1 / 21

Lecture 7

Lecture 7. Chapter 4. Understanding Entrepreneurship & New Ventures. “Small” Business. Locally owned and operated Vs Sony, Nestle Small Business Administration Number of Employees Total Annual Sales Independently Owned/Managed & Does Not Dominate Its Market. “Small” Business.

diane
Download Presentation

Lecture 7

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Lecture 7

  2. Chapter4 Understanding Entrepreneurship & New Ventures

  3. “Small” Business • Locally owned and operated Vs Sony, Nestle • Small Business Administration • Number of Employees • Total Annual Sales • Independently Owned/Managed & Does Not Dominate Its Market

  4. “Small” Business • According to one recent extensive study • Total SMEs in the country number around 2 million, of which approximately 0.4 million are manufacturing units, 0.6 million are service sector units and the remaining 1 million are in the retailing/trade sector.

  5. “Small” Business • According to the same study, SMEs constitute over 90% of the business establishments in Pakistan and contribute Rs. 34 billion (11%) annually to the GDP. • Around 67% of the labour force in the Pakistani manufacturing sector works in SMEs engaged in manufacturing. Furthermore, 80% of the employment in the economy is created by SMEs.

  6. “Small” Business • However, statistics from the same study tell us that 72% of the SMEs are sole proprietary concerns with only one third of the owners receiving a college education. Additionally, only 3% have received any technical training.

  7. “Small” Business • In other words, the overwhelming bulk of SMEs are run in mostly an informal and unstructured manner as sole proprietorships, by people who have received little or no professional training and possibly have limited access to technical advice and financial resources.

  8. “Small” Business • Definition used by the State Bank of Pakistan: • SME means an entity, ideally not a public limited company, which does not employ more than 250 persons (if it is a manufacturing concern) and 50 persons (if it is a trading/service concern) and also fulfills the following criteria of either “a” and “c” or “b” and “c” as relevant:

  9. “Small” Business • a. a trading/service concern with total assets at cost excluding land and building upto Rs 50 million. • b. a manufacturing concern with total assets at cost excluding land and building upto Rs 100 million. • c. any concern (trading, service or manufacturing) with net sales not exceeding Rs 300 million as per latest financial statements.

  10. “Small” Business • Definition used by the Federal Bureau of Statistics: • Small – Less than 10 employees.

  11. “Small” Business • Definition used by the Small Business Finance Corporation: • “Small Business” was defined in the Small Business Finance Corporation Act to mean an industry or an industrial, manufacturing or trading unit, or such other concern, the total value of the fixed asset of which does not exceed Rs. 20 million while a “medium enterprise” is defined as an industrial, manufacturing or trading unit and such other concern the total value of the fixed assets of which does not exceed Rs. 100 million.

  12. “Small” Business • Definition used by the Punjab Small Industries Corporation: • Small – Fixed investment of upto Rs. 20 million (excluding land and building).

  13. “Small” Business • Definition provided by Small & Medium Enterprise Development Authority • (SMEDA): • Micro – Less than 10 employees – Productive Assets upto Rs. 2 million. • Small – 10-35 employees – Productive Assets between Rs. 2 to 20 million. • Medium – 36-99 employees – Productive Assets between Rs. 20 to 40 million.

  14. “Small” Business • Recent Definition Proposal by SMEDA: • Micro – Less than 10 employees – Fixed assets including land & building – Rs. 2.5 million. • Small – 10 to 49 employees – Fixed assets including land & building – Rs. 45 million. • Medium – 50 to 249 employees – Fixed assets including land & building – Rs. 85 million.

  15. Need For Small Businesses • Job Creation (67% labour force works in small businesses • Innovation • Products/Services (computer, radio, photocopier) • Processes • Important To Big Business

  16. Small Business Industries • Services • Construction • Finance & Insurance (affiliates and agent) • Wholesaling • Transportation & Manufacturing (taxi, tour operators)

  17. Entrepreneur • Accepts Risks & Opportunities In Creating/Operating A New Business with a primary goal of growth and expansion • Characteristics • Resourceful • Good Customer Relations • Desire To Be Own Boss- Gain Control Of Life • Build For Family • Tolerance For Uncertainty/Risk

  18. Entrepreneurs

  19. Non-Financial Reasons To Start A Business Source: CIBC World Markets, Economics & Strategy, “Secrets to Small Business Success”, research.cibcwm.com/economic_public/ download/sb-ssbs-10192004.pdf

  20. Financial Reasons To Start A Business Source: CIBC World Markets, Economics & Strategy, “Secrets to Small Business Success”, research.cibcwm.com/economic_public/ download/sb-ssbs-10192004.pdf

  21. Start/OperateSmall Business • Role of internet • Opportunities • Information access

More Related