
Entrepreneurship (Robert C. Ronstadt)
An Integrated Definition
Entrepreneurship
classroom training
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Myth 10:
(Gamblers)
Entrepreneurs usually work on moderate and calculated risks
By planning and prep they minimize risk
Try to control destiny
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Figure
1.1
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Table
1.1
Venture Stage
Financial Consideration
Decision
Start-up or
acquisition
Seed capital
Venture capital sources
Proceed or abandon
Ongoing
Cash management
Investments
Financial analysis and
evaluation
Maintain, increase, or
reduce size
Decline or
succession
Profit question
Corporate buyout
Succession question
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Table
Entrepreneurial
Model
Definition
Measures
Questions
Great Person
Extraordinary Achievers
Personal principles
Personal histories
Experiences
Psychological
Characteristics
Founder
Control over the means
of production
Locus of control
Tolerance of ambiguity
Need for achievement
Classical
Decision making
Ability to see opportunities
Creativity
Management
Expertise
Technical knowledge
Technical plans
Leadership
Social architect
Promotion and protection
of values
Attitudes, styles
Management of people
Intrapreneurship
Decision making
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Figure
Multidimensional Approach
Figure
1.3
Source: Robert C. Ronstadt, Entrepreneurship (Dover, MA: Lord Publishing Co., 1984), 39.
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business successes.
Businesses
58% of Indian adults (18-64 years old) consider entrepreneurship a desirable career
choice; around 66% think that entrepreneurs receive a high level of status and
respect. However, on these measures India ranks below its peers in the factor-driven
(least developed) economies as well as among the BRICS (Brazil - Russia - India China - South Africa) nations.
We see more early-stage entrepreneurs in the 18-44 age groups than any other age
range. In India, about one third (34%) of early-stage entrepreneurs are women.
GEM surveys (including GEM special reports on women) consistently confirm that
In India, entrepreneurship motivated by necessity (no other option for work) accounts
GEM 2014 found that in India, 4.1% of adults are nascent entrepreneurs (actively
involved in setting up a business) while 2.5% are new business owners (in operation
for more than 3 but less than 42 months). Combining these rates gives us the Total
early-stage Entrepreneurial Activity (TEA) rate, meaning that close to 7% of the Indian
adult population or 1 in every 15 adults are engaged in some form of early-stage
entrepreneurial activity.
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According to the GEM National Experts Survey, the three major constraints on
accounting, and other legal services and institutions that support or promote
SMEs
Internal market dynamics the extent to which markets change dramatically
from year to year;
Ease of access to available physical infrastructure communication, utilities,
transportation, land or space, at a price that does not discriminate against new,
small or growing firms.
Cultural and social norms- the extent to which social and cultural norms
encourage or allow actions leading to new business methods or activities that
can potentially increase personal wealth and income
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Effects of Entrepreneurship
The Global Entrepreneurship Monitor (GEM)
Provides an annual assessment of the entrepreneurial
environment of 42 countries.
Latest GEM study: the U.S. outranks the rest of the
world in important entrepreneurial support.
Entrepreneurs lead to growth by:
Table
1.3
Source: NFIB Small Business Policy Guide (Washington, D.C., November 2000), 31.
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Survival of Gazelles
How many gazelles survive?
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Economy:
1.
2.
3.
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2.
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Entrepreneurial
Cognition
Global
Entrepreneurial
Movement
Social
Entrepreneurship
Trends in
Entrepreneurship
Research
Women
and Minority
Entrepreneurs
Entrepreneurial
Education
Family
Businesses
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Key Concepts
Entrepreneurship
Entrepreneur
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Key Concepts
Entrepreneurial Management
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financial/capital school of
corridor principle
displacement school of
thought
entrepreneur
entrepreneurial assessment
approach
entrepreneurial management
Entrepreneurial Revolution
entrepreneurial trait school of
thought
entrepreneurship
environmental school of
thought
external locus of control
thought
gazelle
great chef strategies
internal locus of control
macro view of
entrepreneurship
micro view of
entrepreneurship
mountain gap strategies
strategic formulation school
of thought
venture opportunity school
of thought
water well strategies
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