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Policy makers give a lot of attention to business creation and
entrepreneurship, but they do not have a good resource for
understanding The Truth about Entrepreneurship. The extensive media
coverage of Wall Street entrepreneurship provides an incomplete
portrayal of most business creation. While both high profile and
everyday new firms provide major contributions to economic growth,
the ongoing, bottoms-up activity pursued by over half a billion
around the world is not widely recognized. This book reviews some
of the most salient features of grass roots business creation, such
as the total amount of activity, differences related to national
economic development, the relationship to business churning and job
creation, the impact of national context, the mixed contributions
of high growth firms, the modest effect of external financial
support, the unequal distribution of sunk costs related to
successful payback, importance as an option for the most desperate
in poor countries, and the tendency to overlook the continuing
incremental impact of Main Street business creation.
Entrepreneurial scholars, faculty, policy analysts and graduate
students interested in economic development, entrepreneurship and
public policy will find clarity and gain a depth of knowledge about
policymaking and business creation with The Truth about
Entrepreneurship.
Policy makers give a lot of attention to business creation and
entrepreneurship, but they do not have a good resource for
understanding The Truth about Entrepreneurship. The extensive media
coverage of Wall Street entrepreneurship provides an incomplete
portrayal of most business creation. While both high profile and
everyday new firms provide major contributions to economic growth,
the ongoing, bottoms-up activity pursued by over half a billion
around the world is not widely recognized. This book reviews some
of the most salient features of grass roots business creation, such
as the total amount of activity, differences related to national
economic development, the relationship to business churning and job
creation, the impact of national context, the mixed contributions
of high growth firms, the modest effect of external financial
support, the unequal distribution of sunk costs related to
successful payback, importance as an option for the most desperate
in poor countries, and the tendency to overlook the continuing
incremental impact of Main Street business creation.
Entrepreneurial scholars, faculty, policy analysts and graduate
students interested in economic development, entrepreneurship and
public policy will find clarity and gain a depth of knowledge about
policymaking and business creation with The Truth about
Entrepreneurship.
Entrepreneurship and Economic Development addresses the importance
of business creation, which is endemic in subsistence indigenous
cultures, widespread in developing economies, and a critical
feature of adaptation in the most advanced economies. The author
offers systematic comparisons of six stages of economic development
which provide information about the adjustments in the economic and
social context affecting participation in business creation, the
sectors where activities occur, and the nature of the contributions
to economic growth and adaptation. Implications for public policy
varies for countries at different stages of development. The book
includes an introduction to harmonized data developed over the past
two decades while avoiding technical complexity. Descriptions are
based on representative samples of business creation with an
emphasis on grassroots business creation in countries during all
stages of economic development. Entrepreneurship, economic
development and public policy scholars and faculty as well as
policy analysts focusing on economic development will benefit from
the breadth of knowledge included in this exploration of business
creation.
This important book enhances understanding of entrepreneurial
dynamics, providing the first analysis of changes in US
entrepreneurial activity. Based on the unprecedented Panel Study of
Entrepreneurial Dynamics, it examines adult participation in new
firm creation and differences in regional firm creation activity.
Shedding light on the importance of new firms for job growth,
productivity enhancements, innovation, and routes for social
mobility, the author tracks the success or failure of
entrepreneurs, including comparisons of different groups, such as
women and minorities, as well as across countries.
Understanding the origins of new businesses - the firm creation
process-has been dramatically affected by the development of
longitudinal studies of business start-ups. Several projects have
been implemented to track the development of new firms, from the
emergence of a business idea and organization of a start-up team
through the birth of an operational business. The U.S. projects
(the first and second Panel Studies of Entrepreneurial Dynamics,
known as PSED I and II) have counterparts in a number of other
countries: Australia, Canada, China, Latvia, Netherlands (two
projects), Norway, and Sweden. These eleven projects in nine
countries, implemented over the past decade, are at different
stages of development and have been utilized for a wide range of
assessments of entrepreneurial and business creation phenomena.
This volume presents the state of the art of these international
research projects, providing the first in-depth comparison of the
firm creation data across a wide range of national contexts. The
work will be of great interest to the research community,
particularly those developing such projects in their own countries,
as well as policy makers and scholars interested in the effect of
national context on the business creation process.
Business creation, or entrepreneurship, is a major source of
national economic growth and adaptation as well as an important
career choice for millions. In this insightful book, Paul D.
Reynolds presents an overview of the major factors associated with
contemporary business creation, reflecting representative samples
of US early stage nascent ventures, and emphasizing the unique
features of the one-third that achieve profitability. This in-depth
assessment includes empirical descriptions of a broad range of
relevant features of the entrepreneurial process. By using
representative samples of nascent entrepreneurs and ventures in the
US, it allows extrapolation to US populations of entrepreneurs,
pre-profit ventures, and activity in all economic sectors. Outcomes
including profitability and disengagement are identified in
multiple follow-up interviews. A useful resource for scholars
concerned with business creation, this book also makes an engaging
supplementary course book for upper division and graduate courses
in business plan creation and research methods. Policy analysts
emphasizing programs and policies to enhance business creation will
also find it enlightening.
Business creation, or entrepreneurship, is a major source of
national economic growth and adaptation as well as an important
career choice for millions. In this insightful book, Paul D.
Reynolds presents an overview of the major factors associated with
contemporary business creation, reflecting representative samples
of US early stage nascent ventures, and emphasizing the unique
features of the one-third that achieve profitability. This in-depth
assessment includes empirical descriptions of a broad range of
relevant features of the entrepreneurial process. By using
representative samples of nascent entrepreneurs and ventures in the
US, it allows extrapolation to US populations of entrepreneurs,
pre-profit ventures, and activity in all economic sectors. Outcomes
including profitability and disengagement are identified in
multiple follow-up interviews. A useful resource for scholars
concerned with business creation, this book also makes an engaging
supplementary course book for upper division and graduate courses
in business plan creation and research methods. Policy analysts
emphasizing programs and policies to enhance business creation will
also find it enlightening.
"This important Handbook of Entrepreneurial Dynamics reports on the
Panel Study of Entrepreneurial Dynamics (PSED), the most
comprehensive scientifically representative study to date of
nascent entrepreneurs. The book is unique because the study
identified individuals in the process of creating new businesses to
understand how, at its very source, people move from considering
the option of starting a new business to its actual founding. This
has never been done before in the history of entrepreneurship
research... I cannot recommend this book more strongly to
entrepreneurship scholars and those interested in where
entrepreneurs come from and how they move from their initial idea
to new venture founding." --Claudia Bird Schoonhoven, University of
California, Irvine "This Handbook makes a terrific contribution to
understanding entrepreneurship and new business creation. Its 38
chapters report major findings from the Panel Study of
Entrepreneurial Dynamics (PSED), an unprecedented research program
involving more than a hundred researchers from 10 countries. This
Handbook is 'must reading' for anyone interested in
entrepreneurship research." --Andrew H. Van de Ven, Carlson School
of Management, University of Minnesota Entrepreneurial activity
provides profound positive benefits across an important set of
measures of social and economic well-being, much of it concentrated
in new economic sectors such as information technology. Yet, even
though entrepreneurship has been shown to provide many benefits, it
is surprising that there has not been a systematic study of the
entrepreneurial process. The Handbook of Entrepreneurial Dynamics:
The Process of Business Creation fills this gap by offering
theories, ideas, and measures that can be used to explore and
understand the factors that encompass and influence the creation of
new businesses. The chapters in the handbook provide the rationale
for questionnaires used in the Panel Study of Entrepreneurial
Dynamics (PSED). The PSED is a research program that was initiated
to provide systematic, reliable, and generalizable data on
important features of the new business creation process. The PSED
includes information on the proportion and characteristics of the
adult population involved in efforts to start businesses, the
activities and characteristics that comprise the nature of the
business start-up process, and the proportion and characteristics
of those business start-up efforts that actually become new
businesses. The handbook also describes the PSED data collection
process; provides documentation of the interview schedules,
codebooks, data preparation and weighting scheme; as well as offers
examples of how analyses of PSED data might be conducted. The
authors identify specific measures that can be used to
operationalize theory as well as provide evidence from the PSED
data sets on these measures' reliability and validity. The Handbook
of Entrepreneurial Dynamics is ideal for a sizeable audience,
including graduate students, academics, and librarians in schools
of business and management who need a comprehensive reference on
business creation. In addition, researchers and policy makers at
the federal, state, and local level will find this an invaluable
reference covering all of the factors involved in new venture
formation. Key Features: * Considers categories of data not
available prior to the PSED * Includes a comprehensive overview of
theories about new business formation * Provides demographics of
nascent entrepreneurs * Analyzes the cognitive characteristics of
nascent entrepreneurs * Explores all of the processes of new
business formation
"A Primer in Theory Construction" is for those who have already
studied one or more of the social, behavioral, or natural sciences,
but have no formal introduction to the way theories are
constructed, stated, tested, and connected together to form a
scientific body of knowledge. The author discusses scientific
theories in general terms, but also addresses the special
challenges of developing scientific knowledge about social and
human phenomena. This Allyn and Bacon Classics Edition contains the
complete text of the original copyright 1971 version, with new
typography and page design.
This research program began in 1993. The idea of developing
representative samples of those active in the business creation
process, now called nascent entrepreneurs, developed from the
success of using regional characteristics to 1 predict variations
in new firm birth rates in six countries. The initial purpose was
to determine those external factors that encouraged individuals to
initiate the business creation process and become, as they are now
called, nascent entrepreneurs. The research procedures, mainly the
critical aspects of the scre- ing procedures, were developed with
the Survey Research Laboratory at the University of Wisconsin in
Madison to complete the Wisconsin Entrepreneurial 2 Climate Study.
Support for an initial test with a national sample was provided by
the Institute for Social Research at the University of Michigan.
Richard Curtin became involved with the incorporation of the
screening module as part 3 of the Survey of Consumers in October
and November in 1993. The success of these efforts in providing a
detailed description of the ent- preneurial process based on
representative samples led to substantial interest among
entrepreneurial scholars. A founding team of Nancy Carter, William
Gartner, and Paul Reynolds was able to organize the Entrepreneurial
Research Consortium (ERC), a collaborative network of 34 research
units that shared the financial cost and sweat equity required to
implement the first national project, 4 PSED I.
This research program began in 1993. The idea of developing
representative samples of those active in the business creation
process, now called nascent entrepreneurs, developed from the
success of using regional characteristics to 1 predict variations
in new firm birth rates in six countries. The initial purpose was
to determine those external factors that encouraged individuals to
initiate the business creation process and become, as they are now
called, nascent entrepreneurs. The research procedures, mainly the
critical aspects of the scre- ing procedures, were developed with
the Survey Research Laboratory at the University of Wisconsin in
Madison to complete the Wisconsin Entrepreneurial 2 Climate Study.
Support for an initial test with a national sample was provided by
the Institute for Social Research at the University of Michigan.
Richard Curtin became involved with the incorporation of the
screening module as part 3 of the Survey of Consumers in October
and November in 1993. The success of these efforts in providing a
detailed description of the ent- preneurial process based on
representative samples led to substantial interest among
entrepreneurial scholars. A founding team of Nancy Carter, William
Gartner, and Paul Reynolds was able to organize the Entrepreneurial
Research Consortium (ERC), a collaborative network of 34 research
units that shared the financial cost and sweat equity required to
implement the first national project, 4 PSED I.
Understanding the origins of new businesses - the firm creation
process-has been dramatically affected by the development of
longitudinal studies of business start-ups. Several projects have
been implemented to track the development of new firms, from the
emergence of a business idea and organization of a start-up team
through the birth of an operational business. The U.S. projects
(the first and second Panel Studies of Entrepreneurial Dynamics,
known as PSED I and II) have counterparts in a number of other
countries: Australia, Canada, China, Latvia, Netherlands (two
projects), Norway, and Sweden. These eleven projects in nine
countries, implemented over the past decade, are at different
stages of development and have been utilized for a wide range of
assessments of entrepreneurial and business creation phenomena.
This volume presents the state of the art of these international
research projects, providing the first in-depth comparison of the
firm creation data across a wide range of national contexts. The
work will be of great interest to the research community,
particularly those developing such projects in their own countries,
as well as policy makers and scholars interested in the effect of
national context on the business creation process.
This important book enhances understanding of entrepreneurial
dynamics, providing the first analysis of changes in US
entrepreneurial activity. Based on the unprecedented Panel Study of
Entrepreneurial Dynamics, it examines adult participation in new
firm creation and differences in regional firm creation activity.
Shedding light on the importance of new firms for job growth,
productivity enhancements, innovation, and routes for social
mobility, the author tracks the success or failure of
entrepreneurs, including comparisons of different groups, such as
women and minorities, as well as across countries.
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