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Corporate Entrepreneurship. 26 March, 2014 Guest Lecture TU/e Drs . S.H.J. van den Hoogen. Importance and facilitators. Agenda. Corporate Entrepreneurship Defining it Importance Strategic issues Structural issues Human Resources Management Cultural issues.
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Corporate Entrepreneurship 26 March, 2014 Guest Lecture TU/e Drs. S.H.J. van den Hoogen Importance and facilitators
Agenda • Corporate Entrepreneurship • Defining it • Importance • Strategic issues • Structural issues • Human Resources Management • Cultural issues
“Wealth in the new regime flows directly from innovation, not optimization; that is, wealth is not gained by perfecting the known, but by imperfectly seizing the unknown.”~Kevin Kelly,“New Rules for the New Economy,” Wired
What is Entrepreneurship? The most common keywords found in the definition of entrepreneurship • Starting / Founding / Creating • New Business / New Venture • Innovation / New Products / New Market • Pursuit of Opportunity • Risk-taking / Risk Management / Uncertainty • Profit-seeking / Personal Benefit
What is Entrepreneurship? An encompassing definition of entrepreneurship “Entrepreneurship is the process of creating value by bringing together a unique combination of resources to exploit an opportunity.”
What is Entrepreneurship? • Entrepreneurship involves a process • Entrepreneurs create value where there was none before • Entrepreneurs put resources together in a unique way • Entrepreneurship is opportunity-driven behavior
What is Corporate Entrepreneurship? “Corporate entrepreneurship is a term used to describe entrepreneurial behavior inside established mid-sized and large organizations.” Other popular related terms • Organizational entrepreneurship • Intrapreneurship • Corporate venturing
Management Versus Entrepreneurship “Management is the process of setting objectives and coordinating resources, including people, in order to attain them.”
Management Versus Entrepreneurship Managers focus more on the current situation and how to improve efficiency and effectiveness Entrepreneurs focus less on the current situation and more on what can be
Management Versus Entrepreneurship The Manager The Entrepreneur • Visionary • Opportunity-seeker • Creator • Innovator • Calculated Risk-taker • Resource Leverager • Change Agent • Active and Adaptive Concept Implementer • Planner • Strategist • Organizer • Staffer • Motivator • Budgeter • Evaluator • Coordinator • Supervisor The Entrepreneurial Manager
Turbulent Environments and the Embattled Corporation The changing domain of the external environment • Technological • Economic • Competitive • Labor • Resource • Customer • Legal • Regulatory • Global • Customer • Social • Supplier “Managers face shortened decision windows and diminishing opportunity streams, meaning they must act quickly or find themselves missing out on opportunities”
Turbulent Environments and the Embattled Corporation Customers Fragmented markets and rapidly rising customer expectations are forcing firms to customize their products, cultivate longer-term customer relationships and learn new skills in serving global markets • Technology • Firms have to change the ways they operate internally and how they compete externally based on: • -New information management technologies • -New production and service • delivery technologies • -New customer management • technologies The Embattled Corporation Competitors Lead customers to entirely new market spaces Quickly mimic which makes it harder to differentiate Attack firms’ most profitable areas of business by specializing in narrow, profitable niches Legal, Regulatory and Ethical Standards Firms are increasingly accountable to multiple forcing management to make difficult choices and deliver results while behaving responsibly Increasingly litigious environment Increasing regulatory restrictions
The New Path to Sustainable Competitive Advantage Achieving a sustainable competitive advantage derives from five key company capabilities • Adaptability • Flexibility • Speed • Aggressiveness • Innovativeness “Entrepreneurship is the core source of sustainable advantage”
Exploring the Dimensions of Entrepreneurship “Missing-the-Boat” and “Sinking-the-Boat” Risk Total Risk TR=f (SBR, MBR) Missing the boat risk curve Sinking the boat risk curve Planning Time Source: Dickson and Giglierano (1986).
The Entrepreneurial Imperative: A Persistent Sense of Urgency (1) Managers within an organization tend to become reactive by responding to the changes brought about by the external environment but let entrepreneurial fires within the company dwindle and diminish
The Entrepreneurial Imperative: A Persistent Sense of Urgency (2) Managers must ask themselves the following questions to avoid inevitable diminishing returns and refocus on new directives and entrepreneurial avenues: • How much more cost savings can the company wring out of its current business? Are managers within the firm working harder and harder for smaller and small efficiency gains? • How much more revenue growth can the company squeeze out of its current business? Is the company paying more and more for customer acquisition and market share gains?
The Entrepreneurial Imperative: A Persistent Sense of Urgency (3) How much longer can the company keep propping up its share price through share buybacks, spin-offs, and other forms of financial engineering? Is top management reaching the limits of its ability to push up the share price without actually creating new wealth? How many more scale economies can the company gain from mergers and acquisitions? Are the costs of integration beginning to overwhelm the savings obtained from slashing shared overhead costs? How different are the strategies of the four or five largest competitors in the industry from the company’s strategy? Is it getting harder and harder to differentiate the company from its competitors?
Dispelling the Myths (1): • “Entrepreneurs are born, not made” • “Entrepreneurs must be inventors” • “There is a standard profile or prototype of the entrepreneur” • “All you need is luck to be an entrepreneur” • “Entrepreneurs are extreme risk takers (gamblers)”
Dispelling the Myths (2): • “Entrepreneurial people are academic and social misfits” • “All entrepreneurs need is money” • “Ignorance is bliss for entrepreneurs” • “Most entrepreneurial initiatives fail” • “Entrepreneurship is unstructured and chaotic”
Entrepreneurial Realities: Understanding the Process This process consists of six stages: Identifying the opportunity Defining the business concept Assessing the resource requirements Acquiring the necessary resources Implementing and managing the concept Harvesting the venture
The context in which entrepreneurship takes place is not defined. • Entrepreneurship can occur in: • Start-up ventures • Small firms • Mid-sized companies • Large conglomerates • Non-profit organizations • Public sector agencies Corporate Entrepreneurship “Entrepreneurship is the process of creating value by bringing together a unique combination of resources to exploit an opportunity.”
Corporate Entrepreneurship (2) • Similarities between start-up and corporate entrepreneurship • Both involve opportunity recognition and definition • Both require a unique business concept that takes the form of a product, service or process • Both are driven by an individual champion who works with a team to bring the concept to fruition • Both require that the entrepreneur be able to balance vision with managerial skill, passion with pragmatism, and pro-activeness with patience • Both involve concepts that are most vulnerable in the formative stage, and that require adaptation over time
Corporate Entrepreneurship • Similarities (continued): • Both entail a window of opportunitywithin which the concept can be successfully capitalized upon • Both are predicated on value creation and accountability to a customer • Both find the entrepreneur encountering resistance and obstacles, necessitating both perseverance and an ability to formulate innovative solutions • Both entail risk and require risk management strategies • Both find the entrepreneur needing to develop creative strategies for leveraging resources • Both involve significant ambiguity • Both require harvesting strategies
How Corporate Entrepreneurship Differs Major differences
How Corporate Entrepreneurship Differs Major differences continued
How Corporate Entrepreneurship Differs Corporate entrepreneurs face three major challenges linked to the need for inter-organizational political skills: • Achieving credibility or legitimacy for the concept and the entrepreneurial team • Obtaining resources • Overcoming inertia and resistance
How Corporate Entrepreneurship Differs Corporate entrepreneurs remain in the corporate environment rather than starting their own ventures for three main reasons: • The size of the resource base that they can tap into • The potential to operate on a fairly significant scope and scale fairly quickly • The security they enjoy when operating in an existing company • Organizational politics is one of the main reasons corporate entrepreneurs leave the company
How Corporate Entrepreneurship Differs To cultivate an environment of entrepreneurship within an organization, managers must: • Create environments where employees have a sense that resources can be accessed if an idea is sound • Find ways to reinforce the ability of anyone in the firm to champion an idea and get it implemented • Invest in the development of people
High Little to noInnovative Activity Home-runStrategy Risk Lots of trials and experiments/balanced portfolio of projects Low Low High Innovativeness Stimulating CE can diminish risk
The Open Innovation Revolution Open innovation – “a firm is not solely reliant upon its own innovative resources for new technology, product, or business development purposes. Rather, the firm acquires critical inputs to innovation from outside sources.”
The Open Innovation Revolution Four reasons companies are increasingly choosing to pursue open innovation models: 1.) Importing new ideas is a good way to multiply the building blocks of innovation 2.) Exporting ideas is a good way to raise cash and keep talent 3.) Exporting ideas gives companies a way to measure an innovation’s real value and to ascertain whether further investment is warranted 4.) Exporting and importing ideas helps companies clarify what they do best
Exploring the Dimensions of Entrepreneurship Three dimensions characterize an entrepreneurial organization • Innovativeness • Risk-Taking • Pro-activeness
Pro-activeness: Technology-push vs market-pull • Technology push: employees see possibility and capitalize on it • But: perfection syndrome! • Market-pull: start with customer, driven by marketing people • But: customers don’t always know their needs or cannot describe them accurately • Solution: use both approaches simultaneously!
Exploring the Dimensions of Entrepreneurship Three Frontiers of Innovation • Services – new or improved services • Products – unique or improved • Processes – new or better ways to accomplish a task or function
Strategic issues How can strategy help in organizing/stimulating CE? Strategy should: • Stimulate creativity • Take away “creative blocks” • Protect critical roles in the CE-process • Motivate entrepreneurial behavior
Managing Innovation Strategically: A Portfolio Approach Firm’s Knowledge Pertaining to the New Products’/Service’s Targeted Market Firm’s Knowledge Pertaining to the New Products’/Service’s Core Technology
Strategic implementation flaws • Misunderstanding industry attractiveness • No real competitive advantage • Pursuing an unsustainable competitive position • Compromising strategy for growth • Failure to explicitly communicate strategy internally
On structure… • How many levels in organization? • Centralized or decentralized? • Formal or informal? • Functional specialization or cross-functional interaction? • Control or autonomy? • Rigid or flexible? • Top-down or bottom-up decision making?
Organizational designs for CE Strategic importance Operational relatedness
HRM-structure-issues Job planning & design Creating an Entrepreneurial Work Environment Performance appraisals Recruitment & selection Compensation & rewards Training & development
Elements of an entrepreneurial culture • Focus on people and empowerment • Value creation through innovation and change • Rewards for innovations • Learning from failure • Collaboration and teamwork • Freedom to grow and to fail • Commitment and personal responsibility • Emphasis on the future and sense of urgency
Results in Achievement of personal and performance goals Shared pride and leadership Mutual respect Thirst for new challenges and goals Vision Leadership Big picture Think/act like owners Best we can be Timmons’ Chain of Greatness And which Widespreadresponsibility/accountability Understand and interpret the numbers Reward short-term with bonuses Reward long-term with equity Perpetual learning culture Train and educate High performance goals/standards Shared learning/teach each other Grow, improve, change, innovate Entrepreneurial mindset and values Take responsibility Get results Value and wealth creation Share the wealth with those who create it Customer and quality driven Fosters Leads to