Preparing for business start-up: "pre-start" activities in the new venture creation dynamic
Preparing for business start-up: "pre-start" activities in the new venture creation dynamic
Purpose - The purpose of this research is to examine the activities and behaviours of potential entrepreneurs as they move towards engagement in business start-up. Design/methodology/approach - Based on in-depth engagement with seven founders of new businesses, and informed by a review of the relevant literature. Findings - A series of transitions towards business start-up re identified, which in turn produced a five-step framework for examining and understanding the "pre-start" phase of preparation for entrepreneurship. Research limitations/implications - The case-based approach provided detailed and contextualised insight into how a small group of founders prepared for business start-up. There may be a need to test the framework with a larger group of business founders to assess its wider relevance and applicability. Practical implications - The pre-start framework identifies how individuals progress towards start-up, and so could be used as the basis for a programme to encourage individuals to move through each step towards engagement in business start-up. The movement from step to step can also be used to assess overall levels of preparation for entrepreneurship within the wider population, and so has the potential to be a useful indicator of overall levels of entrepreneurial orientation. Originality/value - The paper presents a process-focused model of the pre-start dynamic.
404-417
Atherton, Andrew Michael
f9cd4f73-4bd9-4546-803d-0a382be1cd72
21 August 2007
Atherton, Andrew Michael
f9cd4f73-4bd9-4546-803d-0a382be1cd72
Atherton, Andrew Michael
(2007)
Preparing for business start-up: "pre-start" activities in the new venture creation dynamic.
Journal of Small Business and Enterprise Development, 14 (3), .
(doi:10.1108/14626000710773510).
Abstract
Purpose - The purpose of this research is to examine the activities and behaviours of potential entrepreneurs as they move towards engagement in business start-up. Design/methodology/approach - Based on in-depth engagement with seven founders of new businesses, and informed by a review of the relevant literature. Findings - A series of transitions towards business start-up re identified, which in turn produced a five-step framework for examining and understanding the "pre-start" phase of preparation for entrepreneurship. Research limitations/implications - The case-based approach provided detailed and contextualised insight into how a small group of founders prepared for business start-up. There may be a need to test the framework with a larger group of business founders to assess its wider relevance and applicability. Practical implications - The pre-start framework identifies how individuals progress towards start-up, and so could be used as the basis for a programme to encourage individuals to move through each step towards engagement in business start-up. The movement from step to step can also be used to assess overall levels of preparation for entrepreneurship within the wider population, and so has the potential to be a useful indicator of overall levels of entrepreneurial orientation. Originality/value - The paper presents a process-focused model of the pre-start dynamic.
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Published date: 21 August 2007
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Local EPrints ID: 499076
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/499076
ISSN: 1462-6004
PURE UUID: cf55f718-5bcc-4afb-9531-adbf3dcd8e73
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Date deposited: 07 Mar 2025 17:43
Last modified: 08 Mar 2025 03:07
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Author:
Andrew Michael Atherton
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