Identifying Gazelles

We conduct a business plan competition to test whether survey instruments or panel judges are able to identify the fastest growing firms. Participants submitted six- to eight-page business plans and defended them before a three- or four-judge panel. We surveyed applicants shortly after they applied and one and two years after the competition. We use follow-up surveys to construct measures of enterprise growth and baseline surveys and panel scores to construct measures of enterprise growth potential. We find that a measure of ability correlates strongly with future growth, but that the panel scores add to predictive power even after controlling for ability and other survey variables. The survey questions have more power to explain the variance in growth. Participants presenting before the panel were given a chance to win customized management training. Fourteen months after the training, we find no positive effect of the training on growth of the business.

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Fafchamps, Marcel, Woodruff, Christopher
Format: Journal Article biblioteca
Published: Published by Oxford University Press on behalf of the World Bank 2017-10-01
Subjects:BUSINESS PLANS, COMPETITION POLICY, COMPETITIVENESS, ENTERPRISE DEVELOPMENT, ENTERPRISE SURVEYS, PANEL JUDGES, EXPERT PANELS, FIRM PERFORMANCE,
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/10986/31472
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Banco Mundial