Improving Business Practices and the Boundary of the Entrepreneur

Many small firms lack the finance and marketing skills needed for firm growth. The standard approach in many business support programs is to attempt to train the entrepreneur to develop these skills, through classroom-based training or personalized consulting. However, rather than requiring the entrepreneur to be a jack-of-all-trades, an alternative is to move beyond the boundary of the entrepreneur and link firms to these skills in a marketplace through insourcing workers with functional expertise or outsourcing tasks to professional specialists. A randomized experiment in Nigeria tests the relative effectiveness of these four different approaches to improving business practices. Insourcing and outsourcing both dominate business training; and do at least as well as business consulting at one-half of the cost. Moving beyond the entrepreneurial boundary enables firms to use higher quality digital marketing practices, innovate more, and achieve greater sales and profits growth over a two-year horizon.

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Anderson, Stephen J., McKenzie, David
Format: Working Paper biblioteca
Language:English
Published: World Bank, Washington, DC 2020-12
Subjects:BUSINESS SUPPORT, BUSINESS PRACTICE, FIRM GROWTH, ENTREPRENEURSHIP, OUTSOURCING, INSOURCING, BUSINESS SERVICES MARKET,
Online Access:http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/377351608212969114/Improving-Business-Practices-and-the-Boundary-of-the-Entrepreneur-A-Randomized-Experiment-Comparing-Training-Consulting-Insourcing-and-Outsourcing
https://hdl.handle.net/10986/34979
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spelling dig-okr-10986349792024-07-28T05:57:24Z Improving Business Practices and the Boundary of the Entrepreneur A Randomized Experiment Comparing Training, Consulting, Insourcing and Outsourcing Anderson, Stephen J. McKenzie, David BUSINESS SUPPORT BUSINESS PRACTICE FIRM GROWTH ENTREPRENEURSHIP OUTSOURCING INSOURCING BUSINESS SERVICES MARKET Many small firms lack the finance and marketing skills needed for firm growth. The standard approach in many business support programs is to attempt to train the entrepreneur to develop these skills, through classroom-based training or personalized consulting. However, rather than requiring the entrepreneur to be a jack-of-all-trades, an alternative is to move beyond the boundary of the entrepreneur and link firms to these skills in a marketplace through insourcing workers with functional expertise or outsourcing tasks to professional specialists. A randomized experiment in Nigeria tests the relative effectiveness of these four different approaches to improving business practices. Insourcing and outsourcing both dominate business training; and do at least as well as business consulting at one-half of the cost. Moving beyond the entrepreneurial boundary enables firms to use higher quality digital marketing practices, innovate more, and achieve greater sales and profits growth over a two-year horizon. 2021-01-07T14:25:40Z 2021-01-07T14:25:40Z 2020-12 Working Paper Document de travail Documento de trabajo http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/377351608212969114/Improving-Business-Practices-and-the-Boundary-of-the-Entrepreneur-A-Randomized-Experiment-Comparing-Training-Consulting-Insourcing-and-Outsourcing https://hdl.handle.net/10986/34979 English Policy Research Working Paper;No. 9502 CC BY 3.0 IGO http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/igo World Bank application/pdf text/plain World Bank, Washington, DC
institution Banco Mundial
collection DSpace
country Estados Unidos
countrycode US
component Bibliográfico
access En linea
databasecode dig-okr
tag biblioteca
region America del Norte
libraryname Biblioteca del Banco Mundial
language English
topic BUSINESS SUPPORT
BUSINESS PRACTICE
FIRM GROWTH
ENTREPRENEURSHIP
OUTSOURCING
INSOURCING
BUSINESS SERVICES MARKET
BUSINESS SUPPORT
BUSINESS PRACTICE
FIRM GROWTH
ENTREPRENEURSHIP
OUTSOURCING
INSOURCING
BUSINESS SERVICES MARKET
spellingShingle BUSINESS SUPPORT
BUSINESS PRACTICE
FIRM GROWTH
ENTREPRENEURSHIP
OUTSOURCING
INSOURCING
BUSINESS SERVICES MARKET
BUSINESS SUPPORT
BUSINESS PRACTICE
FIRM GROWTH
ENTREPRENEURSHIP
OUTSOURCING
INSOURCING
BUSINESS SERVICES MARKET
Anderson, Stephen J.
McKenzie, David
Improving Business Practices and the Boundary of the Entrepreneur
description Many small firms lack the finance and marketing skills needed for firm growth. The standard approach in many business support programs is to attempt to train the entrepreneur to develop these skills, through classroom-based training or personalized consulting. However, rather than requiring the entrepreneur to be a jack-of-all-trades, an alternative is to move beyond the boundary of the entrepreneur and link firms to these skills in a marketplace through insourcing workers with functional expertise or outsourcing tasks to professional specialists. A randomized experiment in Nigeria tests the relative effectiveness of these four different approaches to improving business practices. Insourcing and outsourcing both dominate business training; and do at least as well as business consulting at one-half of the cost. Moving beyond the entrepreneurial boundary enables firms to use higher quality digital marketing practices, innovate more, and achieve greater sales and profits growth over a two-year horizon.
format Working Paper
topic_facet BUSINESS SUPPORT
BUSINESS PRACTICE
FIRM GROWTH
ENTREPRENEURSHIP
OUTSOURCING
INSOURCING
BUSINESS SERVICES MARKET
author Anderson, Stephen J.
McKenzie, David
author_facet Anderson, Stephen J.
McKenzie, David
author_sort Anderson, Stephen J.
title Improving Business Practices and the Boundary of the Entrepreneur
title_short Improving Business Practices and the Boundary of the Entrepreneur
title_full Improving Business Practices and the Boundary of the Entrepreneur
title_fullStr Improving Business Practices and the Boundary of the Entrepreneur
title_full_unstemmed Improving Business Practices and the Boundary of the Entrepreneur
title_sort improving business practices and the boundary of the entrepreneur
publisher World Bank, Washington, DC
publishDate 2020-12
url http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/377351608212969114/Improving-Business-Practices-and-the-Boundary-of-the-Entrepreneur-A-Randomized-Experiment-Comparing-Training-Consulting-Insourcing-and-Outsourcing
https://hdl.handle.net/10986/34979
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