Você está na página 1de 18

Part I

The Entrepreneurial Mindset


in the 21st Century

CHAPTER 2
The Entrepreneurial
Mind-Set in
Individuals

© 2009 South-Western, a part of Cengage Learning. PowerPoint Presentation by Charlie Cook


All rights reserved. The University of West Alabama
Chapter Objectives
1. To describe the entrepreneurial mind-set.
2. To present the major sources of information useful
in profiling the entrepreneurial mind-set
3. To identify and discuss the most commonly cited
characteristics found in successful entrepreneurs
4. To discuss the “dark side” of entrepreneurship
5. To identify and describe the different types of risk
entrepreneurs face as well as the major causes of
stress for these individuals and the ways they can
handle stress
6. To examine entrepreneurial motivation

© 2009 South-Western, a part of Cengage Learning. All rights reserved. 2–2


The Entrepreneurial Mindset
• Entrepreneurial Mindset
 Describes the most common characteristics
associated with successful entrepreneurs as well as
the elements associated with the “dark side” of
entrepreneurship.
• Who Are Entrepreneurs?
 Independent individuals, intensely committed and
determined to persevere, who work very hard.
 They are confident optimists who strive for integrity.
 They burn with the competitive desire to excel and use
failure as a learning tool.

© 2009 South-Western, a part of Cengage Learning. All rights reserved. 2–3


Sources of Research on Entrepreneurs

Research and Speeches,


Direct
Popular Seminars and
Observation
Publications Presentations

The
Entrepreneurial
Mindset

© 2009 South-Western, a part of Cengage Learning. All rights reserved. 2–4


Sources of Research on Entrepreneurs (cont’d)
• Publications • Direct Observation of
 Technical and professional Practicing Entrepreneurs
journals  Interviews
 Textbooks on entrepreneurship  Surveys
 Books about entrepreneurship  Case studies
 Biographies or autobiographies
• Speeches, Seminars, and
of entrepreneurs
Presentations by
 Compendiums about
entrepreneurs Practicing Entrepreneurs
 News periodicals
 Venture periodicals
 Newsletters
 Proceedings of conferences
 The Internet

© 2009 South-Western, a part of Cengage Learning. All rights reserved. 2–5


Common Characteristics of Entrepreneurs
• Commitment, • Calculated risk taking
determination, and • Tolerance for failure
perseverance
• High energy level
• Drive to achieve
• Creativity and
• Opportunity orientation Innovativeness
• Initiative and • Vision
responsibility
• Self-confidence and
• Persistent problem solving optimism
• Seeking feedback • Independence
• Internal locus of control • Team building
• Tolerance for ambiguity

© 2009 South-Western, a part of Cengage Learning. All rights reserved. 2–6


Outline of the Entrepreneurial Organization

Imagination

Acceptance
Flexibility
of Risks

© 2009 South-Western, a part of Cengage Learning. All rights reserved. 2–7


Table
2.1 Characteristics Often Attributed to Entrepreneurs

1. Confidence 15. Intelligence 29. Pleasant personality


2. Perseverance, determination 16. Orientation to clear goals 30. Egotism
3. Energy, diligence 17. Positive response to 31. Courage
challenges
4. Resourcefulness 32. Imagination
18. Independence
5. Ability to take calculated risks 33. Perceptiveness
19. Responsiveness to
6. Dynamism, leadership 34. Toleration of ambiguity
suggestions and criticism
7. Optimism 35. Aggressiveness
20. Time competence, efficiency
8. Need to achieve 36. Capacity for enjoyment
21. Ability to make decisions
9. Versatility; knowledge of quickly 37. Efficacy
product, market, machinery,
22. Responsibility 38. Commitment
technology
23. Foresight 39. Ability to trust workers
10. Creativity
24. Accuracy, thoroughness 40. Sensitivity to others
11. Ability to influence others
25. Cooperativeness 41. Honesty, integrity
12. Ability to get along well with
people 26. Profit orientation 42. Maturity, balance
13. Initiative 27. Ability to learn from mistakes
14. Flexibility 28. Sense of power

Source: John A. Hornaday, “Research about Living Entrepreneurs,” in Encyclopedia of Entrepreneurship, ed. Calvin
Kent, Donald Sexton, and Karl Vesper, © 1982, 26–27. Adapted by permission of Prentice-Hall, Englewood Cliffs, NJ.
© 2009 South-Western, a part of Cengage Learning. All rights reserved. 2–8
Entrepreneurship Theory
• Entrepreneurs cause entrepreneurship.
 Entrepreneurship is a function of the entrepreneur:

E  f (e )
 Entrepreneurship is the interaction of skills related to
inner control, planning and goal setting, risk taking,
innovation, reality perception, use of feedback,
decision making, human relations, and independence.

© 2009 South-Western, a part of Cengage Learning. All rights reserved. 2–9


The Entrepreneurial Journey
• Entrepreneurs
 Create ventures much as an artist creates a painting.
 Are formed by the lived experience of venture
creation.
• Experiential Nature of Creating a Sustainable
Enterprise
 Emergence of the opportunity
 Emergence of the venture
 End emergence of the entrepreneur

© 2009 South-Western, a part of Cengage Learning. All rights reserved. 2–10


The Dark Side of Entrepreneurship
• The Entrepreneur’s Confrontation with Risk
 Financial risk versus profit (return) motive varies in
entrepreneurs’ desire for wealth.
 Career risk—loss of employment security
 Family and social risk—competing commitments of
work and family
 Psychic risk—psychological impact of failure on the
well-being of entrepreneurs

© 2009 South-Western, a part of Cengage Learning. All rights reserved. 2–11


Figure
2.1 Typology of Entrepreneurial Styles

Source: Thomas Monroy and Robert Folger, “A Typology of Entrepreneurial Styles:


Beyond Economic Rationality,” Journal of Private Enterprise IX(2) (1993): 71.
© 2009 South-Western, a part of Cengage Learning. All rights reserved. 2–12
Stress and the Entrepreneur
• Entrepreneurial Stress
 The extent to which entrepreneurs’ work demands
and expectations exceed their abilities to perform as
venture initiators, they are likely to experience stress.

• Causes of Entrepreneurial Stress


 Loneliness
 Immersion in business
 People problems
 Need to achieve

© 2009 South-Western, a part of Cengage Learning. All rights reserved. 2–13


Entrepreneurs: Type A Personalities
• Chronic and severe sense of time urgency.
• Constant involvement in multiple projects subject
to deadlines.
• Neglect of all aspects of life except work.
• A tendency to take on excessive responsibility,
combined with the feeling that “Only I am
capable of taking care of this matter.”
• Explosiveness of speech and a tendency to speak
faster than most people.

© 2009 South-Western, a part of Cengage Learning. All rights reserved. 2–14


Dealing with Stress
• Networking

• Getting away from it all

• Communicating with employees

• Finding satisfaction outside the company

• Delegating

• Exercising Rigorously

© 2009 South-Western, a part of Cengage Learning. All rights reserved. 2–15


The Entrepreneurial Ego
• Self-Destructive Characteristics
 Overbearing need for control
 Sense of distrust
 Overriding desire for success
 Unrealistic optimism
• Entrepreneurial Motivation
 The quest for new-venture creation as well as the
willingness to sustain that venture.
• Personal characteristics, personal environment, business
environment, personal goal set (expectations), and the
existence of a viable business idea.

© 2009 South-Western, a part of Cengage Learning. All rights reserved. 2–16


Figure
2.2 A Model of Entrepreneurial Motivation

Source: Douglas W. Naffziger, Jeffrey S. Hornsby, and Donald F. Kuratko, “A Proposed Research
Model of Entrepreneurial Motivation,” Entrepreneurship Theory and Practice (spring 1994): 33.
© 2009 South-Western, a part of Cengage Learning. All rights reserved. 2–17
Key Terms and Concepts
• calculated risk taking • financial risk
• career risk • immersion in business
• dark side of • loneliness
entrepreneurship • need for control
• delegating • networking
• drive to achieve • opportunity orientation
• entrepreneurial behavior • psychic risk
• entrepreneurial mind-set • risk
• entrepreneurial • stress
motivation • tolerance for ambiguity
• external optimism • tolerance for failure
• family and social risk • vision

© 2009 South-Western, a part of Cengage Learning. All rights reserved. 2–18

Você também pode gostar