Gergely Németh

Illusions of Entrepreneurship / Theories of Entrepreneurial Behaviour

How do we think about ourselves as entrepreneurs and how do we develop our business?


Table 7. Summary table of business and organisational growth and life cycle models
Adizes (1992)
courtship
infancy
adolescence
prime
adulthood
stable
Baird and Meshoulam (1988)
initiation
functional growth
controlled growth
functional integration
strategic integration
Churchill and Lewis (1983)
existence
survival
success
take off
resource maturity
Flamholtz (2009)
new venture
expansion
professionalization
consolidation
diversification
integration
decline
Gibson and Nolan (1974)
initation
growth
formalization
maturity
Greiner (1972)
creativity
direction
delegation
coordination
collaboration
Hanks et al. (1993)
startup station
expansion
maturity
diverzification
Jawahar and McLaughlin (2001)
startup station
growth station
maturity station
decline station
Kazanjian
(1988)
conception and development
commercialization
growth
stability
Kimberly (1979)
initiation
innovation
institutionalizm
Lester et al. (2003)
existence
surviving
success
renewing
decline
Lippitt and Schmidt (1967)
birth/creation
birth/surviving
youth/stability
youth/reputation
maturity/uniqueness, adaptibility
maturity/contribution to society
Moore (1986)
innovation
execution
growth
Németh et al. (2021)
creation phase
change phase
integration phase
retreat phase
Quinn and Cameron (1983)
entrepreneurial/creativity stage
crisis of autonomy stage
crisis of control and institutionalizm
crisis of advancing the structure
Scott and Bruce (1983)
existence
survival
growth
take-off
maturity
Smith et al. (1985)
organizational coordination priority
technological effiency priority
political support priority
Torbert (1974)
fantasies
investment
determination
experiments
predefined productivity
openly chosen structure
Source: edited by the author

Illusions of Entrepreneurship / Theories of Entrepreneurial Behaviour

Tartalomjegyzék


Kiadó: Akadémiai Kiadó

Online megjelenés éve: 2022

ISBN: 978 963 454 839 3

In his book Gergely Németh is right to not promise a sure-fire solution to successful entrepreneurship, but he does make you think about the opportunities and pitfalls. The great advantage of the work is that it uses multiple scientific and logical approaches. It is a true interdisciplinary work. In addition to its diversity, it provides a good, readable reflection on becoming an entrepreneur. The author gently strips away illusions about the process but remains optimistic throughout. It is an important Hungarian work in entrepreneurship literature.

Prof. Dr. Balázs Heidrich

The author concludes by inviting the reader to join him in thinking differently about business and entrepreneurs. Drawing on his conclusions from the literature and empirical research to date, and from his two decades of experience as a consultant, he creates a new model of the entrepreneurial process, in which he explains the stages of the entrepreneurial process along four dimensions and suggests what entrepreneurial competences and behaviors are needed at each stage of the process, even in uncertain times, to ensure that the business can function safely.

A lot of work has gone into writing this book and the author sets out sometimes provocative findings, as well a novel approach and conclusions. These differ in many ways from the general approach and may inspire many educators, researchers, and even entrepreneurs and managers to look at corporate operations from a new perspective and to apply the author’s suggestions in a preventive way in their future work.

Prof. Dr. Erzsébet Noszkay

Hivatkozás: https://mersz.hu/nemeth-illusions-of-entrepreneurship-theories-of-entrepreneurial-behaviour//

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