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Wednesday, July 07, 2010

SBANC Newsletter - July 6, 2010

 


SBANC Newsletter


July 6, 2010


Issue 624 - 2010


QUOTE

"The future belongs to those who believe in the beauty of their dreams."

-Eleanor Roosevelt

FEATURE PAPER


How Do Emotions Impact the Opportunity Recognition Process?

The following paper was written by Malavika Sundararajan from North Carolina Central University. It was presented at the 2009 Small Business Institute Conference.

Abrstract

To understand if emotions help entrepreneurs recognize better opportunities, we extend the entrepreneurship literature by incorporating current psychology and neuroscience theories regarding emotions to understand how four types of emotional responses interact with entrepreneurial cognitive factors to impact the Opportunity Recognition (OR) process. The OR process itself is said to be comprised of stages like preparation, incubation, evaluation, insight, and elaboration. Among these stages the creation of ventures only follows a successful recognition of an opportunity (evaluation) and decision to develop the opportunity (elaboration). Using arguments derived from the entrepreneurship literature, cognitive psychology, and emotions research, this paper specifically depicts the role of emotions and its interaction with self-efficacy, prior knowledge and experience in the above two main stages of the OR process. We conclude with a model and associated propositions that show how the four types of emotional responses impact the two identified OR stages.

Introduction

In order to create a new venture the opportunity has to be discovered and the entrepreneur has to make a choice whether to exploit it or not (Shane and Venkatraman, 2000). While the entrepreneurial process begins with intent to start a new business (Krueger and Brazeal, 1994; Krueger, 1993), and later depends on organizing skills, it is stated, that the crux of the entrepreneurial process is the entrepreneur's opportunity recognition ability and decision-making orientation, and that it is these factors that differentiate entrepreneurs from non-entrepreneurs (Venkataraman, 1997).

The question then arises, can we categorically say that an individual with high entrepreneurial self-efficacy and prior knowledge and experience will be better at recognizing business opportunities and will decide to develop these business opportunities into new ventures? We say, not really. This is because studies by Hills (1999) indicate that entrepreneurs often talk about the influence of gut feeling and how it ultimately leads them to take decisions about developing opportunities. Further, Shepherd and Detienne (2007) demonstrate that while prior knowledge and experience are important for opportunity recognition, the decision to develop the opportunity is impacted by the feedback about the potential or lack of financial reward of the business opportunity. They also add that prior knowledge and experience can sometimes create mental ruts and thus make it more difficult for entrepreneurs to recognize innovative opportunities. The above findings contradict previous empirical findings (Shane, 2000) about prior knowledge and experience being the only primary antecedents to an entrepreneur's opportunity recognition process. Evidence for the role of emotions in OR is also suggested by Cardon, Zeitsma, Saparito, Matherne, Davis (2005), who talk about the entrepreneur's passion and its impact on the entrepreneurial process. So, the OR process which includes motivation to discover opportunities, and depends on whether the entrepreneur likes the idea or not, or whether he or she wants to go ahead with it, suggests that entrepreneurship is really a recurring pattern of both thoughts and feelings that shape entrepreneurial reality and hence action and value creation (Karp, 2006).

In short to answer our question above, "Can we definitely say that an individual with certain cognitive factors will always recognize opportunities better than other without those cognitive factors?" is "NO". The reason as seen above is because there seems to be an emotional component that provides evaluative information and supplies energy for motivational behavior in the entrepreneur (Ford, 1999) that can change the impact of cognitive factors on the OR process (Baron, 2008; Shepherd and Detienne, 2007). All the above studies thus lead to a glaring gap in the OR literature and that is, the development of an OR model that includes the feelings/emotions experienced by the entrepreneur, when going through the opportunity recognition process. The description of this study thus begins with a cognitive perspective of the OR process and how emotions play a role in two of the key stages of the OR process. After this review, we put forth a model and propositions about how emotions and cognitive factors together and separately impact the evaluation and elaboration stages of opportunity recognition.



(Read Entire Paper)

TIP OF THE WEEK


Social Networking

Facebook

Facebook is an international social marketing technique originally adopted by teens to get to know one another. Using the Internet, Facebook provides a venue for sharing photos, information, news, and sales; it allows marketers to have an interactive Web presence with their existing clientele, as well as to encourage prospective customers to try their products. Consumers are encouraged to become "fans," post messages, and encourage their friends to become a friend of the fashion site. Nordstrom, Versace Couture, Chanel, and Saks Fifth Avenue use Facebook as a fashion marketing tool. It is an inexpensive, targeted, and highly effective method for reaching their primary target market.

Annabelle LaRoque"s private brand, LaRoque, has become extremely successful since its inception in 2005. In 2009, more than 1,000 custom-made designs were sold. What is so amazing about this figure is that the LaRoque brand is marketed solely by flyers, Facebook, and word of mouth. LaRoque says that Facebook has become the best marketing effort for her fashion house. Every design is featured on Facebook. The company receives at least five new orders through this medium every week. LaRoque and her customers e-mail each other, talk about fashions, and discuss new fabrics, styles, and designs - all through Facebook. Customers tell her when they are on their way to her store. Facebook "is amazing for my business," she says. "I change my profile picture every day. My picture is always one of my garments. I always tell people what I am doing at the store. Facebook provides a social relationship with my customers."

One of LaRoque's Facebook marketing efforts is the Rainy Day Sale. Any day it rains, the store has a 15-percent-off sale. Customers will log on to Facebook and e-mail Annabelle; they give her the weather forecast and a reminder that they will be in the store the next day. This marketing promotion instills loyal customer behavior and encourages the target market to continually look on Facebook for new ideas and additional contact with the owner, thereby instilling a sense of friendship.

Fashion marketers must always evaluate the success rate of any advertising strategy. As advertising dollars decrease, it is even more important to verify that every advertising strategy reaches its intended audience and that they retain the information. Retention is "a form of competitive advertising calculated to keep a product, services, industry, or view point in the public eye" (Ostrow & Smith, 1988 p. 207). Research on mobile advertising reveals that 40 percent of viewers recall mobile advertising. This recall level is very important in product advertising and encouraging purchase behavior (Ankeny, 2008).

Youtube

YouTube is a social marketing medium whereby videos, television commercials, and photos are posted on the Internet. Average YouTube viewers are 44 percent female and 56 percent male, between the ages of 12 to 17. The popularity of YouTube is widespread. Each month, more than 2.5 billion videos are watched (Woog, 2009). Its viewing frequency makes YouTube and excellent tool for the fashion marketing industry, and yet, despite the enormous number of consumers looking on YouTube on a daily basis, it would be a mistake to use this tool as your primary fashion marketing effort. And integrated fashion marketing effort remains vital to promote merchandise. Integrated efforts include a variety of marketing efforts that repeatedly demonstrate the fashion's benefits to consumers.

YouTube began as a social marketing tool among the younger target market. This marketing media is now used by a wide range of fashion companies. Companies are able to reach their stakeholder by posting television advertisements and fashion show. Designers use YouTube to continually build brand loyalty, market awareness, and product knowledge.

Fashion Marketing: Theory, Principles, and Practice
Mariaane C. Bickle
Pages 86-87
Fairchild Books
Copyright 2011

ANNOUNCEMENTS


American Institute for Higher Education Conference

The American Institute for Higher Education invites you to join them for the Fall 2010 American Institute of Higher Education - The 5th International Conference, to be held September 29 - October 1, 2010, in Orlando, FL. The conference will be located in Rosen Center Hotel (special rates for this conference). The deadline for submissions has been extended to July 15, 2010. For More Information,Click Here

2011 Small Business Institute Conference Submissions

The site for the 2011 Small Business Institute® Conference is now available for conference submissions. The direct link to submit a paper, workshop or best practice is as follows:Click HereFor more information about the 2011 SBI Conference, including author instructions and submission guidelines, please visit the conference website:Click Here

Allied Academies Call for the 2010 Summer International Internet Conference

The Allied Academies Summer 2010 international Internet Conference will be held July 19 through July 30, 2010. Conference Submissions and registration materials are due by July 6. Base registration, on or before July 5, is $250, late registration after that date will be $300. For More Information,Click Here

AACSB Annual Accreditation Conference

Make room on your calenders for the Annual Accreditation Conference. The conference will take place in Houston, Texas September 26-28, 2010. This conference is for deans, associate deans, department chairs, and faculty. Register by August 15, 2010 and save 200 USD off the on-site registration fee. For More Information,Click Here

ASC 21st Annual Conference

Please join the American Society for Competitiveness October 28-30, 2010 for their 21st Annual Conference in the Washington, D.C. area. This conference provides an excellent opportunity to interact with scholars, business leaders, and government leaders from all over the world, discuss research findings and current practices pertaining to the various facets and sources of competitiveness to survive and succeed in today's global marketplace, present your paper in a very congenial and professional conference environment, and publish your article in peer-reviewed Cabell's journals. For More Information,Click Here

NCIIA 15th Annual Conference

We invite you to attend the NCIIA 15th Annual Conference in Washington, D.C. March 24-26, 2011. NCIIA's Open is the premier conference for faculty and students involved in technology innovation and entrepreneurship in higher education. Explore the science, business and practice of catalyzing innovation in higher education. You'll have the opportunity to be part of the foremost community of thought leaders in these fields, take away tangible learnings from workshops taught by leading faculty innovators, make connections that will advance your work, see breakthrough technologies at our annual showcase of student innovations at the Smithsonian National Museum of American History, and experience Washington, D.C.. For More Information,Click Here

2011 Small Business Institute® Annual Conference

The Small Business Institute invites you to attend their 2011 annual conference which will be held in Bonita Springs, Florida. The conference will take place February 17-19, 2011. The deadline for paper submissions is September 17, 2010. Conference tracks include accounting and finance, ethics and environmental responsibility, experiential learning, family business, global entrepreneurship, marketing social entrepreneurship, small business, and women & minority business. For More Information,Click Here

2010 ASBE Call for Papers

The Association for Small Business and Entrepreneurship (ASBE) invites you to submit competitive papers, cases, and workshop proposals for our Fall Conference at the Stockyards Hotel located in the National Historic District in Fort Worth, Texas. The conference will take place October 6-8, 2010. The deadline for submissions is August 1st, 2010. For More Information,Click Here

SBI Journal - Request for Papers And Reviewers

The Small Business Institute is now requesting papers and reviewers for the fifth volume of the Small Business Institute Journal. If you are interested in submitting a paper please visithttp://www.sbaer.uca.edu/sbij/about.phpto see the guidelines and submission procedure. If you are interested in becoming a reviewer or would like more information please email us atsbij@uca.edu.

International Enterprise Promotion Convention: Call For Speakers 2010

Do you see Enterprise as a transformational force for people and communities? Do you support Enterprise Promotion, as a practitioner, funder or policymaker? Are you proud of your own achievements? Do you want to share your successes? Would you like to learn from the experience of colleagues around the World? If you can answer YES to even one of these questions, you should come and speak at IEPC 2010, in Harrogate, North Yorkshire from 8-10 November 2010.. For More Information,Click Here

Student Case Writing Competition

The Baylor University Entrepreneurship Program and USASBE are jointly sponsoring a student case writing competition in conjunction with USASBE's annual meetings beginning in 2011 at USASBE's 25th Annual Conference to be held January 13-16, 2011 in Hilton Head, South Carolina. This is an innovative international event that supports and encourages undergraduate and graduate students who wish to engage in case research and case writing. Submitted cases are suitable if they advance the field of entrepreneurship, broadly defined, and contribute to an understanding of entrepreneurial phenomena. For more information,Click Here

CONFERENCES

ISM
Who:Institute for Supply Management
What:3rd Annual ISM Sustainability and Social Responsibility Conference
Where:Lake Buena Vista, FL
When:Nov 4-5, 2010
Find out more
FFI
Who:Family Firm Institute
What:FFI Annual Conference: Family Enterprise
Where:Chicago, IL
When:Oct 13-16, 2010
Find out more
AACSB
Who:Association to Advance Collegiate Schools of Business
What:Annual Accreditation Conference
Where:Houston, Texas
When:Sep 26-28, 2010
Find out more
AMA
Who:American Marketing Association
What:2010 Advanced Research Techniques Forum
Where:San Francisco, California
When:Oct 28-30, 2010
Find out more
UIC
Who:University of Illinois-Chicago
What:Third Subsistence Marketplace Conference
Where:Chicago, Illinois
When:Jul 9th - 11th, 2010
Find out more

CALLS FOR PAPERS

AIHE
Who:American Institute for Higher Education
What:Amerian Institute for Higher Education Conference
Where:Orlando, FL
When:Sep 29, 2010 - Oct 1, 2010
Submission Deadline:Jul 15, 2010
Find out more
AA
Who:Allied Acedemics
What:Allied Academies Call for the 2010 International Conference
Where:Las Vegas, NV
When:Oct 13-15, 2010
Submission Deadline:Sep 14, 2010
Find out more
AA
Who:Allied Acedemics
What:Allied Academies Call for the 2010 Summer International Conference
Where:New Orleans, LA
When:Jul 19-30, 2010
Submission Deadline:Jul 6, 2010
Find out more
ABRI
Who:Academic and Business Research Institute
What:2010 Academic and Business Research Institute Conference
Where:Orlando, FL
When:Oct 23-25, 2010
Submission Deadline:Aug 31, 2010
Find out more
AGB
Who:Association for Global Business
What:International Applied Business Research Conference
Where:New Orleans, Louisiana
When:Mar 14-16, 2011
Submission Deadline:Mar 1, 2011
Find out more
ASC
Who:American Society for Competitiveness
What:21st Annual Conference
Where:Washington, D.C. area
When:Oct 28-30, 2010
Submission Deadline:Jul 16, 2010
Find out more
NCIIA
Who:National Collegiate Inventors and Innovators Alliance
What:NCIIA 15th Annual Conference
Where:Washington, D.C.
When:Mar 24-26, 2011
Submission Deadline:Jun 21, 2010
Find out more
SBI
Who:Small Business Institute
What:2011 Small Business Institute® Annual Conference
Where:Bonita Springs, FL
When:Feb 17-19, 2011
Submission Deadline:Sep 17, 2010
Find out more
ASBE
Who:Association for Small Business and Entrepreneurship
What:2010 ASBE Call for Papers
Where:Fort Worth, Texas
When:Oct 6-8, 2010
Submission Deadline:Aug 1st, 2010
Find out more
ASBBS
Who:American Society of Business and Behavioral Sciences
What:13th Annual International Conference of the American Society of Business and Behavioral Sciences
Where:Frankfurt, Germany
When:Aug 6th - 8th, 2010
Submission Deadline:Jul 10th, 2010
Find out more
AMA
Who:Atlantic Marketing Association
What:2010 Annual Conference
Where:Orlando, Florida
When:Sep 29th - Oct 2nd, 2010
Submission Deadline:May 15th, 2010
Find out more
NACCE
Who:National Association for Community College Entrepreneurship
What:NACCE 8th Annual Conference
Where:Orlando, FL
When:Oct 10th - 13th, 2010
Submission Deadline:Apr 28th, 2010
Find out more
IABE
Who:International Academy of Business and Economics
What:IABE-2010 Las Vegas Annual Conference
Where:Las Vegas, Nevada
When:Oct 17th - 20th, 2010
Submission Deadline:May 31st, 2010
Find out more


SBANC STAFF

Main Office Phone: (501) 450-5300

Don B. Bradley III, Executive Director of SBANC & Professor of Marketing - Direct Phone: (501) 450-5345

Meagan Dukes, Development Intern

Derius Campbell, Development Intern

Raven Ambers, Development Intern


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