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Entrepreneurship: Successfully Launching New Ventures, 2/e Bruce R. Barringer R. Duane Ireland. Chapter 13. Chapter Objectives (1 of 2). Explain the term sustained growth. Describe the potential downsides to firm growth. Discuss the seven most common reasons firms pursue growth.
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Entrepreneurship: Successfully Launching New Ventures, 2/e Bruce R. Barringer R. Duane Ireland Chapter 13
Chapter Objectives(1 of 2) • Explain the term sustained growth. • Describe the potential downsides to firm growth. • Discuss the seven most common reasons firms pursue growth. • Explain the advantages of having a scalable business model. • Describe the basic idea behind benchmarking and how benchmarking can be used to help a firm execute a successful growth strategy.
Chapter Objectives(2 of 2) • Describe the managerial capacity problem and how it inhibits firm growth. • Discuss the day-to-day challenges of growing a firm. • Identify the three myths surrounding firm growth. • Identify the most prevalent growth-related firm attributes. • Describe the importance of having a commitment to growth.
Growth: A Double-Edged Sword • Nature of Firm Growth • Most entrepreneurial firms want to grow. • Growth in sales revenue is exciting and is an important indicator of an entrepreneurial venture’s potential for future success. • Double-Edged Sword • Growth, however, is a double-edged sword. • While growth is an indication of a firm’s success, it can threaten the stability of a firm’s operations in every area, from human resources to finances, if not managed properly. • Sometimes, if a firm’s product takes off, it is forced into a rapid-growth mode sooner than it would like.
Reasons for Firm Growth(1 of 3) Reasons for Firm Growth Reason for Growth Why This Reason May Motivate a Firm to Grow Capturing Economies of Scale Economies of scale occur when increasing production lowers the average cost of each unit produced. Economics of scope are similar to economies of scale, expect the advantage comes through the scope (or range) of a firm’s operations rather then from its scale of production. Capturing Economies of Scope A scalable business model is one in which increased revenues cost less to deliver than current revenues, so profit margins increase as sales go up. This situation is typically found in companies that have large up-front costs but have products with small per-unit variable costs. Executing a Scalable Business Model
Reasons for Firm Growth(2 of 3) Reasons for Firm Growth (continued) Reason for Growth Why This Reason May Motivate a Firm to Grow Many firms work hard to achieve market leadership, to realize economies of scale in production and be recognized as the brand leader. Market Leadership Larger businesses usually have more influence and power than smaller firms in regard to setting standards for an industry, getting a “foot in the door” with major customers and suppliers, and garnering prestige. Influence, Power, and Survivability Need to Accommodate the Growth of Key Customers Sometimes firms are compelled to grow to accommodate the growth of a key customer.
Reasons for Firm Growth(3 of 3) Reasons for Firm Growth (continued) Reason for Growth Why This Reason May Motivate a Firm to Grow Ability to Attract and Retain Talented Employees Growth is a firm’s primary mechanism to generate promotional opportunities for employees.
Benchmarking Against Successful Growth Firms • Benchmarking • By benchmarking, a firm improves the quality of an activity by identifying and copying the methods of other firms that have been successful in that area. • For example, if a small electronics firm in the Midwest decided to start exporting to Europe, it would be wise to identify other small electronics firms in the Midwest that export to Europe so it could study their methods and experiences. • If the firm you try to “benchmark against” is not a direct or indirect competitor, it will usually be willing to help.
Challenges of Growth • Challenges of Growth • Although growth has many advantages, it is a challenging and rigorous process. • Firm growth often includes: • Raising additional capital. • Recruiting new employees. • Learning how to supervise a larger organization. • Accepting more risk. • Increased anxiety for the owners and managers of a firm.
Managerial Capacity Problem(1 of 6) • Managerial Capacity • In her thoughtful book, The Theory of the Growth of theFirm, Edith T. Penrose argues that firms are collections of productive resources that are organized in an administrative framework. • As a firm goes about its routine activities, it recognizes opportunities to grow. • The problem with this scenario is that firms are not always prepared or able to grow because of limited “managerial capacity.”
Managerial Capacity Problem(2 of 6) • A Firm’s Administrative Framework • A firm’s administrative framework consists of two kinds of services that are important to firm growth. • Entrepreneurial services generate new market, product, and service ideas, while managerial services administer the routine functions of the firm and facilitate the profitable execution of new opportunities. • New product and service ideas require substantial managerial services (or managerial capacity) to be successfully implemented. • This is a complex problem because if a firm has insufficient managerial services to properly implement its new product and service ideas, it can’t grow.
Managerial Capacity Problem(3 of 6) • A Firm’s Administrative Framework (continued) • Continuation From Previous Slide • The reason a firm can’t quickly increase its managerial services (to take advantage of new product or service ideas) is that it is expensive to hire new employees, it takes time for new hires to be socialized into the culture of a firm, and it takes time for new employees to acquire firm-specific skills and establish trusting relationships with other members of the firm. • When a firm’s managerial resources are insufficient to take advantage of its new product and service opportunities, the subsequent bottleneck is referred to as the managerial capacity problem.
Managerial Capacity Problem(4 of 6) • Additional Challenges • As a firm grows, it is faced with the dual challenges of adverse selection and moral hazard. • Adverse selection means that as the number of employees a firm needs increases, it becomes increasingly difficult for the firm to find the right employees, place them in appropriate positions, and provide adequate supervision. • Moral hazard means that as a firm grows and adds personnel, the new hires typically do not have the same ownership incentives as the original founders, so the new hires may not be as motivated as the founders to put in long hours and may even try to avoid hard work.
Managerial Capacity Problem(5 of 6) Basic Model of Firm Growth
Managerial Capacity Problem(6 of 6) The Impact of the Managerial Capacity Problem
Typical Challenges of Growing a Firm(1 of 2) Challenge Explanation As a firm grows, it requires an increasing amount of cash to service its customers. Growth usually increases rather than decreases the challenges involved with cash flow management because an increase in sales means that more cash will be flowing in and out of the firm. Cash Flow Management If firm growth comes at the expense of a competitor’s market share, a price war can result. Because a price war typically helps no one but the customer, any growth strategy should consider competitors’ responses and their effect on price stability. Price Stability
Typical Challenges of Growing a Firm(2 of 2) Challenge Explanation Firm growth is typically accomplished by an increase in firm activity. This means that a firm must handle more service requests and paperwork and contend with more customers and vendors. If a firm does not increase its resources to manage growth, then product or service quality may decline. Quality Control Capital Constraints Capital constraints are an ever-present problem for growing firms. Growth increases rather than decreases the challenges in this area.
Myths About Growth(1 of 2) Myth 1: Growth Companies are Predominately Technology and Health Care Companies Myth 2: Rapid-Growth Firms Emerge Only In Rapid-Growth Industries Because so much attention has been paid to how quickly some well-known technology and health-care companies have grown, it is easy to get the idea that growth companies are primarily technology and health care. This is not necessarily the case. Of course, rapid-growth firms do exist in rapid-growth markets, but there are many examples of firms in fairly ordinary industries that have maintained impressive growth rates.
Myths About Growth(2 of 2) Myth 3: To Grow Quickly, You Must Have a First-Mover Advantage As discussed in Chapter 3, a first-mover advantage is not always advantageous. Many firms have grown quickly by capturing a first-mover advantage, but many firms have also grown quickly by entering an industry later on.
Attributes of Successful Growth Firms(1 of 2) • Growth-Oriented Vision • A growth-oriented vision and/or mission statement clearly communicates to relevant stakeholders the importance of growth to an organization. • Commitment to Growth • A drive and commitment to achieve growth is frequently mentioned as a necessary precursor for successful growth. • Business Growth Planning • Planning helps a firm organize for growth and address the relevant managerial and strategic issues necessary to maintain growth.
Attributes of Successful Growth Firms(2 of 2) • Participation in Business Alliances • Business alliances help firms share costs, increase speed to market, gain economies of scale, and gain access to essential resources, knowledge, and foreign markets. • Geographic Location that Facilitates Knowledge Absorption • A firm located in a geographic area that is in close proximity to important external sources of knowledge will have better access to the knowledge and will be able to substitute a portion of the externally derived knowledge for more expensive internally generated knowledge.