2. A. Entrepreneurship as a self-employment decision
B. The concept of Entrepreneurship
C. The Entrepreneur: The individual that steers
1. Who is the Entrepreneur?
2. What makes the successful entrepreneur?
D. The myths, fears and excuse of people who are not
entrepreneur
E. The advantages of becoming an entrepreneur
ENTREPRENEURSHIP & the
ENTREPRENEUR
3. ENTREPRENEURSHIP & the
ENTREPRENEUR
A. ENTREPRENEURSHIP AS A SELF-EMPLOYMENT
DECISION
- Basically aimed to gear someone towards self-
employment
- Pertains to engage in small & medium sized business
If an individual merely desires independence or wants to go
into business because he wants to be his own boss, he/she
might get disappointed because a practicing entrepreneur
has probably more bosses than he realizes. Here are some
of them:
4. ENTREPRENEURSHIP & the
ENTREPRENEUR
• The various government regulatory bodies
• The suppliers who control material flow and sometimes
credit and sales policies
• The financial creditors and stakeholders
• The demands and cycles of the market
• The demands on the entrepreneur’s personal life
• - because of that many businesses are experiencing
A. ENTREPRENEURSHIPAS A SELF-EMPLOYMENT
DECISION
5. Entrepreneurship
should not be the
economic development
strategy of last resort.
A. ENTREPRENEURSHIPAS A SELF-EMPLOYMENT
DECISION
6. ENTREPRENEURSHIP & the
ENTREPRENEUR
Table 1.1 Age of Business Failures
Age of
Business(Years)
Failure Rate (%) Cumulative(%)
Under 1 27.6 27.6
1-2 13.8 41.4
2-3 11.2 52.6
3-4 10.1 62.7
4-5 6.4 69.1
5-10 9.3 78.4
10-20 8.7 87.1
Over 20 12.9 100
Source: A.J William, “Why small businesses FAIL”, Real Estate Journal, April 1995,pg.18.
A. ENTREPRENEURSHIPAS A SELF-EMPLOYMENT
DECISION
7. ENTREPRENEURSHIP & the
ENTREPRENEUR
Another study was conducted to determine the causes of
business failures. ( See Table 1.2)
Table 1.2: Causes of Business Failures
%
Neglect 3.0
Fraud 1.1
Lack of Technical Expertise 8.5
Lack of Management
Expertise
17.4
Lack of Experience 21.2
Incompetence 44.9
Disaster & other reasons 3.9
100
Source: A.J William, “Small Business Caught in Squeeze”, The Sun-Herald, 8 May 1997.pg.122
A. ENTREPRENEURSHIPAS A SELF-EMPLOYMENT DECISION
8. ENTREPRENEURSHIP & the
ENTREPRENEUR
From the preceding tables, it is clear that most failures occurred when
the business was in its formative stage and that an incompetent
entrepreneur is most often the source of the problem.
All these point to the fact that engaging in entrepreneurship is indeed a
challenging business endeavor. An entrepreneur must possess a
combination of skills, personal characteristics and abilities that would
put to effective use of his highly developed sense of independence,
strong sense of enterprise and risk-taking temperament in his decision
to establish and operate his own business.
A. ENTREPRENEURSHIPAS A SELF-EMPLOYMENT DECISION
9. ENTREPRENEURSHIP & the
ENTREPRENEUR
EXERCISES
A. ENTREPRENEURSHIPAS A SELF-EMPLOYMENT DECISION
From the given exercises , this will give you an opportunity
to discover if you really want to be self-employed and to
help you determine if you are ready to start your own business.
10. ENTREPRENEURSHIP & the
ENTREPRENEUR
B. The concept of ENTREPRENEURSHIP
HISTORY
- Started in FRANCE after the French Revolution
- It is the start of CAPITALISM and end of FEUDALISM
- The word entrepreneur was coined by JEAN BAPTISTE SAY,
a renowned French economist who argued that the concept of
entrepreneurship is independent of the classical economics and is
unable to coexist with it though closely tied with the theory of
economics and society.
11. ENTREPRENEURSHIP & the
ENTREPRENEUR
HISTORY
- The CLASSICAL CAPITALISM, which was propagated by Adam
Smith spouses the optimization of what already exist which focuses on
acquiring the most of the existing resources and establishing
equilibrium or balance similar to the economic practice that we
have at present
- In the early 20th century, JOSEPH SCHUMPETER, also an economist, used Say’s
ideas as the groundwork of his book. The theory of Economic dynamics.
He postulated that it is not optimization and equilibrium but rather the dynamic
disequilibria, brought about by the innovative entrepreneur that brings a healthy
economy and is the central reality for economic theory and practice.
B. The concept of ENTREPRENEURSHIP
12. ENTREPRENEURSHIP & the
ENTREPRENEUR
B. The concept of ENTREPRENEURSHIP
ENTREPRENEURSHIP
In the discussion of business ventures. The word entrepreneurship, entrepreneur,
entrepreneurial and entrepreneurial process will always arise. Entrepreneurship
is what the entrepreneur actually does; entrepreneurial is the approach and the
entrepreneurial process is where the venturers are engaged in.
13. ENTREPRENEURSHIP & the
ENTREPRENEUR
B. The concept of ENTREPRENEURSHIP
ENTREPRENEURSHIP - meaning ( Webster Dictionary)
en·tre·pre·neur noun ˌäⁿn-trə-p(r)ə-ˌnər,-ˌn(y)u̇r
: a person who starts a business and is willing to risk loss in order to make money
: one who organizes, manages, and assumes the risks of a business or enterprise
14. ENTREPRENEURSHIP & the
ENTREPRENEUR
B. The concept of ENTREPRENEURSHIP
ENTREPRENEURSHIP - meaning ( Economist description)
Cantillon 1725
…consist in doing things that are not generally done in the ordinary
Course of business routine; it is essentially a phenomenon that comes
Under a wider aspect of leadership
Kuratko, et al. 1995
….is a process of innovation and new venture creation through four major
dimensions - individual, organization, environment, process – and aided by
collaborative networks in government, education and institution.
15. ENTREPRENEURSHIP & the
ENTREPRENEUR
C. The Entrepreneur: The individual that steers
Who is the entrepreneur?
An 'entrepreneur' is a person who is in control of a commercial undertaking.
The word has also come to mean a person who is 'enterprising', who is ready to
engage in a bold or difficult activity.
16. ENTREPRENEURSHIP & the
ENTREPRENEUR
C. The Entrepreneur: The individual that steers
Who can start and run an enterprise?
People from all walks of life start enterprises and small businesses. You can, too, whether
you're:
•a young person who's just left school
•a qualified tradesperson
•a new graduate
•an inventor or adventurer
•pursuing a hobby or special interest
•an author, performer or artist
•recently retrenched or made redundant
•a new parent with a child to look after
•re-entering the workforce after a break
•a public servant looking for other work options
•a community worker or volunteer
•a corporate manager setting up as an expert consultant
•a newly arrived migrant
•a person recovering from an accident or other trauma.
What matters is that you have a good idea for a business, and you're determined to do
everything necessary for that business to succeed.
17. ENTREPRENEURSHIP & the
ENTREPRENEUR
C. The Entrepreneur: The individual that steers
Characteristics of entrepreneurs
An 'entrepreneurial' person is someone who is prepared to take
some kind of risk in order to accomplish a task they find
attractive. First and foremost, a successful entrepreneur is
creative.
18. ENTREPRENEURSHIP & the
ENTREPRENEUR
C. The Entrepreneur: The individual that steers
Characteristics of entrepreneurs
Entrepreneurs are also:
• confident
• enthusiastic
• not afraid to make decisions
• determined.
Entrepreneurs know:
• what they want
• where to get the best information.
Entrepreneurs can:
• see opportunities that others can't see
• take on a challenge rather than always opting for the safe path
• plan for different possible outcomes
• learn from their mistakes.
19. ENTREPRENEURSHIP & the
ENTREPRENEUR
C. The Entrepreneur: The individual that steers
Characteristics of entrepreneurs
Entrepreneurs have:
• a high level of energy
• appropriate skills, or they know people who
possess them
• access to the necessary resources.
20. ENTREPRENEURSHIP & the
ENTREPRENEUR
C. The Entrepreneur: The individual that steers
Characteristics of entrepreneurs
Some other skills, abilities and qualities of successful entrepreneurs are:
• the ability to see opportunities, and the confidence to seize them
• the ability to identify what other people want - existing customers,
potential new customers, employees, colleagues
• knowing how to satisfy people's needs and wants
• tenacity, persistence, determination and a willingness to work hard
• self-motivation and enthusiasm
• the ability to work as a member of a team
• the ability to take independent action
• openness to new ideas and new ways of doing things
• goal-setting skills
• skill in locating and mobilizing the resources needed to achieve a goal
• reliable intuition - a good entrepreneur is an educated risk taker
21. ENTREPRENEURSHIP & the
ENTREPRENEUR
• vision - the ability to see how products or
practices might be improved, and to plan for
different possible outcomes
• readiness to look at things differently, to
'think outside the box' or to take innovative
action
• readiness to learn from their mistakes and
those of others
• problem-solving ability, and a desire to
solve problems so that all involved parties
are satisfied with the outcome.
Characteristics of entrepreneurs
C. The Entrepreneur: The individual that steers
22. ENTREPRENEURSHIP & the
ENTREPRENEUR
D. The myths, fears and excuses of people who are not entrepreneurs
Myths of people who are not an entrepreneurs.
• Entrepreneurs are born
• Entrepreneurs are super human
• Entrepreneurs are inventors
• Entrepreneur inherit business traits
• Entrepreneurs possess a definite characteristic profile
• The gender-difference myths (men are better entrepreneurs)
• Entrepreneurs are academic and social misfits
• Entrepreneurs are gamblers and risk takers
• Luck and money are the only things needed to become entrepreneurs
• Entrepreneurs experience a lot of failures
23. ENTREPRENEURSHIP & the
ENTREPRENEUR
RISK EXCUSES
Financial Risk “ I do not have the money”
“ I do not know where to get the capital”
“ I am afraid to loose my house, car,
properties, etc.
Career Risk “ I can not risk my promotion”
“ I can not afford not to have salary” What
would happen to me if I don’t have a job?
Family Risk “My kids are still young”
“My spouse and I are not doing well”
Social Risk “What would my friends say?”
“What if nobody buys it”
Psychic Risk “I am too young”
“ I am too old for that”
“ I can’t handle the pressure”
D. The myths, fears and excuses of people who are not entrepreneurs
24. ENTREPRENEURSHIP & the
ENTREPRENEUR
E. The advantage of becoming Entrepreneurs
• Have the opportunity to create your own destiny
• Have the opportunity to be financially well-off
• Have the opportunity of knowing yourself better
• Have the opportunity to excel, be recognized and contribute to society