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INTRAPRENEURIAL ORIENTATION IN THE TRANSPORT INDUSTRY: A PILOT STUDY

This pilot study aims to investigate levels of Intrapreneurial Orientation (IO) in the South African transport industry from the perspective of employees. It also aims to assess the practicality, reliability, and implementation issues of a newly developed measuring instrument. The study will contribute to understanding the role of intrapreneurship in organizational growth and innovation.

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INTRAPRENEURIAL ORIENTATION IN THE TRANSPORT INDUSTRY: A PILOT STUDY

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  1. INTRAPRENEURIAL ORIENTATION IN THE TRANSPORT INDUSTRY: A PILOT STUDY Dr. C Schachtebeck

  2. INTRODUCTION • Entrepreneurship - an engine for innovation, organisational growth, employment creation • Importance of creating SMEs widely acknowledged • Beneficial nature of entrepreneurial actions by existing employees, a.k.a. corporate entrepreneurship or intrapreneurship, is underappreciated • Current studies connect intrapreneurship to achievement of organisational objectives • Intrapreneurship at the organisational level has been explored in some detail, not at the employee level • Entrepreneurial actions by employees are referred to as an employee’s Intrapreneurial Orientation (IO) • “an individual employee’s predisposition to accept entrepreneurial processes, practices and decision-making characterised by a preference for innovativeness, risk-taking and proactiveness” • Little research conducted in South Africa in this field • Despite the transport industry experiencing high levels of business failures, mainly attributable to a lack of entrepreneurial spirit, no study to date has attempted to investigate the IO in this industry

  3. RESEARCH AIMS • To generate preliminary insights into levels of Intrapreneurial Orientation in the South African transport industry, from the perspective of employees. • Piloting an adapted measuring instrument by assessing practicality, reliability and implementation issues.

  4. LITERARY OVERVIEW – Entrepreneurship • “A person who sees an opportunity in the market, gathers resources and creates and grows a business venture to satisfy these needs. He/she takes the risk of the venture is rewarded with profit if it succeeds” • “A person who seeks to generate economic and social value through the creation or expansion of economic activity, by identifying and exploiting opportunities for new products, processes, markets and for meeting outstanding social and environmental needs” • Contribution to GDP • Majority of SMEs fail within the first two years of operation, with only 25% surviving for a period longer than two years • Entrepreneurial Employee Activity, is amongst the lowest in the world, at 0.7%

  5. LITERARY OVERVIEW – Intrapreneurship • Viewed in same light as entrepreneurship, but performed internally in an organisation • Regarded as a “semi-autonomous group operating within the overarching structure of the parent organisation • Improves performance and enhances competitive positioning • Allows innovation and entrepreneurial practices to be weaved into day-to-day processes, by adopting best practices and improving internal responsiveness • Enhances organisational growth, internal performance, profitability and strategic renewal • Efforts need to be operationalized

  6. Environment • Dynamism • Technological Opportunities • Industry Growth • Demand for New Products • Unfavorability of Change • Competitive Rivalry • Intrapreneurship • New Business Venturing • Innovativeness • Self-renewal • Proactiveness • Performance • Growth • Profitability • Organization • Communication • Formal Controls • Environmental Scanning • Organizational Support • Competition-related Values • Person-related Values

  7. LITERARY OVERVIEW – Intrapreneurial Orientation (IO) • Evolved from the Entrepreneurial Orientation (EO) concept • EO = a strategy-making process that aims to inspire entrepreneurial actions within an organisation, usually in the form of “policies and practices that provide a basis for entrepreneurial decisions and actions” • EO = usually at the organisational-level through policies and SOPs • Characterised by risk-taking, proactiveness, innovativeness, competitive aggressiveness and autonomy • IO = entrepreneurial ambitions of the individual employee • Employees become an integral component of internal innovation efforts • Implementation of IO a fusion between Industrial Psychology and entrepreneurship • Implementation of IO also depends on EO policies and practices • Same 5 components, but important role of ‘management’ added • Required managerial tasks include: goal setting, rewards and innovation systems, Intracapital, effective two-way communication, intrapreneurship championing, staff input, intrapreneurial freedom Source: Gupta & Adil (2014)

  8. METHODOLOGY • Quantitative Research, pilot study, using a newly developed measuring instrument • Main constructs in instrument split into managerial factors and personal factors (risk-taking, proactiveness, innovativeness, personal control, self-esteem and achievement orientation). Also contained eight growth variables • 5 point Likert-scale • Four piloting principles were followed to ensure methodological correctness. 1. stating the purpose of the study clearly, 2. ensuring population representativeness and testing procedural elements, 3. accurate reporting of outcomes, 4. participants drawn from the population under investigation • Random sampling approach in online databases • Questionnaires distributed online and by hand • Analysed in SPSS • Tests for reliability, descriptive statistics (means and standard deviations)

  9. Findings • 30 responses (21 male and 9 female) • Most respondents below the age of 40 and located in Gauteng • Most working in an SME with more than 51 employees • Results w.r.t. piloting principles • Population representativeness met – drawn from target population • Outcomes reported in next slide • Problems encountered with procedural and administrative elements: length of the questionnaire, difficult phrasing of some questions (can be due to adaptation from international instruments). • Administration issues: response rates from online surveys was low, paper-based questionnaire recording higher response rates (due to lack of internet access and low rates of engagement with the instrument)

  10. Findings – reliability

  11. Findings – descriptive statistics

  12. CONCLUSION • Findings of this study revealed moderate to high levels of risk-taking propensity, managerial support, proactiveness, personal control, self-esteem, autonomy and innovativeness. • Can inform decision on future large-scale studies, procedural elements for noting or amendment, as well as confirms usability of the newly developed measuring instrument • Value for academia: initial insight into the IO phenomenon and expands on the existing body of knowledge. The measuring instrument can provide the basis for other studies • In practice, provides insights and instrument can also be utilised in industry to identify and pinpoint areas of concern and improvement • Recommendations • Test on larger sample • Test pre-and post-IO implementation • Conduct studies in other emerging markets • Make changes to management of employees and IO efforts/implementation

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