Building an Entrepreneurial Organisation
Simon Mosey author Hannah Noke author Paul Kirkham author
Format:Hardback
Publisher:Taylor & Francis Ltd
Published:19th Apr '17
Currently unavailable, and unfortunately no date known when it will be back
This hardback is available in another edition too:
- Paperback£44.99(9781138861138)
Entrepreneurship is often focused on understanding new ventures, but the entrepreneurial flame is required in growing organisations too. This textbook examines how organisations can become more entrepreneurial to achieve sustainable growth.
The authors show how entrepreneurship can be used to address crisis points of growth within small firms and to overcome the limitations of stagnation within large firms. By integrating entrepreneurship and innovation management, the book presents a framework to diagnose entrepreneurial behaviour within existing firms. Drawing upon research and reflecting practice across a range of industries, from football, through Silicon Valley, to the retail sector, it includes insights from leading practitioners.
The authors build an understanding of entrepreneurship in context to provide diagnostic tools to help organisations make entrepreneurship central to their culture. This unique text is therefore useful reading for business students from advanced undergraduate to executive education.
'Developing an entrepreneurial culture is a challenge in any organisation – both large and small. This very readable book contains excellent examples where cultural change has delivered true innovations. I will certainly use some of the described best practice in my own organisation.' - Malcolm Skingle, Director of Academic Liaison, GlaxoSmithKline, UK
'A must read for executive management teams. The entrepreneurial culture advocated in this book is exactly what venture capital and private equity investors look for in high growth organisations.' - Rob Carroll, Founder, Catapult Ventures Group and Vice Chairman, Small Business Charter, UK
ISBN: 9781138861121
Dimensions: unknown
Weight: 145g
138 pages