Katz-Entreprenuerial Small Business Mgmet-Chapter 01
Katz-Entreprenuerial Small Business Mgmet-Chapter 01
Katz-Entreprenuerial Small Business Mgmet-Chapter 01
s
b
McGraw-Hill/Irwin 1-1
Copyright © 2009 by The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved.
1-1
e Faculty Introduction
sShahid S. Butt – MBA, BBA (Hons) - IBA, Karachi- 1980-81
b
30 years Corporate experience in General Management,
Marketing, Sales, Customer Services and Distribution positions,
in a wide variety of business environments with leading
organizations – Exxon, DHL Worldwide Express, Instaphone
and TCS Express Worldwide, UAE. Currently with the
Beaconhouse Group
Successfully conducted training in the areas of Leadership,
Sales, Management, Communications and Customer Services.
Visiting facilitator for the Chartered Institute of Marketing
diploma programs, at the Global Training Center-Dubai,
operated by Emirates Bank International.
Adjunct faculty member at the American University of Sharjah-
AUS, Australian University of Wollongong and the Center for
American Education in Dubai, Imperial and UMT in Lahore.
McGraw-Hill/Irwin 1-2
Copyright © 2009 by The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved.
1-2
e
s
b
Introduce Yourself………..
• Name
• Your educational background
• Work experience, if any, please provide details
• If you are currently working, what is your
position/role ???
• Your objective for enrolling on this program is to…!!!
McGraw-Hill/Irwin 1-3
Copyright © 2009 by The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved.
1-3
1
Small Business:
Its Opportunities and
Rewards
• Small Business:
Business involves 1-50 people
and has its owner managing the
business on a day-to-day basis
– Over a million new businesses per
year in U.S.
• Entrepreneur:
Entrepreneur a person who owns or
starts an organization, such as a
business
1-5
Chapter 1
1-6
Chapter 1
1-7
Chapter 1
• Incubators:
Incubators a facility which offers
subsidized space and business advice to
companies in their earliest stages of
operation
– More than 87% of firms receiving help from
incubators were still in operation after four
years
• Small business knowledge means small
business success!
1-8
Chapter 1
1-9
Chapter 1
1-10
Chapter 1
Small Business Owners and
Entrepreneurs:
• Entrepreneurial businesses are characterized
by novelty in their products, services, or
business models
• Small businesses are imitative,
imitative providing only
minor variations on an established model
• Self-employed:
Self-employed working for yourself
– About 16.3 million self-employed people in 2006
1-11
Chapter 1
Small Business Owners and Entrepreneurs:
• Entrepreneur:
Entrepreneur anyone who owns a business
• Groups within population of entrepreneurs:
– Founders:
Founders people who create or start new
businesses
– Franchise:
Franchise prepackaged business bought, rented, or
leased from a company called a franchisor
– Buyers:
Buyers people who purchase and existing business
– Heir:
Heir person who becomes an owner through
inheriting or being given a stake in a family business
1-12
Chapter 1
Small Business vs. High-Growth Ventures
1-13
Chapter 1
Small Business vs. High-Growth Ventures (cont.)
1-14
Chapter 1
Small Business vs. High-Growth Ventures
• Innovativeness: refers to how important a role new
ideas, products, services, processes, or markets
play in an organization
• Potential for growth: refers to the potential market
size
• Dynamic Capitalism Typology: a model of an
economy categorizing businesses based on their
innovativeness and growth rate
1-15
Chapter 1
Small Business vs. High-Growth Ventures
4 Sectors:
• Economic Core Sector
• Glamorous Sector
• Ambitious Firm Sector
• Resource Constrained Sector
1-16
Chapter 1
Small Business vs. High-Growth Ventures
1-17
Chapter 1
2. Livable income
3. Personal growth
1-18
Chapter 1
Example
Dream Job
• Survey conducted by the Graduate Management
Admission Council (GMAC)
– 1,000 college seniors, 49% male and 31% female
were interested in pursuing entrepreneurship
– College graduates’ main concern used to be starting
salary, now it’s quality of life
– Next Generation is looking for:
• Ownership in a company
• Freedom to set their own hours
• Chance to make a difference
1-19
http://www.entrepreneur.com/magazine/entrepreneur/1997/january/13766.html
Chapter 1
Question
All of the following are myths about small
businesses except:
a) Need to make something to make money
b) Growth is in the service industry
c) There is not enough financing to start a business
d) 70% of all new businesses fail within 2 years
1-20
Chapter 1
1-21
Chapter 1
Example
Be Realistic About Startup Financing
• Free Government money for a “great business idea”
is a myth
• Three general categories of start-ups:
– The “just get going” startup – small service
businesses without much startup financing
– The elite, successful tech-savvy entrepreneurs – use
angel investment and venture capital
– The middle-ground businesses – need six figures for
startup should scale down and change plans
1-22
http://www.entrepreneur.com/startingabusiness/businessplans/businessplancoachtimberry/article183606.html
Chapter 1
1-23
Chapter 1
1-24
Chapter 1
1-25
Chapter 1
1-26
Chapter 1
Small Business and the Economy:
• New Jobs:
Jobs small businesses created 75% of the
last 3.4 million jobs created
– Small business is the engine of job creation
– Occupational Structure:
Structure the sequence or
organization of jobs and careers in the economy
– Small businesses employ more than half of all
Americans
– Small businesses are key employers – they
employ people who have atypical work histories or
needs
1-27
Chapter 1
1-28
Chapter 1
Small Business and the Economy:
• New Opportunities:
Opportunities small business presents the
best opportunities for many people who foresee
problems fitting into mainstream jobs
– Small businesses are the support for the boat
that carries the economy: high-growth ventures
and large companies
• Small businesses provide cheaper alternatives to
product manufacture, distribution, and ideas
1-29
Chapter 1
Summary
1-30