We recognize entrepreneurs, first and foremost, by what they actually do – by the tasks they undertake. A number of tasks have been associated with the entrepreneur. Some of the more important are:
1) Owning Organizations: Ownership lies with those who invest in the business and own its
stock – the principals, while the actual running is delegated to professional
agents or managers. Therefore, if an entrepreneur actually owns the business
then he is in fact undertaking two roles at the same time that of an investor
and that of a manager. Here we can also recognize many people as entrepreneur
even if they do not own the venture they are managing.
2) Founding New Organizations: The entrepreneur is recognized as the person who undertakes the task
of bringing together the different elements of the organization (people,
property, productive resource, etc.) and giving them a separate legal entity.
The entrepreneur makes major changes in their organizational word.
3) Bringing Innovations to Market: The idea of innovation encompasses any new way of doing something so
that value is created. Innovation can mean a new product or service but it can
also include a new way of delivering an existing product or service, new
methods of informing the consumer about the product or new ways of organizing
the company.
4)
Identification of Market Opportunity: An
opportunity is the gap in a market where the potential exists to do something
better and create value. New opportunities exist all the time but they do not
necessarily present themselves. If they are to be exploited they must be
actively sought out. Note that opportunity always takes priority over
innovation.
5) Application of Expertise: A slight more technical notion is that they have a special ability
in deciding how to allocate scarce resources in situations where information is
limited. It is their expertise in doing this that makes entrepreneurs valuable
to investors.
6) Provision of leadership: Entrepreneurs can rarely drive their innovation to market on their
own. They need the support of other people both from their organizations and
from people outside such as investor customer and supplier.
7) The entrepreneur as manager: At the end of the day the entrepreneur is a manager. The distinction
between an entrepreneur and ordinary manager may lie on what the entrepreneur
manager manages, how they manage, their effectiveness and the effect they have
as a manager not by the particular tasks they undertake.
Wealth of the Entrepreneur
Wealth is money and anything that money
can buy. It includes money, knowledge and assets of the entrepreneur.
Who Benefits from the entrepreneur’s
Wealth?
No entrepreneur works in a vacuum. The
venture they create touches the lives of many other people. To drive his/her
venture forward, the entrepreneur calls up on the support of a number of
different groups. In return for their support these groups expect to be
rewarded from the success of the venture. Peoples who have a part to play in
the entrepreneurial venture generally are called stakeholder. The stakeholder
groups are; employees, investor, supplier, customer, the local community and government.
Let us look at the benefits of each stakeholder.
1) Employees: They contribute physical and
mental labor to the business. Success of the entrepreneurial venture depends on
their effort and motivation. Therefore, they are rewarded with:
Ø
Money – their wage or salary
Ø
The possibility of owning a
part of the firm through share schemes.
Ø
A stage of which they can
develop social relationships.
Ø The possibility of personal development.
2)
Investors: These are the peoples who
provide the entrepreneur with the necessary money to start the venture and keep
it running. There are two main sorts of investors: stockholders and lenders.
Stockholders are those who buy the stock of the company and are true owners of
the firm. The actual return of the stockholders varies depending on how the
business performs. Lenders,
on the other hand, are people who offer money to the venture on the basis of it
being a loan. They do not actually own a part of the firm and their return is
independent of the businesses performance. They also take priority for payment
over shareholders and face lower level of risk than the stockholders.
3)
Supplier: They are the individuals and
organizations who provide the business with the materials, productive assets
and information it needs to produce its output. They are paid for providing
these inputs.
4)
Customers: Customers may need to make an
investment in using a particular supplier. Changing supplier may involve
switching costs and supplier, risk of quality and expenses incurred in changing
over to new inputs. The
entrepreneur may reward customers by offering quality products, fair prices,
regular and consistency of supply, loan arrangement etc.
5)
The local community: Business has physical locations. The way they operate may affect the
people who live and other businesses which operate nearby.
A
business has a number of responsibilities, which may be defined or not in
national laws, to this local community. Such as:
? Not polluting their shared environment
? Contributing and sponsoring local development activities
? Contribution for political and cultural stabilities and economic
improvements
? Acting in an ethical way.
Mr Pedro Loan Offer has been a key partner in our success, and an invaluable asset for the growth and future of our company, Mr Pedro and his loan company invested in my business with a loan of $1000000 at the rate of 2% in return and it's was really nice working with him because I do not know what I would have done without the help of Mr Pedro and his loan company,
ReplyDeleteMr Pedro Jerome contact Email: pedroloanss@gmail.com