TY - JOUR
T1 - Developing new opportunities, entrepreneurial skills and product/service creativity
T2 - a ‘Young Enterprise’ (YE) perspective
AU - Fearon, Colm
AU - Furlotti, Marco
AU - van-Vurren, Wim
AU - McLaughlin, Heather
PY - 2019/10/7
Y1 - 2019/10/7
N2 - The purpose of this research is to investigate how Young Enterprise (YE) student entrepreneurs develop new product/service opportunities, learn decision-making skills and achieve a sense of entrepreneurial self-efficacy. From a national survey of YE participants in the Netherlands, entrepreneurial self-efficacy was found to partially mediate relationships between new opportunity recognition belief and two key product/service creativity characteristics, namely: (a) new product/service novelty and; (b) new product/service meaningfulness. The ability of YE entrepreneurs to re-scale their new venture strategies, and/or re-adapt products and services were also important real options (or strategic decision-making) moderators in a new social cognitive learning framework. This article contributes to a fresh understanding of the opportunity recognition belief and entrepreneurial decision skills literatures from a social cognitive theoretical perspective. This research also provides much needed empirical support for European YE policy-makers, demonstrating that team-based mini-enterprise education initiatives really do benefit entrepreneurial learners!
AB - The purpose of this research is to investigate how Young Enterprise (YE) student entrepreneurs develop new product/service opportunities, learn decision-making skills and achieve a sense of entrepreneurial self-efficacy. From a national survey of YE participants in the Netherlands, entrepreneurial self-efficacy was found to partially mediate relationships between new opportunity recognition belief and two key product/service creativity characteristics, namely: (a) new product/service novelty and; (b) new product/service meaningfulness. The ability of YE entrepreneurs to re-scale their new venture strategies, and/or re-adapt products and services were also important real options (or strategic decision-making) moderators in a new social cognitive learning framework. This article contributes to a fresh understanding of the opportunity recognition belief and entrepreneurial decision skills literatures from a social cognitive theoretical perspective. This research also provides much needed empirical support for European YE policy-makers, demonstrating that team-based mini-enterprise education initiatives really do benefit entrepreneurial learners!
KW - Young Enterprise (YE)
KW - opportunity recognition belief
KW - entrepreneurial self- efficacy
KW - social cognitive theory
KW - real options
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=85074009888&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1080/03075079.2019.1672643
DO - 10.1080/03075079.2019.1672643
M3 - Article
SN - 0307-5079
SP - 1
EP - 18
JO - Studies in Higher Education
JF - Studies in Higher Education
ER -