A study of entrepreneurs, not just in small businesses, but within all sectors of the market. Using case studies to show the different types, the authors provide theoretical chapters on issues within entrepreneurship, the process, where it goes wrong, and how it can be encouraged and sustained. We all know an entrepreneur when we see one. This ground-breaking book reviews more than a hundred entrepreneurs from all walks of life and backgrounds, and sets their stories within a rigorous analytical framework, in order to give a critical insight into: * What entrepreneurs do and achieve * How they go about it * How they could be better supported The key point though is whether there are more people "out there" with the potential to be successful entrepreneurs, and, if so, how they might be identified and fostered. This book opens up this subject using for the first time the themes of talent, temperament and technique, which, in the correct mix, produce outstanding entrepreneurs. Using the ideas presented, it should be possible to tap more effectively the well of entrepreneurial talent that the authors identify. The release of this entrepreneurial talent could transform the numerous programmes for promoting business start-up and growth. It is the missing ingredient in many of these initiatives.
Book Details
- Country: US
- Published: 2000
- Publisher: Elsevier Science & Technology Books
- Language: English
- Pages: 372
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