Unit 2
Unit 2
Unit 2
Entrepreneur
The word “entrepreneur” is derived from the French verb “entreprendre”, which means ‘to
undertake’. This refers to those who “undertake” the risk of new enterprises. An enterprise
is created by an entrepreneur. The process of creation is called “entrepreneurship”.
Characteristics of Entrepreneurship
3. Profit Potential “Profit potential is the likely level of return or compensation to the
entrepreneur for taking on the risk of developing an idea into an actual business
venture.” Without profit potential, the efforts of entrepreneurs would remain only an
abstract and a theoretical leisure activity.
4. Risk Bearing The essence of entrepreneurship is the ‘willingness to assume risk’
arising out of the creation and implementation of new ideas. New ideas are always
tentative and their results may not be instantaneous and positive. An entrepreneur has
to have patience to see his efforts bear fruit. In the intervening period (time gap
between the conception and implementation of an idea and its results), an
entrepreneur has to assume risk. If an entrepreneur does not have the willingness to
assume risk, entrepreneurship would never succeed.
7. Goal-Oriented Activity The entrepreneur who creates and operates enterprises seeks
to earn profits through satisfaction of needs of consumers; hence, entrepreneurship is
a goal-oriented activity. Entrepreneurship emphasizes results, achievements and
targets achieved. It is work done not imaginary plans or paper decisions. Hence
entrepreneurship is a goal-oriented activity.
8. Value Creation Next, we find that the process of creating value is a characteristic in
describing entrepreneurship. Through entrepreneurship, new products, services,
transactions, approaches, resources, technologies, and markets are created that
contribute some value to a community or marketplace. We can also see value created
when, through entrepreneurship; resources are transformed into outputs such as
products or services. During this transformation process, value is created because the
entrepreneur is fashioning something worthwhile and useful. Drucker says, “Until
entrepreneurial act, every plant is a seed and every mineral just another rock.
11. Interest and Vision The first factor for entrepreneurial success is interest. Since
entrepreneurship pays off according to performance rather than time spent on a
particular effort, an entrepreneur must work in an area that interests her. Otherwise,
she will not be able to maintain a high level of work ethic, and she will most likely
fail. This interest must also translate into a vision for the company’s growth. Even if
the day-to-day activities of a business are interesting to an entrepreneur, this is not
enough for success unless she can turn this interest into a vision of growth and
expansion. This vision must be strong enough that she can communicate it to
investors and employees.
12. Risk and Rewards Entrepreneurship requires risk. The measurement of this risk
equates to the amount of time and money you invest into your business. However, this
risk also tends to relate directly to the rewards involved. An entrepreneur who invests
in a franchise pays for someone else’s business plan and receives a respectable
income, while an entrepreneur who undertakes ground breaking innovations risks
everything on an assumption that something revolutionary will work in the market. If
such a revolutionary is wrong, she can lose everything. However, if she is right, she
can suddenly become extremely wealthy.
(c) Perseverance (working against all odds to overcome obstacles and never complacent with
success)
(e) Persuasion (to customers and financiers for patronization of his business and develops &
maintains relationships)
Cast/religion
Family background
Level of Education
Level of perception
Legitimacy of Entrepreneurship
Migratory character
Social Mobility
Social Security
Investment capacity
Ambition/motivation
6. Other Factors
Entrepreneurial Education
More and more people with high academic attainments started joining the ranks of
industrialists, especially the professionals holding qualifications in engineering, law,
medicine, cost and chartered accounting. The newer entrepreneurs have a larger proportion of
their floatation in the traditional sector, but these professionals have by and large preferred to
make their investments in modern sector. The technicians in particular among both old and
new entrepreneurs have entered industries in the modern sector having a bearing of their
academic qualifications. Many universities and institutes are nowadays offering
entrepreneurship education. A number of institutes have set up successful entrepreneurship
centers, which provide help to budding entrepreneurs by conducting formal training and
structured mentoring programs.
Increase in per capita income leads to a greater share of the services sector in the national
economy. The average size of firms’ m many sections of the services sector are relatively
small. This in turn promotes entrepreneurial activity across a number of service sector
industries. Even for some developing countries such as India, services account for over half
of the total GDP. Growing importance of services in the overall economy has paved the way
for entrepreneurial activity. New industries such as software and business process
outsourcing have emerged and these have a large number of entrepreneurial firms.
Increased wealth has led to increase in the demand for variety (Jackson 1984). The
increasing demand for new products is of advantage to smaller firms. A number of studies
have shown the comparative advantage of smaller firms in being innovative and coming up
with new products . If the products has unmet demand, it will create a market for itself. The
success of entrepreneurship is, therefore, dependent upon the extent to which the product is in
demand. Changes in consumer tastes are a major reason for growth of entrepreneurship.
People are, inclined to products that are specifically designed to meet their special needs.
Mass produced homogenous goods do not enjoy as wide an appeal anymore.
Max Weber was first to point out that the entrepreneurial growth was governed by the ethical
value system of the society concerned. He said that the spirit of rapid industrial growth
depends upon a rationalized technology, acquisition of money and its rational use for
productivity and multiplication of money. These elements depend upon a specific value
orientation of individuals. Entrepreneurship develops rapidly in those societies where ethical
values provided independent capacity of decision-making. No doubt, this view has some truth
but it is not accepted universally.
Entrepreneurship largely depends upon the control system designed for controlling the
business activities. If the control system is effective they will result in optimal inventory,
good quality products and high profit margins. This will have a positive effect on the success
of entrepreneurship
1. Leadership skills Do you possess good leadership skills? Do people like your
leadership and does your leadership style inspire change? As a business owner, you must be
able to manage your employees and the teams involved.
Businesses that are meeting their goals and aspirations have gotten where they are because of
having leaders with the capacity to guide the businesses through the different challenges, but
still come out on the other side having achieved what they set out to do. Being a great leader
means that your employees work with you, question your moves at other times, and basically
communicate well with you just to ensure that your business reaches its goals.
“The quality of a leader is reflected in the standards they set for themselves.” – Ray
Kroc
2. Excellent communication skills For you to get the end product you had in mind when
starting, you should be able to clearly communicate your goals to all the teams involved in
the production and processing process. An entrepreneur needs to understand their employees,
know their strengths or weaknesses, then help them use these effectively, making the
business and the employee better. This is only possible through communication.
Communication must be two way and you should also listen. Good written and spoken
communication skills are important out of the business establishment as well.
Communication is integral when looking for funding, when handling complaints from
customers, or when negotiating new deals.
3. Ambition To change the world with your business, you need to have ambitious projects.
Ambitious projects are often referred to as the disruptive ventures. To get on top of things
and the industry, yours should be the project that will disrupt the society’s status quo.
As an entrepreneur, your ‘holy grail’ is a product or a service that will shake up the industry
radically. This includes the ability to change the way people view things, interact or label
things.
4. Risk taker An entrepreneur is the definition of a risk taker. Business growth depends on
your ability to dive into the future of uncertainty while embracing all the challenges and the
problems that will cross your path. You should be willing to risk your money, time, and other
unknown factors. To deal with these risks and the unknown, you should set aside resources,
bandwidth, and plans to deal with the unknown.
5. Fearlessness You cannot run a business when you are afraid of every turn you are about
to make. Being a risk taker requires a fearless spirit. There will be scary moments, but your
ability to maneuver and win over the fear is the power that will propel you and your business
to greater heights.
6. Ability to listen to your gut instincts and to trust them There isn’t one
successful entrepreneur who faults or regrets trusting their instincts. In a normal consumer
life as well as the business world, you have to listen to that little voice and step out when your
gut says so.
As a result of the impressive results reported by entrepreneurs who always trust their
instincts, gut instincts have been dubbed the sixth sense. This sixth sense is very powerful
and you should be able and willing to trust and rely on it. It doesn’t matter what the rest of
the team thinks.
7. Visionary You cannot take on the entrepreneurship bull by the head and ride it without
falling over or getting it to trample on you if you have a solid vision in mind. Perceptive and
creative business visionaries tend to twist normal views, distorting reality and eventually
change the way people see the world. To be in the top entrepreneurial league, you should be
able to cultivate these visions in your mind so as to make the big breakthroughs, which could
never be envisioned by an ordinary person.
“The key to realizing a dream is to focus not on success but on significance — and then
even the small steps and little victories along your path will take on greater meaning.”
– Oprah Winfrey
8. Motivation and passion The most important trait ingrained in successful entrepreneurs
is passion in what one does and the motivation to hit the big business storms every day
without giving up. Because of passion, you will stay up late to complete unfinished tasks,
wake up earlier for your customers to get their deliveries in time, work endlessly on the same
thing without getting bored, willingness to make the business better and stronger, and the
ability to be in love with that which you wake up to, every day. Without this and the internal
motivation to make things work, you will not succeed in business.
9. Tech savviness You don’t have to be a pro in all matters tech and programming but in
this digital age, you should have the least possible capacity to market your products or
services online and to connect to your customers, competitors, or suppliers through social
media platforms. Digital marketing is crucial and you should do some basic SEO. You should
also use the company’s and your personal social media platforms to build and enhance your
business brand.
10. Good financial management skills You need to manage your money. Even when
you have a CFO, you still have to control things and help in making business decisions
concerning money. Besides financial management, you must have the ability and the capacity
to raise funds. To get investors interested in your business, you should be able to show them
what you have and what their investment can do for your business.
BASIS
ENTREPRENEUR MANAGER
COMPARISON
Manager is an individual who
Entrepreneur refers to a person who
takes the responsibility of
Meaning creates an enterprise, by taking
controlling and administering the
financial risk in order to get profit.
organization.
Focus Business startup Ongoing operations
Primary motivation Achievement Power
Approach to task Informal Formal
Status Owner Employee
Reward Profit Salary
Decision making Intuitive Calculative
Driving force Creativity and Innovation Preserving status quo
Risk orientation Risk taker Risk averse
Evolution of Entrepreneur,
Entrepreneurship
The majority of wealth in the hands of the ruling class, owning one’s own business was a rare
sight. The old-world entrepreneurs mostly consisted of merchants and craftsmen. Plenty of
merchants created their own business, but a lot of the time the business and connections were
handed down generation to generation. Skilled craftsmanship was another family affair, but
anyone with the right connections that was lucky enough to land an apprenticeship and
succeed at it we’re able to climb the economic ladder a little higher.
Merchants started to take over be more prominent as the world market grew because of
exploration and sailing and shipping became easier. It wasn’t until the industrial age when the
big business was back in a central location. Inventors were a large part of the entrepreneurial
field. Using new technology, manufacturing, transportation and ingenuity, inventors
dominated the industrial age.
The 20th century was the home of the media kings. Radio, television and film blew up
creating new industries across the globe. Finally, our current Information Age came upon us
in the 80’s. Since then moguls have been materialized from one single good idea worth
billions upon billions of dollars.
Entrepreneurs have shaped the face of business and enterprise since the dawn of man. From
the first wheel to the advent of the internet, these clever businesspeople evolved for centuries
into their most recent incarnation, the social media entrepreneur.
We’re no longer cave-people, but we still have some things in common with our ancestors.
Instead of using the internet as a forum for their business, today’s social media entrepreneurs
are reshaping it to fit their businesses. These social media entrepreneurs thrive on
connectivity.
The need and the constant necessity for a good leader is one of the many factors that drive the
evolution of entrepreneurship. Besides this, there are a few other factors:
Trading: With the improvement in communication between the countries and the
advancement in transportation, start the process of trading.
Advent of stable specialization and communities: When more and more individuals
start to settle in secure communities, a huge change was noticed in their lifestyles.
Each group had a leader who was qualified and specialized in one task and that helped
in speeding the development of leadership skills and innovation.
Need of independent career: More and more people are looking for a career path
that is totally independent. The majority started to take risks by developing their own
businesses in order to achieve maximum benefits.
Concepts of Intrapreneurship
An Intrapreneurship is the system wherein the principles of entrepreneurship are practiced
within the boundaries of the firm. An intrapreneur is a person who takes on the responsibility
to innovate new ideas, products and processes or any new invention within the organization.
An intrapreneur is the individual who thinks out of the box and possesses the leadership skills
and does not fear from risk. Thus, an intrapreneur possesses the same traits as that of an
entrepreneur.
Entrepreneur Intrapreneur
An entrepreneur is independent in his An intraprenuer is dependent on the
operations entrepreneur i.e. the owner.
An entrepreneur himself raises funds
The Intrapreneur does not raise funds.
required for the enterprise.
Entrepreneur bears the risk involved in the An intrapreneur does not fully bear the risk
business. involved in the enterprise.
On the contrary,an intrapreneur operates from
An entrepreneur operates from outside.
within the organization itself.
An entrepreneur begins his business with a An intrapreneur sets up his enterprise after
newly set up enterprise. working someone else’s organization.
As an entrepreneur establishes new business, An intrapreneur establishes his business after
so he does not posses any experience over gathering experiences through working in the
the business. other organization.
Entrepreneurs may find it difficult to get Intrapreneurs have their resources readily
resources available to them.
Entrepreneurs are found anywhere their Intrapraneurs work within the confines of an
vision takes them. organization.
Entrepreneurs know the business on a macro
Intrapreneurs are highly skilled and specialized.
scale.
Types of Entrepreneurs
1. Innovative Entrepreneur: These are the ones who invent the new ideas, new
products, new production methods or processes, discover potential markets and
reorganize the company’s structure. These are the industry leaders and contributes
significantly towards the economic development of the country.The innovative
entrepreneurs have an unusual foresight to recognize the demand for goods and
services. They are always ready to take a risk because they enjoy the excitement of a
challenge, and every challenge has some risk associated with it. Ratan Tata is said to
be an innovative entrepreneur, who launched the Tata Nano car at a considerably low
cost.
2. Imitating Entrepreneurs: The imitating entrepreneurs are those who immediately
copy the new inventions made by the innovative entrepreneurs. These do not make
any innovations by themselves; they just imitate the technology, processes, methods
pioneered by others.These entrepreneurs are found in the places where there is a lack
of resources or industrial base due to which no new innovations could be made. Thus,
they are suitable for the underdeveloped regions where they can imitate the
combinations of inventions already well established in the developed regions, in order
to bring a boom in their industry.
3. Fabian Entrepreneurs: These types of entrepreneurs are skeptical about the changes
to be made in the organization. They do not initiate any inventions but follow only
after they are satisfied with its success rate.They wait for some time before the
innovation becomes well tested by others and do not result in a huge loss due to its
failure.
4. Drone Entrepreneurs: These entrepreneurs are reluctant to change since they are
very conservative and do not want to make any changes in the organization. They are
happy with their present mode of business and do not want to change even if they are
suffering the losses.
Thus, this classification is done on the basis of the willingness of an entrepreneur to create
and accept the innovative ideas.
Functions of Entrepreneur
1. Entrepreneurial Functions
2. Managerial Functions
3. Promotional Functions
4. Commercial Functions
The significance of management function lies in the fact that enterprises with excellent
facilities and quality resources have floundered and fizzled out due to either no management
or poor management and enterprises with good management but with poor facilities and
resources have flourished and performed exceedingly well. In small-scale enterprises, the
entrepreneur who is the owner of the enterprise also, has to perform the management
functions as well.
The management functions performed by entrepreneur are classified into the following
five types:
1. Planning
2. Organizing
3. Staffing
4. Directing
5. Controlling
The importance of planning lies in the fact that it ensures the smooth and effective
completion and running of a business enterprise. Absence of planning causes confusion
which, in turn, affects the smooth performance of job whatsoever it may be.
This is a story about four people named Everybody, Somebody, Anybody and Nobody. There
was an important job to be done. Everybody was sure that somebody would do it. Anybody
could have done it, but nobody did it. Somebody got angry about that because it was
Everybody’s job. Everybody thought anybody could do it, but nobody realized that
everybody would not do it. It ended up that everybody blamed somebody when nobody did
what anybody could have done.
Business history is replete with evidences that it is basically the staff, i.e., personnel working
in the organization that makes all the difference. While appreciating the role of personnel in
the success of an organization, L. F. Urwick had remarked that, “business houses are made or
broken in the long-run not by markets or capital, patents or equipments, but by men.”
Andrew Carniege’s view that “Take my people and leave my factory, soon grass will grow on
the floor. Take my factory and leave my people, soon we shall build a better factory” also
underlines the significance of people or staffing in the making of an organization. However,
staffing function is as crucial for the success of a business enterprise is equally complex as
well.
4. Directing: The functions like planning, organizing, and staffing are merely preparations
for setting up a business enterprise. The directing function of entrepreneur actually starts the
setting up of enterprise. Under the directing function, the entrepreneur guides, counsels,
teaches, stimulates and activates his/ her employees to work efficiently to accomplish the set
objectives.
Thus, directing function of entrepreneur concerns the total manner in which an entrepreneur
influences the actions of his / her employees/ workers. It is the final action of an entrepreneur
in making his / her employees actually act after all preparations have been completed.
3. Promotional Functions:
Every intending entrepreneur wants to start the most profitable and rewarding project. The
selection of the most suitable business project involves a process. The intending entrepreneur,
based on his /her knowledge, experience, and information gathered from friends and
relatives, generates some possible business ideas which can be examined and pursued as a
business enterprise.
This process is also described as ‘opportunity scanning and identification’. Then, the
generated ideas are analysed in terms of costs and benefits associated with them. Having
made cost-benefit analysis of all the ideas, the most beneficial idea is finally selected to be
pursued as business enterprise.
In this sense, business plan is just like an operating document. The preparation of business
plan is not must, but it is very much useful for the entrepreneur to establish his / her
enterprise in an effective and smooth manner. But, it is must for those entrepreneurs who
intend to apply for financial assistance from the financial institutions and banks for their
enterprises.
3. Requirement for Finance: The entrepreneur prepares requirement for funds with its
detailed structure. The financial requirement is also classified into short-term and
long-term separately. Then, the sources of supply to acquire the required fund are also
mentioned. How much will be the share capital in terms of equity and preference
shares and how much will be borrowed capital from different financial institutions
and banks are clearly determined.
4. Commercial Functions:
The ancillary activities include production planning and control, maintenance and repair,
purchasing, store-keeping, and material handling. The effective performance of production
function, to a large extent, depends on the proper production planning and control.
2. Marketing: All production is basically meant for marketing. Marketing is the performance
of those business activities that direct the flow of goods and services from producer to
consumer or user. Thus, marketing essentially begins and ends with the customers. It is
important to note that marketing is not just selling. In fact, marketing includes much more
than selling. Selling is the last function in marketing activities.
The examples of marketing activities are market or consumer research, product planning and
development, standardization, packaging, pricing, storage, promotional activities, distribution
channel, etc. The success of marketing function is linked with an appropriate ‘marketing
mix’. Traditionally, marketing mix referred to 4 Ps, namely, product, price, promotion, and
physical distribution. Of late, 3 more Ps namely, packaging, people, and process are also
added to ‘marketing mix’.
3. Accounting: The main objective of any business enterprise is to earn profits and create
wealth. Whether the business is fulfilling its objective or not is ascertained through
accounting. What is accounting? According to the American Institute of Certified Public
Accountants, “Accounting is the art of recording, classifying and summarizing in a
significant manner and, in terms of money, transactions and events which are, in part at least,
of a financial character and interpreting the results thereof.”
The Profit & Loss Account is prepared for ascertaining whether the business earned profit or
incurred loss during a particular period of time also called ‘accounting year’. The Balance
Sheet is prepared to know the financial position of business during the accounting period.
Hence, the Balance Sheet is also called ‘Position Statement.
Entreprepreneurial Decision-Process,
Challenges Faced By Entrepreneurs
Step by step make decision problems and find opportunity
following are the steps to follow.
Problem Opportunity
Listen to your
Identify of the
potential clients
problem
and past leads
Evaluate of the
all results
Entrepreneurs are a national treasure, and should be protected, nourished, encouraged and
rewarded as much as possible. They create all wealth, all jobs, all opportunities, and all
prosperity in the nation. They’re the most important people in a market economy–and there
are never enough of them.
As an entrepreneur, you are extremely important to your world. Your success is vital to the
success of the nation. To help you develop a better business, one that contributes to the health
of the economy, I’m going to suggest that you take some time to sit down, answer the
following questions, and implement the following actions:
What opportunities exist today for you to create or bring new products or services to your
market that people want, need and are willing to pay for? What are your three best
opportunities?
Identify the steps you could take immediately to operate your business more
efficiently, especially regarding internal operating systems.
Tell yourself continually “Failure is not an option.” Be willing to move out of your
comfort zone, to take risks if necessary to build your business.
Use your creativity rather than your money to find new, better, cheaper ways to sell
your products or reduce your costs of operation. What could you do immediately in
one or both of these areas?
Imagine starting over. Is there anything you’re doing today that, knowing what you
now know, you wouldn’t get into or start up again?
Imagine reinventing your business. If your business burned to the ground today, and
you had to start over.
Women Enterprises
Women Entrepreneurs may be defined as the women or a group of women who initiate,
organize and operate a business enterprise.
Government of India has defined women entrepreneurs as an enterprise owned and controlled
by a women having a minimum financial interest of 1% of the capital and giving at least 51%
of employment generated in the enterprise to women.
’
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Apart from the above, most Indian Women have performed well in
both organized and unorganized sector. For example, Kiran
Mazumdar shaw, Shahnaz Hussain, Ekta Kapoor, Kathi Ben who
started their enterprises in small scale and achieved wonders and
created history.
How to Develop Women Entrepreneurs?
Right efforts on all areas are required in the development of women entrepreneurs and their
greater participation in the entrepreneurial activities. Following efforts can be taken into
account for effective development of women entrepreneurs.
The usual ideologies and principals do not holdback social Entrepreneurs. They are
always looking at breaking them.
Social Entrepreneurs are impatient. They do not go well with the bureaucracy around
them.
Social Entrepreneurs have the patience, energy and enthusiasm to teach others.
Social Entrepreneurs combine Innovation, Resources and Opportunity to derive
solutions to Social problems.
This should be first in the list, Social Entrepreneurs DO NOT loose their FOCUS
anytime.
Social Entrepreneurs always jump in before having their resources in place. They are
not traditional.
Social Entrepreneurs ALWAYS believe that every one can Perform and have the
capacity to do so.
Social Entrepreneurs ALWAYS display DETERMINATION
Social Entrepreneurs can ALWAYS measure and monitor their results.
This business model leverages resources in order to respond to social needs. Leveraged non-
profits make innovative use of available funds, in order to impact a need. These leveraged
non-profits are more traditional ways of dealing with issues, though are distinguished by their
innovative approaches.
The entrepreneur sets up a non-profit organization to drive the adoption of an innovation that
addresses a market or government failure. In doing so, the entrepreneur engages a cross
section of society, including private and public organizations, to drive forward the innovation
through a multiplier effect. Leveraged non-profit ventures continuously depend on outside
philanthropic funding, but their longer-term sustainability is often enhanced given that the
partners have a vested interest in the continuation of the venture.
This organizational structure can take on a variety of forms, but is distinctive because the
hybrid non-profit is willing to use profit to sustain its operations. Hybrid non-profits are often
created to deal with government or market failures, as they generate revenue to sustain the
operation outside of loans, grants, and other forms of traditional funding.
The entrepreneur sets up a non-profit organization but the model includes some degree of
cost-recovery through the sale of goods and services to a cross section of institutions, public
and private, as well as to target population groups. Often, the entrepreneur sets up several
legal entities to accommodate the earning of an income and the charitable expenditures in an
optimal structure. To be able to sustain the transformation activities in full and address the
needs of clients, who are often poor or marginalized from society, the entrepreneur must
mobilize other sources of funding from the public and/or philanthropic sectors. Such funds
can be in the form of grants or loans, and even quasi-equity.
These models are set up as businesses designed to create change through social means. Social
business ventures evolved through a lack of funding—social entrepreneurs in this situation
were forced to become for-profit ventures.
The social entrepreneur sector is increasingly important for economic (and social)
development because it creates social and economic values:
1. Employment Development
The first major economic value that social entrepreneurship creates is the most obvious one
because it is shared with entrepreneurs and businesses alike: job and employment creation.
Estimates ranges from one to seven percent of people employed in the social
entrepreneurship sector. Secondly, social enterprises provide employment opportunities and
job training to segments of society at an employment disadvantage (long-term unemployed,
disabled, homeless, at-risk youth and gender-discriminated women). In the case of Grameen
the economic situation of six million disadvantaged women micro-entrepreneurs were
improved.
Social enterprises develop and apply innovation important to social and economic
development and develop new goods and services. Issues addressed include some of the
biggest societal problems such as HIV, mental ill-health, illiteracy, crime and drug abuse
which, importantly, are confronted in innovative ways. An example showing that these new
approaches in some cases are transferable to the public sector is the Brazilian social
entrepreneur Veronica Khosa, who developed a home-based care model for AIDS patients
which later changed government health policy.
3. Social Capital
Next to economic capital one of the most important values created by social entrepreneurship
is social capital (usually understood as “the resources which are linked to possession of a
durable network of … relationships of mutual acquaintance and recognition”). Examples are
the success of the German and Japanese economies, which have their roots in long-term
relationships and the ethics of cooperation, in both essential innovation and industrial
development. The World Bank also sees social capital as critical for poverty alleviation and
sustainable human and economic development. Investments in social capital can start a
virtuous cycle.
(1) Endowment
The first job of social entrepreneur is to take whatever endowment of social capital he is
given and to use these relationships to create more social capital,by getting more people and
organizations involved with the project,by building a wider web of trust and cooperation
around the project.
The initial endowment of social capital often brings access to physical capital,usually in the
form of rather run-down buildings.Getting access to a physical base is vital. It provides a
focus, a base for new services and a tangible sign that the project is achieving something.
The project has to recruit and pull in more key people to help it move from start-up into
growth,creating products and services.
As the project grows,becomes larger and more complex,its management will need to become
more organized.It will need stronger financial systems and legal help.With more staff
involved,people management may become more complicated.So the project needs to develop
organizational capital,a more formalized management structure,financial systems and a
stronger set of relationships with partners.
In the first phase of project,the social entrepreneur inherits and creates social capital.Then he
starts to accumulate more capital in the form of buildings and finance.Then the capital is
invested in creating new services and products.In the final phase,if the investment has been
successful the project starts to pay dividends in several different forms.Perhaps the most
valuable dividend is yet more social capital,in the form of stronger bonds of trust and
cooperation,within the community and outside partners and funders.
Social entrepreneurship fosters a more equitable society by addressing social issues and
trying to achieve ongoing sustainable impact through their social mission rather than purely
profit-maximization. In Yunus’s example, the Grameen Bank supports disadvantaged
women. Another case is the American social entrepreneur J.B. Schramm who has helped
thousands of low-income high-school students to get into tertiary education.
To sum up, social enterprises should be seen as a positive force, as change agents providing
leading-edge innovation to unmet social needs. Social entrepreneurship is not a panacea
because it works within the overall social and economic framework, but as it starts at the
grassroot level it is often overlooked and deserves much more attention from academic
theorists as well as policy makers. This is especially important in developing countries and
welfare states facing increasing financial stress.
Rural Entrepreneurship
In the micro-finance industry, we consider rural areas as places of opportunities for new
entrepreneurs. Despite all the inadequacies in rural areas, we should assess and make good
use of their strengths and strengthen them to make rural areas as ‘places of opportunities’. In
a country like India, there is much to do with the way we see the reality of the rural areas.
Rural psychology is attuned to promoting new ideas and innovation, more so because job
opportunities are limited there. We should encourage entrepreneurs to think positively,
creatively and with an entrepreneurship- building mindset to promote their growth. Young
people with such perspective and with the help of rightly channelized efforts would usher in
an era of thriving rural entrepreneurship.
Rural entrepreneurship will augur well for our country in a number of ways.
On the other hand PM’s ‘Make in India’ project has induced major initiatives, policy changes
and a slew of reforms that put India on the global industrial map as one of the fastest growing
economies and one of the most attractive investment destinations in the world. So we must
think seriously to promote entrepreneurship in a large scale, reaching out to the every corner
of our country. Micro Units Development and Refinance Agency (MUDRA) was created to
refinance micro business under the scheme titled Pradhan Mantri MUDRA Yojana. It can
also create a balanced regional growth, dispel the concentration of industrial units in urban
areas and promote regional development in a balanced way.
Rural entrepreneurship has the potential to promote artistic activities. A large section of
the bearers of traditional heritage and culture lives in rural areas. They create artistically
brilliant handicraft pieces and are equally good in the performing arts sectors. The age-old
rich heritage of rural India can be preserved by protecting and promoting art and handicrafts
through rural entrepreneurship. Recently, on the occasion of the International Women’s Day
we had felicitated 17 successful women entrepreneurs from different areas of our country,
they are mainly from rural or semi-urban areas.
In a country like India, where people are still fighting on the issue of unemployment with
83.3 crore out of the total 121 crore Indians living in rural areas, rural entrepreneurship can
awaken the youth there and expose them to various avenues to adopt entrepreneurship and
promote it as a career option. It will bring in an overall change in the quality of lives of
people and address social ills like illiteracy, child marriage, migration and women
empowerment among many others.