Eco Lit Frameworks
Eco Lit Frameworks
Eco Lit Frameworks
The following are brief synopses of some of the literature addressing entrepreneurial ecosystems. This is
not an exhaustive review but does provide an introduction to some authors and concepts. The reviews
here are meant to provide applicants reference resources for understanding the logic and current work in
the field of entrepreneurship driving the creation of ROI as a strategy in Oregon.
Resources:
Energizing Entrepreneurs: Charting a Course for Rural Communities
Markley, D., Macke, D. & Luther V. September 2005. Lincoln, NE: Heartland Center for Leadership
Development. Resource download.
Energizing Entrepreneurs is a guide for the rural community leader who is helping to transform their
communities into hotbeds of entrepreneurship. It discusses what communities can do to energize
entrepreneurship in general, and how to support local entrepreneurs individually. Packed with
insightful tips and advice from experts with years of experience in the field, Energizing Entrepreneurs
is a “must have” for anyone working to create supportive environments for entrepreneurs, new
sources of wealth and sustaining economic betterment.
Startup Communities
Feld, B. September 2013. Hoboken, NJ: John Wiley & Sons, Inc.
“Startup communities” are popping up everywhere, from cities all over the United States like Boulder,
Boston, New York, Seattle, and Omaha to countries like Iceland. These entrepreneurial ecosystems
are driving innovation, new business creation, and job growth. Startup Communities documents the
strategy, dynamics, tactics, and long-term perspective required for building communities of
entrepreneurs who can feed off of each other’s talent, creativity, and support. So, if you think Silicon
Valley is the only place to start your next venture, think again. These days, great business ideas can
come from anywhere, and this audiobook is the smart wake-up call you’ve been waiting for.
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Auerswald, P. A. October 2015. Kansas City, MO: Ewing Marion Kauffman Foundation. Document
download.
The author provides an in-depth exploration of the meaning of entrepreneurship and discusses the
meaning and relevance of the ecosystem concept to entrepreneurship. The author also cites research
on factors that influence entrepreneurs’ location and start-up decisions (finance, human resources,
market opportunities, quality of life of location). Six strategies for enabling entrepreneurial ecosystems
are offered: favor incumbents less; listen to entrepreneurs; map the ecosystem; think big, start small,
move fast; avoid artificially segmenting your community or your strategies.
City Initiatives for Technology, Innovation, and Entrepreneurship: A Resource for City Leadership
Gibson, J., Robinson, M. and Cain, S. 2015. Download the report.
City Initiatives for Technology, Innovation, and Entrepreneurship (CITIE) supports policymakers to
create policy initiatives that catalyze innovation and entrepreneurship in cities. The focus is on tech
and innovation, however, a number of points are relevant to entrepreneurship in general. The CITIE
effort includes a diagnostic tool and survey of 40 leading cities from around the world. Three key
findings from high-performing governments include: policy coherence (policies in one area don’t
undermine policies in another); default to openness (habitually connect with people outside of city hall
to solve problems); government work styles more closely associated with start-ups than
bureaucracies. The CITIE framework identifies nine roles in three policy dimensions that can
influence entrepreneurship and innovation. These policy dimensions (and roles) are openness
(regulator, advocate, customer), infrastructure (host, investor, connector), leadership (strategist,
digital governor, datavore).
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article includes a set of questions for assessing entrepreneurial ecosystem that may be adapted for
use on the ROI survey.
The article generated significant interest and the author wrote a follow-up piece titled How to Start an
Entrepreneurial Ecosystem in Six Months. The second article suggests the following: start local; get
the word out quickly via town halls, convenings, and meetings; connect resources online and in bricks
and mortar spaces; support and mentor entrepreneurs and latent entrepreneurs to find customers,
advisors, investors, and business partners; bring visibility; have a small group of advisors; connect to
leaders.
The entrepreneurial development system: Transforming business talent and community economies
Lichenstein, Gregg A., and Lyons, Thomas S. 2001. Economic Development Quarterly. 15(1): 3-20.
The focus here is on entrepreneurial development systems rather than entrepreneurial ecosystems,
however, the article has value for considering the technical, managerial, entrepreneurial, and
personal skills identified as important to for entrepreneurial development.
Creating an Entrepreneurial Appalachian Region: Findings and Lessons from an Evaluation of the
Appalachian Regional Commission’s Entrepreneurship Initiative 1997-2005
RUPRI Center for Rural Entrepreneurship and Appalachian Regional Commission. 2008. Download
report.
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This report includes impacts, lessons for practitioners and policy makers, and recommendations. Key
lessons include incorporating capacity assessment and capacity building into program design,
focusing investments on long term approaches, requiring initiatives to be market driven and practice
continuous improvement, emphasizing investments in initiatives that demonstrate the ability to partner
and collaborate, and investing in evaluation.
Community Readiness
RUPRI. December 2013. Lincoln, NE: Center for Rural Entrepreneurship. Download document.
Economic development is hard, long-term work. To be successful, communities must be ready to
launch a new initiative. We define community readiness as having the understanding, capacity and
commitment to engage in entrepreneur-focused development. Our collection of Community
Readiness resources can help you assess your community's readiness for entrepreneur-focused
economic development.
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a necessary strategy, explains what entrepreneurship is and who entrepreneurs are, dissects the
essential components of an entrepreneurship ecosystem, and includes a toolkit for practitioners to
assess and implement economic development strategies in their communities. Several case studies
of entrepreneurial firms as well as organizations that support these businesses provide an insight into
the variety of policies and programs out there to support and foster entrepreneurship in a community.
Examining the Connections within the Startup Ecosystem: A Case Study of St. Louis
Motoyama, PhD, Y. & Watkins, K. September 2014. Download report.
We critically examine how an entrepreneurial ecosystem is structured using an exploratory and
bottom-up approach. Past studies in this area have discussed the presence of elements in the system
or captured the ecosystem as holistically as possible by extending to social, cultural, and institutional
dimension. However, we find that such aggregated conceptualizations gave limited understanding to
how different elements are connected and constitute the system. Here, we apply a social network
approach by analyzing the connections of the ecosystem at multiple layers: (1) among entrepreneurs,
(2) among support organizations, and (3) between and among entrepreneurs and key support
organizations. Through a series of interviews with entrepreneurs and support organizations in St.
Louis, we find that the ways in which support organizations in this region interacted with each other
and with entrepreneurs, including explicit cross-organizational collaboration and strategic structuring
of resources, significantly impacted the way that entrepreneurs interacted with one another and with
organizations, thus deepening our understanding of these connections and identifying intervening
points within the ecosystem.