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ENTREPRENEUR
An Entrepreneur is a person who has possession of an enterprise, or venture, and assumes significant accountability for the inherent risks and the outcome. An Ambitious leader who combines land, labor, and capital to create and market new goods or services .
ENTREPRENEURSHIP
Entrepreneurship is the process of
creating something new with value by devoting the necessary time and effort, assuming the accompanying financial, psychic, and social risks, and receiving the resulting rewards of monetary and personal satisfaction of independence.
Entrepreneurship Process
The Inventor The Opportunity Spotter The Project Champion
The Idea
ENTREPRENEURIAL DEVELOPMENT
Entrepreneurship development (ED) refers to the process of enhancing entrepreneurial skills and knowledge through structured training and institutionbuilding programmes. ED aims to enlarge the base of entrepreneurs in order to hasten the pace at which new ventures are created. This accelerates employment generation and economic development.
Entrepreneurship development focuses on the individual who wishes to start or expand a business. Small and medium enterprise (SME) development, on the other hand, focuses on developing the enterprise, whether or not it employs or is led by individuals who can be considered entrepreneurial. Furthermore, entrepreneurship development, entrepreneurship development concentrates more on growth potential and innovation than SME development does.
Requirements to be an entrepreneur
Innovation Creativity Risk Taking Organization
After doing his matriculation at the age of 16, Dhirubhai moved to Aden, Yemen. He worked there as a gas-station attendant, and as a clerk in an oil company. He returned to India in 1958 with Rs 50,000 and set up a textile trading company. Assisted by his two sons, Mukesh and Anil, Dhiru Bhai Ambani built India's largest private sector company, Reliance India Limited, from a scratch. Over time his business has diversified into a core specialisation in petrochemicals with additional interests in telecommunications, information technology, energy, power, retail, textiles,
ENTREPRENEURIAL CYCLE
6) Non-availability of inputs 7) ill-planned training methodology 8) No clear-cut objective 9) Lack of clarity in approach and 10) Lack of creativity and commitment
5. Entrepreneurship Development Institute Of India a) Selecting potential entrepreneurs b)Product selection and project report preparation c)Practical training and work experience d)Post training support and follow-up 6. Institute For Rural Management And Administration
. National Institute Of Entrepreneurship And Small (NISEBUD) a)To help institution in carrying out activities relating to entrepreneurship development b)To provide vital information, support to trainers, promoters & entrepreneurs c)To hole examination & test & confer Business Development
9. Entrepreneurship Development Institute Of India (EDII) Increase the supply of trained entrepreneurs through training. Improve managerial capabilities of small-scale industries. Contribute to the dispersal of business ownership and thus expand the social base of Indian entrepreneurial class. Participate in institution-building efforts. Promote micro-enterprises at the rural level.
ENTREPRENEURIAL CULTURE
Culture consists of tangible man-made objects, such as automobiles, clothing, furniture, buildings and tools and intangible concepts such as laws, morals, and knowledge. In addition, culture includes the values, character, qualities, skills acceptable within the particular society. Entrepreneurial culture thus implies vision, values, norms and traits that are conductive for the development of the economy
6) Political stability and governments policy 7) Caste and religious affiliation 8) Availability of supporting facilities 9) Achievement motivation and 10)Personality and personal skill
Founders of YouTube Broadcasts 100 million short videos daily on myriad subjects Sold to Google
Founded a banking system 30 years ago To lend small amounts of money to the rural poor in Bangladeshi villages. 2006 Nobel Peace Prize winner,
Founders of MySpace.com Registering 160,000 people per day with no marketing. As of September 2007, there are over 200 million accounts.
ENTREPRENEURSHIP THEORIES
1. 2. 3. 4. 5. Sociological Theories Economic Theories Psychological Theories Cultural Theories Motivational Theories
Sociological Theories
Sociological Theories Divided into 2 Theories : Everett E. Hagen 2.
How a traditional society becomes one in which Impact of religion shapes on technical progress takes place. the entrepreneurial culture.
The entrepreneurs creativity is the key Emphasized that entrepreneurial element energies means of religious of Social Transformation and beliefs. Economic Growth. Spirit of Capitalism Reveals general model of the socialProtestant ethic interrelationship among physical environmen Inducement of profit social structure, personality and culture. Adventurous spirit facilitate Max taking risk
Economic Theories
1.Schumpeters Theory of Innovation
Entrepreneurship and economic development are interdependent. Economic development takes place when a country' real rational income increases. An entrepreneur is one who perceives the opportunities to
Distinction between Invention and Innovation Emphasis on Entrepreneurial Function. Presentation of Disequilibrium Situation through Entrepreneurial. Entrepreneurialism dream and the will to found a private kingdom. Schumpeter remained silent about as to why some economics had more entrepreneurial talent than others.
Covers the following 5 cases New goods/ services. New method of production. New market. New source of supply of raw materials. New organization
Psychological Theories
Peter F. Drucker said that an entrepreneur is one who always searches for change, responds to it and exploits it as an opportunity. He laid emphasis on two important factors innovation and resources.
Value and satisfaction obtained from resources Peter F. Drucker Material is converted into resources and are combined in a new or more productive configuration Entrepreneurship is the practice which has knowledge base. Entrepreneurship is equally important to small business and non-economic institutions.
Cultural Theories
Cultural theories point out that entrepreneurship is the product of culture. Entrepreneurial talents come from cultural values and cultural system embedded into the cultural environment. Hoselitzs Theory He explains that the supply of Entrepreneurship is governed by cultural factors & culturally minority groups are the spark plugs of entrepreneurial economic development. Marginal men Emphasis on skills Contribution of social classes like parsees in
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