BUS 405: Chapter 2
Risk-taking
A person's tendency to tolerate and act where there is a potential risk, or where a positive outcome cannot be fully assured.
Perseverance
A type of learned optimism and one of the most powerful contributors to entrepreneurial success.
Minority-owned businesses
Account for nearly 29.3% of all U.S. businesses and had a remarkable growth rate of 27% between 2007 and 2012.
Industry-specific knowledge
Activities, knowledge, and skills specific to businesses in a particular industry.
Proactivity
An attitude describing a person's tendency to take initiative and go ahead to do something rather than wait to see what will happen or wait for someone else to do it.
Glass ceiling
An invisible barrier that prevents women from rising above certain levels in an organization.
Planning Style
Different approaches to planning: comprehensive planners take a long-term view and act on their plans, critical-point planners plan first, act on it, and then consider more planning, opportunist planners start with a goal and look to achieve it, reactive planners are passive and let the environment determine their actions, and habit-based planners do not plan, they just have a routine.
Competencies
Forms of business-related expertise possessed by entrepreneurs.
Set-asides
Government contracting funds earmarked for particular kinds of firms, such as small businesses, minority-owned firms, women-owned firms, and the like.
Access problems
Most often discrimination in financing for women and underrepresented-owned small businesses.
Women-owned businesses
One of the fastest-growing sectors of all U.S. businesses, accounting for only 4.3% of national small business revenue.
Stakeholders
Persons, organizations, or entities that have an interest or concern in a particular business or decision.
Slack resources
Profits that are available to be used to satisfy the preferences of the owner in how the business is run.
Entrepreneurial Teams
Teams, often family-related, with shared trust and knowledge, working together in entrepreneurial ventures.
Resource Competencies
The ability or skill of the entrepreneur at finding expendable components necessary to the operation of the business such as time, information, location, financing, raw materials, and expertise.
Innovativeness
The importance of new ideas, products, services, processes, or markets in an organization.
Promotion Focus
The intent on maximizing gains and bias toward pursuing opportunities that lead to those gains.
Prevention Focus
The intent on minimizing losses and can work well in an established industry or a poor one.
Entrepreneurial mindset
The motivations, cognitions, attitudes, aptitudes, and behaviors that lead to a propensity to create solutions to problems or seek opportunities to do something new or better.
Glass cliffs
The practice of placing women in leadership positions that are risky or where organizations are in crisis.
Succession
The process of intergenerational transfer of a business.
Liability of newness
The set of risks faced by firms early in their life cycles that comes from a lack of knowledge by the owners about the business they are in and by customers about the new business.
Organizational culture
The set of shared beliefs, basic assumptions, or common, accepted ways of dealing with problems and challenges within a company.
Passion
The strong emotional commitment of entrepreneurs to their firm, inspiring key stakeholders like potential investors, employees, or subcontractors.
Expert business professionalization
When all major functions of a firm are conducted according to the standard business practices of its industry.
Professionalization
When all the major functions of a firm are conducted according to the standard business practices of its industry.
Specialized business professionalization
When businesses have founders or owners who are passionate about one or two of the key business functions and professionally pursue those functions.
Minimized business professionalization
When the entrepreneur does nearly everything in the simplest way possible, rather than in a professional way.
Second career entrepreneurs
Workers who retire early and use the money to start their own business.
Veteran entrepreneurs
Workers who take generous offers to retire early, due to downsizing, and use the money to start their own business.