A spirit of entrepreneurship encompassed the conception and
birth of this volume because it addresses a new, and critically
important, subject area. The marketing discipline has until
recently largely ignored entrepreneurship and new ventures. The
growing entrepreneurship field has also devoted little attention to
marketing. This is the first scholarly book to discuss and
conceptualize the interface between marketing and entrepreneurship
and to provide numerous research opportunities on truly important
issues. At a time when the marketing discipline is increasingly
criticized for too little attention to important topics, this book
offers a path for the researcher who wants to make a major impact.
This is a pioneering book and it is hoped that it will one day be
viewed as a classic contribution to marketing and to
entrepreneurship thought. Although there is considerable new
knowledge in this volume, the primary focus is on questions, issues
and variables that should stimulate added creativity. For the
scholar, the sifting and sorting will be fruitful. The contents of
this volume will be of value to the reader in search of ideas,
concepts and research directions pertaining to marketing in new
and/or growing ventures. The authors are leading scholars in the
marketing and management disciplines.
The book begins with a rich collection of five articles on the
nature of entrepreneurship and its relationship to marketing. This
may be the single best array of definitional perspectives ever
written, in part because leading contributors to the debate have
returned to the task. The second section focuses on market
opportunity, but rather than only looking at market analysis and
idea screening, there is also ground breaking work regarding
entrepreneurial opportunity identification and opportunity
recognition. Marketing strategy and each of the marketing mix areas
are addressed in separate chapters with particular attention to the
uniquenesses of marketing in new enterprises as compared to mature,
larger firms. The final section of the book may be the most
intriguing, with attention to entrepreneurship in international
markets and lesser developed countries, as well as the role of new
and smaller enterprises in job generation. The audiences for this
book include marketing, management and entrepreneurship professors,
PhD candidates, public policy makers, intellectually curious
business owners and others.
General
Is the information for this product incomplete, wrong or inappropriate?
Let us know about it.
Does this product have an incorrect or missing image?
Send us a new image.
Is this product missing categories?
Add more categories.
Review This Product
No reviews yet - be the first to create one!