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E-book: Comparative Entrepreneurship: The UK, Japan, and the Shadow of Silicon Valley [Oxford Scholarship Online E-books]

(Professor and Associate Dean (International), University of Auckland Business School)
  • Format: 224 pages
  • Pub. Date: 12-Mar-2009
  • Publisher: Oxford University Press
  • ISBN-13: 9780199563661
  • Oxford Scholarship Online E-books
  • Price currently not known
  • Format: 224 pages
  • Pub. Date: 12-Mar-2009
  • Publisher: Oxford University Press
  • ISBN-13: 9780199563661
Are entrepreneurs essentially the same everywhere? Are the processes of entrepreneurship similar? Or are they shaped by their environments? If so, how?

We know a lot about national differences in management practices, corporate governance, and even innovation systems, but we know surprisingly little about national differences in entrepreneurship. Comparative Entrepreneurship compares processes of entrepreneurship in the UK and Japan, countries associated with liberal market economies and coordinated market economies respectively.

Focusing on high tech manufacturing it identifies basic similarities and key differences. Similarities are found in approaches to opportunity and business creation, which are strikingly different from recent policy emphases in the UK and Japan, inspired by Silicon Valley (hence the entrepreneurs live in 'the shadow of Silicon Valley'). Differences - in the backgrounds of entrepreneurs, founding teams, attitudes to growth and risk, innovation, competitive advantages, HRM emphases, and inter-firm collaborations - are summed up by the concepts of 'project entrepreneurship' and 'lifework entrepreneurship.' These are closely related to the respective environments, especially the nature of markets in both countries. They also embody different time orientations, with implications for financing and governance.



This study brings insights from entrepreneurship to comparative institutions and varieties of capitalism, and vice versa, and draws on two surveys and 25 case interviews in both the UK and Japan. It concludes with a discussion of dilemmas for entrepreneurship policy in the UK, Japan, and other countries.
Figures and Tables
vi
Contributors viii
Acknowledgments ix
Introduction 1(6)
Comparative Entrepreneurship
7(20)
Opportunity and Business Creation
27(24)
Ties and Teams in Start-up
51(14)
Entrepreneurial Orientations and Business Objectives
65(22)
Competitive Orientations and Growth Limitations
87(15)
HRM, Leadership, and Culture
102(17)
Interfirm Collaboration
119(13)
Entrepreneurship and Markets
132(17)
Entrepreneurship, Rationality, and Time
149(18)
Appendix 1 Design, Methods, Analysis, and Interpretation: An Act of Sensemaking 167(11)
Appendix 2 Factor Analysis Tables 178(8)
References 186(17)
Index 203
D. Hugh Whittaker is Professor and Associate Dean (International) of the University of Auckland Business School. He has written extensively on Japanese and comparative management and innovation, most recently The New Community Firm: Employment, Governance and Management Reform in Japan (Cambridge University Press, 2005, with T. Inagami) and Recovering From Success: Innovation and Technology Management in Japan (Oxford University Press, 2006, co-edited with R. E. Cole).