Entrepreneurial Skills of Rural Based Entrepreneurs: Basis For Enhancement Program
Entrepreneurial Skills of Rural Based Entrepreneurs: Basis For Enhancement Program
Entrepreneurial Skills of Rural Based Entrepreneurs: Basis For Enhancement Program
Ariel M. Plantilla
amplantilla74@gmail.com
Ariel M. Plantilla. Entrepreneurial Skills of Rural Based Entrepreneurs: Basis for Enhancement Program.
– PalArch’s Journal of Archaeology of Egypt/Egyptology 17(1), 291-299. ISSN 1567-214X
ABSTRACT
The study primarily aimed to assess micro and small enterprise owners' entrepreneurial skills in a rural-based
economy and identify the needs and problems they encountered in managing their small business, which will serve
as an input for proposing an enhancement program to help the micro and small entrepreneurs. The study used a
descriptive survey. Results show that micro and small entrepreneurs possess planning skills. They always assess the
internal and external environment before making any business decisions, set goals and targets, and think of
strategies on how to achieve those goals. According to their demographic profile, there was no significant variation
on the entrepreneurial skills in terms of planning, marketing, and interpersonal skills of the micro and small
entrepreneurs. Their management and personal maturity skills differed according to their age and years of
experience as entrepreneurs. Education and experience contribute to the development of entrepreneurial skills, such
as marketing and personal maturity skills. Micro and small entrepreneurs' identified problems were inabilities to set
long-term plans and study different aspects of business, competition, innovation, lack of financial capital and
knowledge on bookkeeping, and the high operating cost of business and receivable management.
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INTRODUCTION
Businesses in the Philippines are composed predominantly of micro and small businesses
in the 2017 List of establishments of the Philippine Statistics Authority (PSA). A total of
924,721 business enterprises operating in the Philippines. Micro, small and medium
enterprises (MSMEs) account for 99.56% of the total establishments, of which 89.59%
(828,436) were microenterprises, 9.56% (88,412) were small enterprises, and 0.41%
(3,829) were medium-sized enterprises. Large enterprises made up in the remaining
0.44% (4,044) MSME’s employed 65% of the country’s workforce and account for 35%
of the Philippine GDP (dti.gov.ph)
Businesses are classified in terms of asset size and some employees. Microenterprise has
an asset size of 3 million and below with nine employees. Less, small scale enterprise has
an asset size of 3 to 15 million. With an estimated 10 to 19 employees, medium-sized
enterprises have an asset size of 15 to 100 million estimated employed 100 to less than
200 employees. In comparison, large scale enterprises with over 100 million assets and
employs more than 200 employees.
According to the Small Business Association (SBA), only 30% of new businesses failed
during the first two years of being open, 50% during the first five years, and 66% during
the early 10. The SBA stated that only 25% make it to 15 years or more. However, not all
of these businesses need to fail. With the right planning, funding, and flexibility,
businesses have a better chance of succeeding (https://www.investopedia.com/slide-
show/top-6-reasons-new-businesses-fail/?article=1).
One of the causes of business failure is poor business management. Many small
businesses failed due to the poor management skills of the owner. Goldhill said that the
primary reason for the failure of startups within three years is usually management's
failure to act, management's inability to react, or management's failure to plan (Moyak,
2016).
Asala (2016), many reports on business failures cite poor management as one of the
biggest reasons for failure. New business owners frequently lack relevant business and
management expertise in almost all business functions. They do not have enough capital
to hire the necessary people to care for what they do not know. Unless they recognize
what they don't do well, and more importantly, seek help, business owners may soon face
disaster. For these reasons, the researcher wanted to assess small business owners'
entrepreneurial skills in Pililla and provide assistance to them through business
management capability building or enhancement program.
Objectives
The study primarily aimed to assess micro and small enterprise owners' entrepreneurial
skills and identify their needs and problems, which will serve as the basis for a proposed
program to capacitate these small entrepreneurs in managing their business.
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Hood & Young(1993) analyzes responses from the list of the nation's most profitable
publicly-owned entrepreneurial companies for the years 1979-1989 by 100 chief
executives from Inc. magazine. A list of required areas of expertise is established in terms
of content, skills, and mindset. Finance/cash management, engineering, accounting are
examples of critical information domains.
After deciding the areas of knowledge needed for effective entrepreneurship, the study
goes further to determine whether executives assume that knowledge can really be taught.
The priority level of significance is also calculated.
Carland & Carland (1998), using a study of 88 businesses drawn from Inc. 500, exuded
the impact of the composition of entrepreneurial team skills on the success of new
projects.
Sujan Patel identified 17 skills that any entrepreneur must have to be successful. Where
their money goes, how it can be raised, and how it can be successful, entrepreneurs need
to think. Jim Rohn said that you were the sum of the five people you spent the most time
with. To get to where you want to go, it is essential to recruit the right people, and it is
necessary to handle them well. To understand your strengths and weaknesses, it is
necessary to know where you are strong and vulnerable. The associates you bring on and
the staff you recruit will teach others the strategic choices you make. The skills
demonstrated here are taken from Sujan Patel's book, Entrepreneurial Skills for Business,
published by YPWR.
The Entrepreneurial Skills Analysis of German and Serbian entrepreneurs found that they
have different entrepreneurial skills growth levels. Stress tolerance is a strength for
aspiring German entrepreneurs that has the greatest variability. For potential Serbian
entrepreneurs, resistance to stress that explains the greatest variation affects individuals.
This suggests that people preparing to set up their businesses need self-control to ensure
an acceptable future output (Morales et al., 2013).
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Theoretical framework
Marshall believed that entrepreneurship's success depended on the features that the
entrepreneur had. The most critical elements are commitment, efficacy, reasonable and
efficient action, perseverance, and the ability to adapt to environmental changes (Van
Praaag, 1999).
METHODOLOGY
The researcher utilized a descriptive survey research design to analyze micro and small
enterprise owners' entrepreneurial skills in a rural-based economy.
Planning skills, marketing skills, management skills, interpersonal skills, and personal
maturity were the skills measured. Registered micro and small business owners engaged
in the type of merchandising industry, manufacturing, and service were the report's
primary informants. The questionnaire checklist developed by the researcher was the data
collection method used in this study. It was subject to content validation by experts in the
field of business and entrepreneurship. Using the research and interpretation of SPSS
tools, the collected data were tabulated.
The following statistical tools were used in the analysis of gathered data to describe the
demographic profile of the small and micro-entrepreneurs percentage rank was used to
describe the entrepreneurial skills weighted mean was used to ascertain variations in the
entrepreneurial skills in terms of demographic profile. F test and One Way ANOVA
were used, to measure the significant relationship between entrepreneurial skills and
demographic profile. Chi-Square was used.
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It can be seen from the table that the majority of micro-small entrepreneurs at Pililla often
analyze the internal and external climate in terms of planning skills before making any
business decisions. They set targets and goals for their organization and think about plans
to achieve these goals or objectives. However, before entering into business projects, they
have some deficiencies in researching the proposed business's various aspects, leading to
business venture failures.
Table 3 can be gleaned from that when it comes to company management. Micro-Small
Entrepreneurs (MSEs) are hands-on in business management. They also oversee the
company's day-to-day operations, maintain a particular inventory or inventory of items,
and educate family members in appropriate business management practices for
management. They said some of their family needs in an interview were taken from their
sari-sari shops' sales or profits.
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The table shows that most of the micro-small entrepreneurs in Pililla understand the
importance of open contact with clients regarding interpersonal skills and accept the
customer's opinions and feedback to enhance their goods and services, which is a good
entrepreneurial ability. Networking by participation in gatherings, however, micro-small
entrepreneurs have seldom performed the assembly.
It can be seen from the table the good characteristics of micro-small entrepreneurs in
Pililla include responsibility for solving challenges. They are risk-takers, capable of
coping with stresses and stress from customer demand, flexible. They have a constructive
outlook on perceived setbacks that have been taken as a challenge and learning
experience.
Table 6: Composite table on the Entrepreneurial Skills of Micro and Small Entrepreneurs
in Pililla.
Aspect Mean VI
Planning Skills 4.20 A 1
Marketing Skills 3.88 O 3
Management Skills 3.82 O 4
Interpersonal Skills 3.80 O 5
Personal Maturity 4.16 O 2
Average 3.97 O
The table highlights the various entrepreneurship skills of small and micro-entrepreneurs
in Pililla. Small entrepreneurs often practice planning, followed by skills of personal
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competence, which are also exercised. Marketing abilities are often practiced, teamwork
abilities are frequently practiced, and diplomatic skills are often practiced.
On the challenges faced by small business owners when it comes to planning, 70 percent
of respondents said that their issue was the inability to research various aspects of the
company by performing a feasibility study before joining a company that often leads to
business failure, and 63 percent said they had trouble setting their long-term business
plan. However, they have a vision for their business.
Nearly 70% of micro and small entrepreneurs revealed that their issue was competition in
the marketing of their goods and services, in particular, because of the proliferation of
large chain supermarkets in the region. Because of resource constraints, they could not
build inventions for their business. Fifty percent of Pililla's small businesses operate on a
break-even or no benefit, which is why they were unable to make any inventions for their
companies.
The table shows in terms of managing the concerns of small business owners in Pililla.
Nearly fifty-five (55) percent of business owners said they lack bookkeeping or
accounting expertise, which is key to business management. The lack of financial capital
is next. 125 or 51.7 percent of small business owners said that a lack of capital is one
reason for not expanding their business. The majority of the money of the respondents
came from their investments.
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SUMMARY OF FINDINGS
From the analysis of the gathered data, the findings are hereby presented:
As for the profile of micro-small entrepreneurs in Pililla Rizal, the majority of women
belong to the 31-50 age range of the middle age community. Most of them have
completed high school, but they have not finished college. Full-time entrepreneurs are the
bulk of them. Most micro-entrepreneurs are engaged in merchandising or retail trade
market on the profile of their market; most of them were 2 to 6 years in the company
survival era. Their money for business was derived from their investments.
In terms of strategy, the challenges faced by entrepreneurs are the inability to set long-
term goals and the failure to research various facets of the enterprise. The challenge is
marketing, completion, and creativity. The issues are management, financial resources,
and a lack of accounting or bookkeeping skills about company operations. Their concern
is the high cost of business activities such as electricity, transportation costs, and
receivable management.
CONCLUSIONS
Results suggest that micro and small business owners in Pililla have planning skills. In
terms of strategy, promotion, and interpersonal skills, there were no significant
differences in entrepreneurial skills. The problems identified were the inability to set
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long-term plans and research the various market, competition, and innovation aspects,
lack of financial resources, and bookkeeping skills.
RECOMMENDATIONS
Based on the findings and conclusions drawn, the researcher recommended that to
support micro and small entrepreneurs, the partnership should be formed between and
among business owners, local government units, and academia. URS Pililla may
recommend a program to train micro-entrepreneurs in business planning, accounting or
accounting, and in the management of receivables. Among successful entrepreneurs, a
follow-up analysis could be performed to account for the factors that led to their success.
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