Business Growth Models
Structural Growth Model
The relationship between
entrepreneurial structure or attitudes and firm growth is important for at
least three reasons. First, it is widely believed that the entrepreneurs of a
firm place a lasting stamp on their companies that influences the cultures and
behaviors of their firms (Mullins, 1996). Second, investors and others often
assess the potential of a new venture by evaluating the attributes of its entrepreneurs.
One of the most important criterions used by venture capitalists, for example,
in deciding whether to fund a firm is their perception of the entrepreneur's or
the entrepreneurial team's ability to successfully launch the venture. Third,
launching a new firm is a challenging process. As a result, individual
difference variables, such as educational attainment and prior industry
experience, have in many instances been found to be critical in successfully
launching a new firm (Barringer et al.,
2005).
Strategic Growth Model
Entrepreneurial strategy is an
important factor for difference between rapid-growth firms and lower-growth
firms (Wiklund, 1998). First, SME strategy is different from the strategy taken
by large firms. Entrepreneurial strategy may affect all business activities in
the progress of firm growth. Second, after a firm gets established and starts
growing, the smaller firms usually are under bigger influence from
entrepreneurs. And larger firms are in need of more professional management.
Entrepreneurial strategy functions all the time. Hence, it is important for
entrepreneurship researchers to recognize the importance of entrepreneurial
dimensions of strategy in addition to individual level entrepreneurship (Miller,
1983). Wiklund (1998) suggests that entrepreneurial dimensions of a firm's
strategy are seen as a combination of risk-taking, proclivity, and
innovativeness.
Financial and Human Growth Model
Financial and human resources
are basic inputs in the production process, whereas capabilities refer to the
capacity for coordinating resources to perform certain tasks or activities.
However, it is difficult from a measurement perspective to separate financial resource
availability from the capacity to utilize these resources (Chandler and Hanks,
1993). The resource typology used in business growth is the one outlined above:
fianacial capability, present size, number of employees that hold university
degree, involvement of employees in decision making, present size (sales),
formal professional cooperation, day-to-day advisors cooperation, decision
making, and creating unique value for customers, product superiority,
innovation (Barringer et al., 2005).
Organizational Growth Model
Wiklund suggests that task organizational
characteristics in terms of dynamism, hostility and heterogeneity have been
argued to be critical for suitable strategic choices, i.e. particular
strategies are likely to lead to better performance depending on the level of
organizational dynamism, hostility and heterogeneity. These dimensions are
frequently used in small business growth and performance literature (Brown and
Eisenhardt, 1996). Furthermore, Zahra (1991) suggests that each of these three
dimensions should influence entrepreneurship orientation (EO), i.e. depending
on the degree of organizational dynamism, hostility and heterogeneity; firms
with a higher or lower degree of EO may perform better or worse.
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