SlideShare a Scribd company logo
1 of 35
Corporate Entrepreneurship
Professor Alexander Settles
The Entrepreneurial Mindset
in Organizations
• Factors in the emergence of the entrepreneurial
economy:
– The rapid evolution of knowledge and technology
promoted high-tech entrepreneurial start-ups.
– Demographic trends adding fuel to the proliferation of
newly developing ventures.
– The venture capital market became an effective
funding mechanism.
– American industry began to learn how to manage
entrepreneurship.
Reengineering Corporate
Thinking
• Steps that will help innovative people to
develop an entrepreneurial mindset:
1. Set explicit goals.
2. Create a system of feedback and positive
reinforcement.
3. Emphasize individual responsibility.
4. Give rewards based on results.
5. Do not punish failures.
Assessing Support for
Innovation
• Does the firm encourage entrepreneurial thinking?
• Does the firm provide ways for innovators to stay with
their ideas?
• Are people permitted to do the job in their own way, or
are they constantly stopping to explain their actions and
ask for permission?
• Has the firm evolved quick and informal ways to access
the resources to try new ideas?
• Has the firm developed ways to manage many small and
experimental innovations?
Assessing Support for
Innovation (cont’d)
• Is the system set up to encourage risk taking
and to tolerate mistakes?
• Are people in your company more concerned
with new ideas or with defending their turf?
• How easy is it to form functionally complete,
autonomous teams in the firm’s corporate
environment?
Rules for an Innovative Environment
Source: “Corporate Venturing Obstacles: Sources and Solutions,” by Hollister B. Sykes and Zenas Block, Journal of Business
Venturing (winter 1989): 161. Copyright © 1989 by Elsevier Science Publishing Co., Inc.
1. Encourage action.
2. Use informal meetings whenever possible.
3. Tolerate failure and use it as a learning experience.
4. Persist in getting an idea to market.
5. Reward innovation for innovation’s sake.
6. Plan the physical layout of the enterprise to encourage informal
communication.
7. Expect clever bootlegging of ideas—secretly working on new
ideas on company time as well as personal time.
8. Put people on small teams for future-oriented projects.
9. Encourage personnel to circumvent rigid procedures and
bureaucratic red tape.
10. Reward and promote innovative personnel.
Encouraging an Intrapreneurial
Environment
• Steps to help restructure corporate thinking and
encourage an intrapreneurial environment:
1. Early identification of potential intrapreneurs
2. Top management sponsorship of intrapreneurial
projects
3. Creation of both diversity and order in strategic
activities
4. Promotion of intrapreneurship through
experimentation
5. Development of collaboration between intrapreneurial
participants and the organization at large
Benefits of an Entrepreneurial
Philosophy
• Leads to the development of new products
and services and helps the organization
expand and grow.
• Creates a work force that can help the
enterprise maintain its competitive
posture.
• Promotes a climate conducive to high
achievers and helps the enterprise
motivate and keep its best people.
The Corporate
Entrepreneurship Process
Corporate
Entrepreneurship
Corporate
Venturing
Innovation
Strategic
Renewal
The Nature of Corporate
Entrepreneurship
• Defining The Concept
– Corporate Entrepreneurship
• Activities that receive organizational sanction and
resource commitments for the purpose of
innovative results.
– A process whereby an individual or a group of individuals, in
association with an existing organization, creates a new
organization or instigates renewal or innovation within the
organization.
– A process that can facilitate firms’ efforts to innovate constantly
and cope effectively with the competitive realities that
companies encounter when competing in international markets.
Defining Corporate Entrepreneurship
Source: Michael H. Morris, Donald F. Kuratko, and Jeffrey G. Covin, Corporate Entrepreneurship & Innovation (Mason, OH, Thomson), 2008, p. 81.
The Need for Corporate
Entrepreneuring
• Rapid growth in the number of new and sophisticated
competitors
• Sense of distrust in the traditional methods of corporate
management
• An exodus of some of the best and brightest people from
corporations to become small business entrepreneurs
• International competition
• Downsizing of major corporations
• An overall desire to improve efficiency and productivity
Table
3.2 Sources of and Solutions to Obstacles in
Corporate Venturing
Traditional Management
Practices
Adverse
Effects
Recommended
Actions
Enforce standard procedures
to avoid mistakes
Innovative solutions blocked,
funds misspent
Make ground rules specific
to each situation
Manage resources for efficiency
and ROI
Competitive lead lost,
low market penetration
Focus effort on critical issues
(e.g., market share)
Control against plan Facts ignored that should replace
assumptions
Change plan to reflect new learning
Plan for the long term Nonviable goals locked in,
high failure costs
Envision a goal, then set interim
milestones, reassess after each
Manage functionally Entrepreneur failure and/or
venture failure
Support entrepreneur with managerial
and multidiscipline skills
Avoid moves that risk
the base business
Missed opportunities Take small steps, build out from
strengths
Protect the base business
at all costs
Venturing dumped when base
business is threatened
Make venturing mainstream,
take affordable risks
Judge new steps from
prior experience
Wrong decisions about competition
and markets
Use learning strategies,
test assumptions
Compensate uniformly Low motivation and inefficient
operations
Balance risk and reward,
employ special compensation
Promote compatible individuals Loss of innovators Accommodate “boat rockers”
and “doers”
Source: “Corporate Venturing Obstacles: Sources and Solutions,” by Hollister B. Sykes and Zenas Block, Journal of Business Venturing
(winter 1989): 161
Successful Innovative
Companies
• Factors in large corporations that are
successful innovators:
– Atmosphere and vision
– Orientation to the market
– Small, flat organizations
– Multiple approaches
– Interactive learning
– Skunkworks
Conceptualizing Corporate
Entrepreneurship Strategy
• Corporate Entrepreneurship Strategy
– A vision-directed, organization-wide reliance on
entrepreneurial behavior that purposefully and
continuously rejuvenates the organization and shapes
the scope of its operations through the recognition
and exploitation of entrepreneurial opportunity.
– It requires the creation of congruence between the
entrepreneurial vision of the organization’s leaders
and the entrepreneurial actions of those throughout
the organization.
Model of the Corporate
Entrepreneurship Strategy Process
• Corporate entrepreneurship strategy is
manifested through the presence of three
elements:
– An entrepreneurial strategic vision
– A proentrepreneurship organizational
architecture
– Entrepreneurial processes and behavior as
exhibited across the organizational hierarchy.
3–17
Model of the Corporate
Entrepreneurship Strategy Process
(cont’d)
• Linkages in the model:
1. Individual entrepreneurial cognitions of the organization’s
members
2. External environmental conditions that invite entrepreneurial
activity
3. Top management’s entrepreneurial strategic vision for the firm
4. Organizational architectures that encourage entrepreneurial
processes and behavior
5. The entrepreneurial processes that are reflected in
entrepreneurial behavior
6. Organizational outcomes resulting from entrepreneurial actions.
An Integrative Model of Corporate
Entrepreneurship Strategy
Source: Duane Ireland, Jeffery G. Covin, and Donald F. Kuratko, “Conceptualizing Corporate
Entrepreneurship Strategy,” Entrepreneurship Theory and Practice 33, no. 1
Conceptualizing a Corporate
Entrepreneurial Strategy (cont’d)
• Critical steps of a corporate
entrepreneurial strategy:
– Developing the vision
– Encouraging innovation
– Structuring for an intrapreneurial climate
– Developing individual managers for corporate
entrepreneurship
– Developing venture teams.
Shared Vision
Source: Jon Arild Johannessen, “A Systematic Approach to the Problem of Rooting a Vision in the Basic Components of an Organization,”
Entrepreneurship, Innovation, and Change (March 1994): 47.
Types of Innovation
• Radical Innovation
– The launching of inaugural breakthroughs.
– These innovations take experimentation and
determined vision, which are not necessarily
managed but must be recognized and nurtured.
• Incremental Innovation
– The systematic evolution of a product or service into
newer or larger markets.
– Many times the incremental innovation will take over
after a radical innovation introduces a breakthrough.
Objectives and Programs for Venture Development
Source: “Supporting Innovation and Venture Development in Established Companies,” by Rosabeth Moss Kanter, Journal of Business
Venturing (winter 1985): 56–59
Objectives Programs
Make sure that current systems, structures, and
practices do not present insurmountable
roadblocks to the flexibility and fast action
needed for innovation.
Reduce unnecessary bureaucracy, and
encourage communication across departments
and functions.
Provide the incentives and tools for
intrapreneurial projects.
Use internal “venture capital” and special project
budgets. (This money has been termed
intracapital to signify a special fund for
intrapreneurial projects.) Allow discretionary time
for projects (sometimes referred to as
“bootlegging” time).
Seek synergies across business areas so new
opportunities are discovered in new
combinations.
Encourage joint projects and ventures among
divisions, departments, and companies. Allow
and encourage employees to discuss and
brainstorm new ideas.
Developing and Supporting Radical and
Incremental Innovation
Radical Incremental
Stimulate through challenges and puzzles. Set systematic goals and deadlines.
Remove budgetary and deadline constraints
when possible.
Stimulate through competitive pressures.
Encourage technical education and exposure
to customers.
Encourage technical education and exposure
to customers.
Allow technical sharing and brainstorming
sessions.
Hold weekly meetings that include
key management and marketing staff.
Give personal attention—develop relationships
of trust.
Delegate more responsibility.
Encourage praise from outside parties. Set clear financial rewards for meeting goals
and deadlines.
Have flexible funds for opportunities that arise.
Reward with freedom and capital for new
projects and interests.
Source: Harry S. Dent, Jr., “Growth through New Product Development,” Small Business Reports (November 1990): 36.
3M’s Innovation Rules
• Don’t kill a project
• Tolerate failure
• Keep divisions small
• Motivate the champions
• Stay close to the customer
• Share the wealth
Structuring for a Corporate
Entrepreneurial Environment
• Reestablishing the drive to innovate:
– Invest heavily in entrepreneurial activities that allow new ideas to
flourish in an innovative environment.
– Provide nurturing and information-sharing activities.
– Employee perception of an innovative environment is critical.
• Corporate Venturing
– Institutionalizing the process of embracing the goal of growth
through development of innovative products, processes, and
technologies with an emphasis on long-term prosperity.
Intrapreneurial Development: Joint Function of
Individual and Organizational Factors
Source: Deborah V. Brazeal, “Organizing for Internally Developed Corporate Ventures,” Journal of Business Venturing (January 1993): 80.
Preparing for Failure
• “Learning from Failure”
– Recognizing the importance of managing the grief
process that occurs from project failure.
– Understanding how organizational routines and rituals
are likely to influence the grief recovery.
– Ensuring that the organization’s social support system
can encourage greater learning, foster motivational
outcomes, and increase coping self-efficacy in
affected individuals.
Developing Individual Managers
for Corporate Entrepreneurship
• Corporate Entrepreneurship Training Program
(Corporate Breakthrough Training)
1. The Breakthrough Experience
2. Breakthrough Thinking
3. Idea Acceleration Process
4. Barriers and Facilitators to Innovative Thinking
5. Sustaining Breakthrough Teams
6. The Breakthrough Plan
Corporate Entrepreneurship
Assessment Instrument (CEAI)
• Key Internal Climate Factors in an
Organization’s Readiness for Entrepreneurial
Activity
– Management support
– Autonomy/work discretion
– Rewards/reinforcement
– Time availability
– Internal organizational boundaries
Facilitating Corporate
Entrepreneurial Behavior
• Organizations foster entrepreneurial behavior by:
– Encouraging—not mandating—innovative activity
– Human resource policies for “selected rotation”
– Committing to projects long enough for momentum to occur.
– Bet on people, not on analysis.
• Rewarding Entrepreneuring:
– Allow inventor to take charge of the new venture
– Grant discretionary time to work on future projects
– Make intracapital available for future research ideas
Corporate Innovator’s Commandments
1. Come to work each day willing to give up your job for the innovation.
2. Circumvent any bureaucratic orders aimed at stopping your innovation.
3. Ignore your job description, do any job needed to make your innovation work.
4. Build a spirited innovation team that has the “fire” to make it happen.
5. Keep your innovation “underground” until it is prepared for demonstration to
the corporate management.
6. Find a key upper level manager who believes in you and your ideas and will
serve as a sponsor to your innovation.
7. Permission is rarely granted in organizations, thus always seek forgiveness
for the “ignorance” of the rules that you will display.
8. Always be realistic about the ways to achieve the innovation goals.
9. Share the glory of the accomplishments with everyone on the team.
10. Convey the innovation’s vision through a strong venture plan.
Sustaining Corporate
Entrepreneurship
• Sustained Corporate Entrepreneurship Model
– Based on theoretical foundations from previous
strategy and entrepreneurship research.
– Considers the comparisons made at the individual
and organizational level on organizational outcomes,
both perceived and real, that influence the
continuation of the entrepreneurial activity.
– Transformational trigger
• Something external or internal to the company that initiates
the need for strategic adaptation or change.
Developing Innovative (I)
Teams
• Innovative (I) Team
– A semi-autonomous self-directing, self-managing,
high-performing group of two or more people who
formally create and share the ownership of a new
organization.
– The leader is called a “product champion” or an
“corporate entrepreneur.”
• Collective Entrepreneurship
– Individual skills are integrated into a group; this
collective capacity to innovate becomes something
greater than the sum of its parts.
A Model of Sustained Corporate
Entrepreneurship
Source: Donald F. Kuratko, Jeffrey S. Hornsby, and Michael G. Goldsby, “Sustaining Corporate Entrepreneurship: Modeling Perceived Implementation
and Outcome Comparisons at Organizational and Individual Levels,” International Journal of Entrepreneurship and Innovation 5(2) (May 2004): 79.
Corporate Entrepreneurship
at IBM
• Emerging Business Opportunity (EBO)
Program’s Key Rules:
– Think big . . . really big.
– Bring in the A-team.
– Start small.
– Establish unique measurement
techniques.

More Related Content

What's hot

Chaper 2....enterpreneurial-intentions
Chaper 2....enterpreneurial-intentionsChaper 2....enterpreneurial-intentions
Chaper 2....enterpreneurial-intentionsHari Shrestha
 
Chapter 1 concept and nature of entrepreneurship
Chapter 1 concept and nature of entrepreneurshipChapter 1 concept and nature of entrepreneurship
Chapter 1 concept and nature of entrepreneurshipAlebachew Hailu
 
Entrepreneurship Chap 2
Entrepreneurship Chap 2Entrepreneurship Chap 2
Entrepreneurship Chap 2Umair Arain
 
Emerging issues.....
 Emerging issues..... Emerging issues.....
Emerging issues.....Hari Shrestha
 
Entrepreneurship and entrepreneurial marketing
Entrepreneurship and entrepreneurial marketing Entrepreneurship and entrepreneurial marketing
Entrepreneurship and entrepreneurial marketing Maxwell Ranasinghe
 
Strategic Management: Types of Strategy
Strategic Management: Types of StrategyStrategic Management: Types of Strategy
Strategic Management: Types of StrategyAntoniette Marcellita
 
Business environment 1 st module mba Management
Business environment 1 st module  mba Management Business environment 1 st module  mba Management
Business environment 1 st module mba Management Babasab Patil
 
Contemporary issues in marketing
Contemporary issues in marketingContemporary issues in marketing
Contemporary issues in marketingManish Parihar
 
Importance of Entrepreneurship B.com Final Year
Importance of Entrepreneurship B.com Final YearImportance of Entrepreneurship B.com Final Year
Importance of Entrepreneurship B.com Final YearDr. Toran Lal Verma
 
Importance of Organizational Development
Importance of Organizational DevelopmentImportance of Organizational Development
Importance of Organizational DevelopmentAmanda Jamison
 
Corporate governance and social responsibility
Corporate governance and social responsibilityCorporate governance and social responsibility
Corporate governance and social responsibilityNeha Chauhan
 
Chapter 2 entrepreneurship (lecture 2)
Chapter 2 entrepreneurship (lecture 2)Chapter 2 entrepreneurship (lecture 2)
Chapter 2 entrepreneurship (lecture 2)Afzaal Ali
 
Concepts of entrepreneurship
Concepts of entrepreneurshipConcepts of entrepreneurship
Concepts of entrepreneurshipMohan Ramaswamy
 

What's hot (20)

Chaper 2....enterpreneurial-intentions
Chaper 2....enterpreneurial-intentionsChaper 2....enterpreneurial-intentions
Chaper 2....enterpreneurial-intentions
 
Organization Development
Organization DevelopmentOrganization Development
Organization Development
 
Entrepreneurship
EntrepreneurshipEntrepreneurship
Entrepreneurship
 
Chapter 1 concept and nature of entrepreneurship
Chapter 1 concept and nature of entrepreneurshipChapter 1 concept and nature of entrepreneurship
Chapter 1 concept and nature of entrepreneurship
 
Entrepreneurship Chap 2
Entrepreneurship Chap 2Entrepreneurship Chap 2
Entrepreneurship Chap 2
 
Emerging issues.....
 Emerging issues..... Emerging issues.....
Emerging issues.....
 
Entrepreneurship and entrepreneurial marketing
Entrepreneurship and entrepreneurial marketing Entrepreneurship and entrepreneurial marketing
Entrepreneurship and entrepreneurial marketing
 
Strategic Management: Types of Strategy
Strategic Management: Types of StrategyStrategic Management: Types of Strategy
Strategic Management: Types of Strategy
 
Strategic alliance
Strategic allianceStrategic alliance
Strategic alliance
 
Entrepreneurial process
Entrepreneurial processEntrepreneurial process
Entrepreneurial process
 
Introduction to Entrepreneurship
 Introduction to Entrepreneurship Introduction to Entrepreneurship
Introduction to Entrepreneurship
 
Business environment 1 st module mba Management
Business environment 1 st module  mba Management Business environment 1 st module  mba Management
Business environment 1 st module mba Management
 
Contemporary issues in marketing
Contemporary issues in marketingContemporary issues in marketing
Contemporary issues in marketing
 
Importance of Entrepreneurship B.com Final Year
Importance of Entrepreneurship B.com Final YearImportance of Entrepreneurship B.com Final Year
Importance of Entrepreneurship B.com Final Year
 
Importance of Organizational Development
Importance of Organizational DevelopmentImportance of Organizational Development
Importance of Organizational Development
 
Entrepreneurship: evolution and revolution
Entrepreneurship: evolution and revolutionEntrepreneurship: evolution and revolution
Entrepreneurship: evolution and revolution
 
Corporate governance and social responsibility
Corporate governance and social responsibilityCorporate governance and social responsibility
Corporate governance and social responsibility
 
Strategic Alliances
Strategic AlliancesStrategic Alliances
Strategic Alliances
 
Chapter 2 entrepreneurship (lecture 2)
Chapter 2 entrepreneurship (lecture 2)Chapter 2 entrepreneurship (lecture 2)
Chapter 2 entrepreneurship (lecture 2)
 
Concepts of entrepreneurship
Concepts of entrepreneurshipConcepts of entrepreneurship
Concepts of entrepreneurship
 

Similar to Corporate Entrepreneurship Mindset

Read attachedpages about 3-M and their approach to innovationRes.docx
Read attachedpages about 3-M and their approach to innovationRes.docxRead attachedpages about 3-M and their approach to innovationRes.docx
Read attachedpages about 3-M and their approach to innovationRes.docxmakdul
 
THE ENTREPRENEURIAL AND INTRAPRENEURIAL MIND
THE ENTREPRENEURIAL AND INTRAPRENEURIAL MINDTHE ENTREPRENEURIAL AND INTRAPRENEURIAL MIND
THE ENTREPRENEURIAL AND INTRAPRENEURIAL MINDFallahchay Ali
 
Roles of a Corporate Innovation Unit - ECSI Framework
Roles of a Corporate Innovation Unit - ECSI FrameworkRoles of a Corporate Innovation Unit - ECSI Framework
Roles of a Corporate Innovation Unit - ECSI FrameworkECSI
 
Kuching | Jan-15 | Entrepreneurship as a Vehicle to Encourage Grass Roots Inn...
Kuching | Jan-15 | Entrepreneurship as a Vehicle to Encourage Grass Roots Inn...Kuching | Jan-15 | Entrepreneurship as a Vehicle to Encourage Grass Roots Inn...
Kuching | Jan-15 | Entrepreneurship as a Vehicle to Encourage Grass Roots Inn...Smart Villages
 
A holistic approach to Innovation Excellence
A holistic approach to Innovation ExcellenceA holistic approach to Innovation Excellence
A holistic approach to Innovation ExcellenceKienbaum Consultants
 
Innovation-Reverse innovation by Roy
Innovation-Reverse innovation by RoyInnovation-Reverse innovation by Roy
Innovation-Reverse innovation by RoyDivyanshu Roy
 
2016 - 2. Innovation as a core business process.pot
2016 - 2. Innovation as a core business process.pot2016 - 2. Innovation as a core business process.pot
2016 - 2. Innovation as a core business process.potNadia Lushchak
 
Organizational Innovation – Barriers and Counter Measures
Organizational Innovation – Barriers and Counter MeasuresOrganizational Innovation – Barriers and Counter Measures
Organizational Innovation – Barriers and Counter MeasuresFelix Zappe
 
Seeds of Innovation
Seeds of InnovationSeeds of Innovation
Seeds of Innovationericw01
 
Strength and Weaknesses of Innovation Implementation
Strength and Weaknesses of Innovation ImplementationStrength and Weaknesses of Innovation Implementation
Strength and Weaknesses of Innovation ImplementationJeovan Figueiredo
 
Innomantra Viewpoint - Getting Bold innovation Right v1.0
Innomantra Viewpoint - Getting Bold innovation Right v1.0 Innomantra Viewpoint - Getting Bold innovation Right v1.0
Innomantra Viewpoint - Getting Bold innovation Right v1.0 Innomantra
 
Engaging employees in change
Engaging employees in changeEngaging employees in change
Engaging employees in changeGideon Bernto
 

Similar to Corporate Entrepreneurship Mindset (20)

Read attachedpages about 3-M and their approach to innovationRes.docx
Read attachedpages about 3-M and their approach to innovationRes.docxRead attachedpages about 3-M and their approach to innovationRes.docx
Read attachedpages about 3-M and their approach to innovationRes.docx
 
Strategic entrepreneurial growth
Strategic entrepreneurial growthStrategic entrepreneurial growth
Strategic entrepreneurial growth
 
Chapter-2.pptx
Chapter-2.pptxChapter-2.pptx
Chapter-2.pptx
 
THE ENTREPRENEURIAL AND INTRAPRENEURIAL MIND
THE ENTREPRENEURIAL AND INTRAPRENEURIAL MINDTHE ENTREPRENEURIAL AND INTRAPRENEURIAL MIND
THE ENTREPRENEURIAL AND INTRAPRENEURIAL MIND
 
Roles of a Corporate Innovation Unit - ECSI Framework
Roles of a Corporate Innovation Unit - ECSI FrameworkRoles of a Corporate Innovation Unit - ECSI Framework
Roles of a Corporate Innovation Unit - ECSI Framework
 
Intrapreneurship
IntrapreneurshipIntrapreneurship
Intrapreneurship
 
Kuching | Jan-15 | Entrepreneurship as a Vehicle to Encourage Grass Roots Inn...
Kuching | Jan-15 | Entrepreneurship as a Vehicle to Encourage Grass Roots Inn...Kuching | Jan-15 | Entrepreneurship as a Vehicle to Encourage Grass Roots Inn...
Kuching | Jan-15 | Entrepreneurship as a Vehicle to Encourage Grass Roots Inn...
 
A holistic approach to Innovation Excellence
A holistic approach to Innovation ExcellenceA holistic approach to Innovation Excellence
A holistic approach to Innovation Excellence
 
Corporate entrepreneurship
Corporate entrepreneurshipCorporate entrepreneurship
Corporate entrepreneurship
 
Innovation-Reverse innovation by Roy
Innovation-Reverse innovation by RoyInnovation-Reverse innovation by Roy
Innovation-Reverse innovation by Roy
 
2016 - 2. Innovation as a core business process.pot
2016 - 2. Innovation as a core business process.pot2016 - 2. Innovation as a core business process.pot
2016 - 2. Innovation as a core business process.pot
 
Biz dev presentation 5
Biz dev presentation 5Biz dev presentation 5
Biz dev presentation 5
 
vivek ambastha
vivek ambasthavivek ambastha
vivek ambastha
 
Organizational Innovation – Barriers and Counter Measures
Organizational Innovation – Barriers and Counter MeasuresOrganizational Innovation – Barriers and Counter Measures
Organizational Innovation – Barriers and Counter Measures
 
Seeds of Innovation
Seeds of InnovationSeeds of Innovation
Seeds of Innovation
 
Strength and Weaknesses of Innovation Implementation
Strength and Weaknesses of Innovation ImplementationStrength and Weaknesses of Innovation Implementation
Strength and Weaknesses of Innovation Implementation
 
Innomantra Viewpoint - Getting Bold innovation Right v1.0
Innomantra Viewpoint - Getting Bold innovation Right v1.0 Innomantra Viewpoint - Getting Bold innovation Right v1.0
Innomantra Viewpoint - Getting Bold innovation Right v1.0
 
Engaging employees in change
Engaging employees in changeEngaging employees in change
Engaging employees in change
 
Business Identification
Business IdentificationBusiness Identification
Business Identification
 
Session -10
Session  -10Session  -10
Session -10
 

Recently uploaded

8447779800, Low rate Call girls in Kotla Mubarakpur Delhi NCR
8447779800, Low rate Call girls in Kotla Mubarakpur Delhi NCR8447779800, Low rate Call girls in Kotla Mubarakpur Delhi NCR
8447779800, Low rate Call girls in Kotla Mubarakpur Delhi NCRashishs7044
 
Organizational Structure Running A Successful Business
Organizational Structure Running A Successful BusinessOrganizational Structure Running A Successful Business
Organizational Structure Running A Successful BusinessSeta Wicaksana
 
Pitch Deck Teardown: Geodesic.Life's $500k Pre-seed deck
Pitch Deck Teardown: Geodesic.Life's $500k Pre-seed deckPitch Deck Teardown: Geodesic.Life's $500k Pre-seed deck
Pitch Deck Teardown: Geodesic.Life's $500k Pre-seed deckHajeJanKamps
 
Call Girls In Sikandarpur Gurgaon ❤️8860477959_Russian 100% Genuine Escorts I...
Call Girls In Sikandarpur Gurgaon ❤️8860477959_Russian 100% Genuine Escorts I...Call Girls In Sikandarpur Gurgaon ❤️8860477959_Russian 100% Genuine Escorts I...
Call Girls In Sikandarpur Gurgaon ❤️8860477959_Russian 100% Genuine Escorts I...lizamodels9
 
Intro to BCG's Carbon Emissions Benchmark_vF.pdf
Intro to BCG's Carbon Emissions Benchmark_vF.pdfIntro to BCG's Carbon Emissions Benchmark_vF.pdf
Intro to BCG's Carbon Emissions Benchmark_vF.pdfpollardmorgan
 
Independent Call Girls Andheri Nightlaila 9967584737
Independent Call Girls Andheri Nightlaila 9967584737Independent Call Girls Andheri Nightlaila 9967584737
Independent Call Girls Andheri Nightlaila 9967584737Riya Pathan
 
8447779800, Low rate Call girls in Tughlakabad Delhi NCR
8447779800, Low rate Call girls in Tughlakabad Delhi NCR8447779800, Low rate Call girls in Tughlakabad Delhi NCR
8447779800, Low rate Call girls in Tughlakabad Delhi NCRashishs7044
 
Call US-88OO1O2216 Call Girls In Mahipalpur Female Escort Service
Call US-88OO1O2216 Call Girls In Mahipalpur Female Escort ServiceCall US-88OO1O2216 Call Girls In Mahipalpur Female Escort Service
Call US-88OO1O2216 Call Girls In Mahipalpur Female Escort Servicecallgirls2057
 
Ten Organizational Design Models to align structure and operations to busines...
Ten Organizational Design Models to align structure and operations to busines...Ten Organizational Design Models to align structure and operations to busines...
Ten Organizational Design Models to align structure and operations to busines...Seta Wicaksana
 
Lean: From Theory to Practice — One City’s (and Library’s) Lean Story… Abridged
Lean: From Theory to Practice — One City’s (and Library’s) Lean Story… AbridgedLean: From Theory to Practice — One City’s (and Library’s) Lean Story… Abridged
Lean: From Theory to Practice — One City’s (and Library’s) Lean Story… AbridgedKaiNexus
 
Kenya Coconut Production Presentation by Dr. Lalith Perera
Kenya Coconut Production Presentation by Dr. Lalith PereraKenya Coconut Production Presentation by Dr. Lalith Perera
Kenya Coconut Production Presentation by Dr. Lalith Pereraictsugar
 
FULL ENJOY Call girls in Paharganj Delhi | 8377087607
FULL ENJOY Call girls in Paharganj Delhi | 8377087607FULL ENJOY Call girls in Paharganj Delhi | 8377087607
FULL ENJOY Call girls in Paharganj Delhi | 8377087607dollysharma2066
 
The CMO Survey - Highlights and Insights Report - Spring 2024
The CMO Survey - Highlights and Insights Report - Spring 2024The CMO Survey - Highlights and Insights Report - Spring 2024
The CMO Survey - Highlights and Insights Report - Spring 2024christinemoorman
 
Investment in The Coconut Industry by Nancy Cheruiyot
Investment in The Coconut Industry by Nancy CheruiyotInvestment in The Coconut Industry by Nancy Cheruiyot
Investment in The Coconut Industry by Nancy Cheruiyotictsugar
 
Islamabad Escorts | Call 03274100048 | Escort Service in Islamabad
Islamabad Escorts | Call 03274100048 | Escort Service in IslamabadIslamabad Escorts | Call 03274100048 | Escort Service in Islamabad
Islamabad Escorts | Call 03274100048 | Escort Service in IslamabadAyesha Khan
 
Marketplace and Quality Assurance Presentation - Vincent Chirchir
Marketplace and Quality Assurance Presentation - Vincent ChirchirMarketplace and Quality Assurance Presentation - Vincent Chirchir
Marketplace and Quality Assurance Presentation - Vincent Chirchirictsugar
 
Market Sizes Sample Report - 2024 Edition
Market Sizes Sample Report - 2024 EditionMarket Sizes Sample Report - 2024 Edition
Market Sizes Sample Report - 2024 EditionMintel Group
 
Call Us 📲8800102216📞 Call Girls In DLF City Gurgaon
Call Us 📲8800102216📞 Call Girls In DLF City GurgaonCall Us 📲8800102216📞 Call Girls In DLF City Gurgaon
Call Us 📲8800102216📞 Call Girls In DLF City Gurgaoncallgirls2057
 
India Consumer 2024 Redacted Sample Report
India Consumer 2024 Redacted Sample ReportIndia Consumer 2024 Redacted Sample Report
India Consumer 2024 Redacted Sample ReportMintel Group
 

Recently uploaded (20)

8447779800, Low rate Call girls in Kotla Mubarakpur Delhi NCR
8447779800, Low rate Call girls in Kotla Mubarakpur Delhi NCR8447779800, Low rate Call girls in Kotla Mubarakpur Delhi NCR
8447779800, Low rate Call girls in Kotla Mubarakpur Delhi NCR
 
Organizational Structure Running A Successful Business
Organizational Structure Running A Successful BusinessOrganizational Structure Running A Successful Business
Organizational Structure Running A Successful Business
 
Pitch Deck Teardown: Geodesic.Life's $500k Pre-seed deck
Pitch Deck Teardown: Geodesic.Life's $500k Pre-seed deckPitch Deck Teardown: Geodesic.Life's $500k Pre-seed deck
Pitch Deck Teardown: Geodesic.Life's $500k Pre-seed deck
 
Call Girls In Sikandarpur Gurgaon ❤️8860477959_Russian 100% Genuine Escorts I...
Call Girls In Sikandarpur Gurgaon ❤️8860477959_Russian 100% Genuine Escorts I...Call Girls In Sikandarpur Gurgaon ❤️8860477959_Russian 100% Genuine Escorts I...
Call Girls In Sikandarpur Gurgaon ❤️8860477959_Russian 100% Genuine Escorts I...
 
Intro to BCG's Carbon Emissions Benchmark_vF.pdf
Intro to BCG's Carbon Emissions Benchmark_vF.pdfIntro to BCG's Carbon Emissions Benchmark_vF.pdf
Intro to BCG's Carbon Emissions Benchmark_vF.pdf
 
Independent Call Girls Andheri Nightlaila 9967584737
Independent Call Girls Andheri Nightlaila 9967584737Independent Call Girls Andheri Nightlaila 9967584737
Independent Call Girls Andheri Nightlaila 9967584737
 
8447779800, Low rate Call girls in Tughlakabad Delhi NCR
8447779800, Low rate Call girls in Tughlakabad Delhi NCR8447779800, Low rate Call girls in Tughlakabad Delhi NCR
8447779800, Low rate Call girls in Tughlakabad Delhi NCR
 
Japan IT Week 2024 Brochure by 47Billion (English)
Japan IT Week 2024 Brochure by 47Billion (English)Japan IT Week 2024 Brochure by 47Billion (English)
Japan IT Week 2024 Brochure by 47Billion (English)
 
Call US-88OO1O2216 Call Girls In Mahipalpur Female Escort Service
Call US-88OO1O2216 Call Girls In Mahipalpur Female Escort ServiceCall US-88OO1O2216 Call Girls In Mahipalpur Female Escort Service
Call US-88OO1O2216 Call Girls In Mahipalpur Female Escort Service
 
Ten Organizational Design Models to align structure and operations to busines...
Ten Organizational Design Models to align structure and operations to busines...Ten Organizational Design Models to align structure and operations to busines...
Ten Organizational Design Models to align structure and operations to busines...
 
Lean: From Theory to Practice — One City’s (and Library’s) Lean Story… Abridged
Lean: From Theory to Practice — One City’s (and Library’s) Lean Story… AbridgedLean: From Theory to Practice — One City’s (and Library’s) Lean Story… Abridged
Lean: From Theory to Practice — One City’s (and Library’s) Lean Story… Abridged
 
Kenya Coconut Production Presentation by Dr. Lalith Perera
Kenya Coconut Production Presentation by Dr. Lalith PereraKenya Coconut Production Presentation by Dr. Lalith Perera
Kenya Coconut Production Presentation by Dr. Lalith Perera
 
FULL ENJOY Call girls in Paharganj Delhi | 8377087607
FULL ENJOY Call girls in Paharganj Delhi | 8377087607FULL ENJOY Call girls in Paharganj Delhi | 8377087607
FULL ENJOY Call girls in Paharganj Delhi | 8377087607
 
The CMO Survey - Highlights and Insights Report - Spring 2024
The CMO Survey - Highlights and Insights Report - Spring 2024The CMO Survey - Highlights and Insights Report - Spring 2024
The CMO Survey - Highlights and Insights Report - Spring 2024
 
Investment in The Coconut Industry by Nancy Cheruiyot
Investment in The Coconut Industry by Nancy CheruiyotInvestment in The Coconut Industry by Nancy Cheruiyot
Investment in The Coconut Industry by Nancy Cheruiyot
 
Islamabad Escorts | Call 03274100048 | Escort Service in Islamabad
Islamabad Escorts | Call 03274100048 | Escort Service in IslamabadIslamabad Escorts | Call 03274100048 | Escort Service in Islamabad
Islamabad Escorts | Call 03274100048 | Escort Service in Islamabad
 
Marketplace and Quality Assurance Presentation - Vincent Chirchir
Marketplace and Quality Assurance Presentation - Vincent ChirchirMarketplace and Quality Assurance Presentation - Vincent Chirchir
Marketplace and Quality Assurance Presentation - Vincent Chirchir
 
Market Sizes Sample Report - 2024 Edition
Market Sizes Sample Report - 2024 EditionMarket Sizes Sample Report - 2024 Edition
Market Sizes Sample Report - 2024 Edition
 
Call Us 📲8800102216📞 Call Girls In DLF City Gurgaon
Call Us 📲8800102216📞 Call Girls In DLF City GurgaonCall Us 📲8800102216📞 Call Girls In DLF City Gurgaon
Call Us 📲8800102216📞 Call Girls In DLF City Gurgaon
 
India Consumer 2024 Redacted Sample Report
India Consumer 2024 Redacted Sample ReportIndia Consumer 2024 Redacted Sample Report
India Consumer 2024 Redacted Sample Report
 

Corporate Entrepreneurship Mindset

  • 2. The Entrepreneurial Mindset in Organizations • Factors in the emergence of the entrepreneurial economy: – The rapid evolution of knowledge and technology promoted high-tech entrepreneurial start-ups. – Demographic trends adding fuel to the proliferation of newly developing ventures. – The venture capital market became an effective funding mechanism. – American industry began to learn how to manage entrepreneurship.
  • 3. Reengineering Corporate Thinking • Steps that will help innovative people to develop an entrepreneurial mindset: 1. Set explicit goals. 2. Create a system of feedback and positive reinforcement. 3. Emphasize individual responsibility. 4. Give rewards based on results. 5. Do not punish failures.
  • 4. Assessing Support for Innovation • Does the firm encourage entrepreneurial thinking? • Does the firm provide ways for innovators to stay with their ideas? • Are people permitted to do the job in their own way, or are they constantly stopping to explain their actions and ask for permission? • Has the firm evolved quick and informal ways to access the resources to try new ideas? • Has the firm developed ways to manage many small and experimental innovations?
  • 5. Assessing Support for Innovation (cont’d) • Is the system set up to encourage risk taking and to tolerate mistakes? • Are people in your company more concerned with new ideas or with defending their turf? • How easy is it to form functionally complete, autonomous teams in the firm’s corporate environment?
  • 6. Rules for an Innovative Environment Source: “Corporate Venturing Obstacles: Sources and Solutions,” by Hollister B. Sykes and Zenas Block, Journal of Business Venturing (winter 1989): 161. Copyright © 1989 by Elsevier Science Publishing Co., Inc. 1. Encourage action. 2. Use informal meetings whenever possible. 3. Tolerate failure and use it as a learning experience. 4. Persist in getting an idea to market. 5. Reward innovation for innovation’s sake. 6. Plan the physical layout of the enterprise to encourage informal communication. 7. Expect clever bootlegging of ideas—secretly working on new ideas on company time as well as personal time. 8. Put people on small teams for future-oriented projects. 9. Encourage personnel to circumvent rigid procedures and bureaucratic red tape. 10. Reward and promote innovative personnel.
  • 7. Encouraging an Intrapreneurial Environment • Steps to help restructure corporate thinking and encourage an intrapreneurial environment: 1. Early identification of potential intrapreneurs 2. Top management sponsorship of intrapreneurial projects 3. Creation of both diversity and order in strategic activities 4. Promotion of intrapreneurship through experimentation 5. Development of collaboration between intrapreneurial participants and the organization at large
  • 8. Benefits of an Entrepreneurial Philosophy • Leads to the development of new products and services and helps the organization expand and grow. • Creates a work force that can help the enterprise maintain its competitive posture. • Promotes a climate conducive to high achievers and helps the enterprise motivate and keep its best people.
  • 10. The Nature of Corporate Entrepreneurship • Defining The Concept – Corporate Entrepreneurship • Activities that receive organizational sanction and resource commitments for the purpose of innovative results. – A process whereby an individual or a group of individuals, in association with an existing organization, creates a new organization or instigates renewal or innovation within the organization. – A process that can facilitate firms’ efforts to innovate constantly and cope effectively with the competitive realities that companies encounter when competing in international markets.
  • 11. Defining Corporate Entrepreneurship Source: Michael H. Morris, Donald F. Kuratko, and Jeffrey G. Covin, Corporate Entrepreneurship & Innovation (Mason, OH, Thomson), 2008, p. 81.
  • 12. The Need for Corporate Entrepreneuring • Rapid growth in the number of new and sophisticated competitors • Sense of distrust in the traditional methods of corporate management • An exodus of some of the best and brightest people from corporations to become small business entrepreneurs • International competition • Downsizing of major corporations • An overall desire to improve efficiency and productivity
  • 13. Table 3.2 Sources of and Solutions to Obstacles in Corporate Venturing Traditional Management Practices Adverse Effects Recommended Actions Enforce standard procedures to avoid mistakes Innovative solutions blocked, funds misspent Make ground rules specific to each situation Manage resources for efficiency and ROI Competitive lead lost, low market penetration Focus effort on critical issues (e.g., market share) Control against plan Facts ignored that should replace assumptions Change plan to reflect new learning Plan for the long term Nonviable goals locked in, high failure costs Envision a goal, then set interim milestones, reassess after each Manage functionally Entrepreneur failure and/or venture failure Support entrepreneur with managerial and multidiscipline skills Avoid moves that risk the base business Missed opportunities Take small steps, build out from strengths Protect the base business at all costs Venturing dumped when base business is threatened Make venturing mainstream, take affordable risks Judge new steps from prior experience Wrong decisions about competition and markets Use learning strategies, test assumptions Compensate uniformly Low motivation and inefficient operations Balance risk and reward, employ special compensation Promote compatible individuals Loss of innovators Accommodate “boat rockers” and “doers” Source: “Corporate Venturing Obstacles: Sources and Solutions,” by Hollister B. Sykes and Zenas Block, Journal of Business Venturing (winter 1989): 161
  • 14. Successful Innovative Companies • Factors in large corporations that are successful innovators: – Atmosphere and vision – Orientation to the market – Small, flat organizations – Multiple approaches – Interactive learning – Skunkworks
  • 15. Conceptualizing Corporate Entrepreneurship Strategy • Corporate Entrepreneurship Strategy – A vision-directed, organization-wide reliance on entrepreneurial behavior that purposefully and continuously rejuvenates the organization and shapes the scope of its operations through the recognition and exploitation of entrepreneurial opportunity. – It requires the creation of congruence between the entrepreneurial vision of the organization’s leaders and the entrepreneurial actions of those throughout the organization.
  • 16. Model of the Corporate Entrepreneurship Strategy Process • Corporate entrepreneurship strategy is manifested through the presence of three elements: – An entrepreneurial strategic vision – A proentrepreneurship organizational architecture – Entrepreneurial processes and behavior as exhibited across the organizational hierarchy.
  • 17. 3–17 Model of the Corporate Entrepreneurship Strategy Process (cont’d) • Linkages in the model: 1. Individual entrepreneurial cognitions of the organization’s members 2. External environmental conditions that invite entrepreneurial activity 3. Top management’s entrepreneurial strategic vision for the firm 4. Organizational architectures that encourage entrepreneurial processes and behavior 5. The entrepreneurial processes that are reflected in entrepreneurial behavior 6. Organizational outcomes resulting from entrepreneurial actions.
  • 18. An Integrative Model of Corporate Entrepreneurship Strategy Source: Duane Ireland, Jeffery G. Covin, and Donald F. Kuratko, “Conceptualizing Corporate Entrepreneurship Strategy,” Entrepreneurship Theory and Practice 33, no. 1
  • 19. Conceptualizing a Corporate Entrepreneurial Strategy (cont’d) • Critical steps of a corporate entrepreneurial strategy: – Developing the vision – Encouraging innovation – Structuring for an intrapreneurial climate – Developing individual managers for corporate entrepreneurship – Developing venture teams.
  • 20. Shared Vision Source: Jon Arild Johannessen, “A Systematic Approach to the Problem of Rooting a Vision in the Basic Components of an Organization,” Entrepreneurship, Innovation, and Change (March 1994): 47.
  • 21. Types of Innovation • Radical Innovation – The launching of inaugural breakthroughs. – These innovations take experimentation and determined vision, which are not necessarily managed but must be recognized and nurtured. • Incremental Innovation – The systematic evolution of a product or service into newer or larger markets. – Many times the incremental innovation will take over after a radical innovation introduces a breakthrough.
  • 22. Objectives and Programs for Venture Development Source: “Supporting Innovation and Venture Development in Established Companies,” by Rosabeth Moss Kanter, Journal of Business Venturing (winter 1985): 56–59 Objectives Programs Make sure that current systems, structures, and practices do not present insurmountable roadblocks to the flexibility and fast action needed for innovation. Reduce unnecessary bureaucracy, and encourage communication across departments and functions. Provide the incentives and tools for intrapreneurial projects. Use internal “venture capital” and special project budgets. (This money has been termed intracapital to signify a special fund for intrapreneurial projects.) Allow discretionary time for projects (sometimes referred to as “bootlegging” time). Seek synergies across business areas so new opportunities are discovered in new combinations. Encourage joint projects and ventures among divisions, departments, and companies. Allow and encourage employees to discuss and brainstorm new ideas.
  • 23. Developing and Supporting Radical and Incremental Innovation Radical Incremental Stimulate through challenges and puzzles. Set systematic goals and deadlines. Remove budgetary and deadline constraints when possible. Stimulate through competitive pressures. Encourage technical education and exposure to customers. Encourage technical education and exposure to customers. Allow technical sharing and brainstorming sessions. Hold weekly meetings that include key management and marketing staff. Give personal attention—develop relationships of trust. Delegate more responsibility. Encourage praise from outside parties. Set clear financial rewards for meeting goals and deadlines. Have flexible funds for opportunities that arise. Reward with freedom and capital for new projects and interests. Source: Harry S. Dent, Jr., “Growth through New Product Development,” Small Business Reports (November 1990): 36.
  • 24. 3M’s Innovation Rules • Don’t kill a project • Tolerate failure • Keep divisions small • Motivate the champions • Stay close to the customer • Share the wealth
  • 25. Structuring for a Corporate Entrepreneurial Environment • Reestablishing the drive to innovate: – Invest heavily in entrepreneurial activities that allow new ideas to flourish in an innovative environment. – Provide nurturing and information-sharing activities. – Employee perception of an innovative environment is critical. • Corporate Venturing – Institutionalizing the process of embracing the goal of growth through development of innovative products, processes, and technologies with an emphasis on long-term prosperity.
  • 26. Intrapreneurial Development: Joint Function of Individual and Organizational Factors Source: Deborah V. Brazeal, “Organizing for Internally Developed Corporate Ventures,” Journal of Business Venturing (January 1993): 80.
  • 27. Preparing for Failure • “Learning from Failure” – Recognizing the importance of managing the grief process that occurs from project failure. – Understanding how organizational routines and rituals are likely to influence the grief recovery. – Ensuring that the organization’s social support system can encourage greater learning, foster motivational outcomes, and increase coping self-efficacy in affected individuals.
  • 28. Developing Individual Managers for Corporate Entrepreneurship • Corporate Entrepreneurship Training Program (Corporate Breakthrough Training) 1. The Breakthrough Experience 2. Breakthrough Thinking 3. Idea Acceleration Process 4. Barriers and Facilitators to Innovative Thinking 5. Sustaining Breakthrough Teams 6. The Breakthrough Plan
  • 29. Corporate Entrepreneurship Assessment Instrument (CEAI) • Key Internal Climate Factors in an Organization’s Readiness for Entrepreneurial Activity – Management support – Autonomy/work discretion – Rewards/reinforcement – Time availability – Internal organizational boundaries
  • 30. Facilitating Corporate Entrepreneurial Behavior • Organizations foster entrepreneurial behavior by: – Encouraging—not mandating—innovative activity – Human resource policies for “selected rotation” – Committing to projects long enough for momentum to occur. – Bet on people, not on analysis. • Rewarding Entrepreneuring: – Allow inventor to take charge of the new venture – Grant discretionary time to work on future projects – Make intracapital available for future research ideas
  • 31. Corporate Innovator’s Commandments 1. Come to work each day willing to give up your job for the innovation. 2. Circumvent any bureaucratic orders aimed at stopping your innovation. 3. Ignore your job description, do any job needed to make your innovation work. 4. Build a spirited innovation team that has the “fire” to make it happen. 5. Keep your innovation “underground” until it is prepared for demonstration to the corporate management. 6. Find a key upper level manager who believes in you and your ideas and will serve as a sponsor to your innovation. 7. Permission is rarely granted in organizations, thus always seek forgiveness for the “ignorance” of the rules that you will display. 8. Always be realistic about the ways to achieve the innovation goals. 9. Share the glory of the accomplishments with everyone on the team. 10. Convey the innovation’s vision through a strong venture plan.
  • 32. Sustaining Corporate Entrepreneurship • Sustained Corporate Entrepreneurship Model – Based on theoretical foundations from previous strategy and entrepreneurship research. – Considers the comparisons made at the individual and organizational level on organizational outcomes, both perceived and real, that influence the continuation of the entrepreneurial activity. – Transformational trigger • Something external or internal to the company that initiates the need for strategic adaptation or change.
  • 33. Developing Innovative (I) Teams • Innovative (I) Team – A semi-autonomous self-directing, self-managing, high-performing group of two or more people who formally create and share the ownership of a new organization. – The leader is called a “product champion” or an “corporate entrepreneur.” • Collective Entrepreneurship – Individual skills are integrated into a group; this collective capacity to innovate becomes something greater than the sum of its parts.
  • 34. A Model of Sustained Corporate Entrepreneurship Source: Donald F. Kuratko, Jeffrey S. Hornsby, and Michael G. Goldsby, “Sustaining Corporate Entrepreneurship: Modeling Perceived Implementation and Outcome Comparisons at Organizational and Individual Levels,” International Journal of Entrepreneurship and Innovation 5(2) (May 2004): 79.
  • 35. Corporate Entrepreneurship at IBM • Emerging Business Opportunity (EBO) Program’s Key Rules: – Think big . . . really big. – Bring in the A-team. – Start small. – Establish unique measurement techniques.