[youtube=http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=w16tVCpQrAg]
A short video of me outlining some of my thinking about developing an enterprise culture.
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[youtube=http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=w16tVCpQrAg]
A short video of me outlining some of my thinking about developing an enterprise culture.
by admin
Gardening and Hunting are two very different approaches to developing an enterprise culture.
A gardening approach sets out to create jobs and entrepreneurial activity by investing in local people and their talents, cultures, passions and skills. It as an endogenous “arising from within” approach to community and economic development. The starting point for economic gardening says that ‘in this community we have all that we need to build a vibrant and sustainable future’. It may need careful nurturing to help it thrive but the seeds of our future success are already sown.
The key tools of economic gardening include:
This contrasts with economic hunting which sets to create jobs and entrepreneurial activity by attracting investment and employment into a community from outside. The starting point here is one that says ‘our community is deficient. We lack the entrepreneurs to create employment so we have to attract them from elsewhere. Then perhaps some of the entrepreneurial pixie dust will rub of onto local people. And if it doesn’t, well at least we will have attracted entrepreneurs who will provide them with jobs.’ This is an exogeneous approach to community and economic development.
The key tools of economic hunting include:
Historically most of the investment has gone into economic hunting strategies.
There has been a rise in interest (if not yet investment) in economic gardening. I see no fundamental reason why the two can’t co-exist in the same community, but they are not always comfortable bed fellows. Economic hunting usually means changing things to make them convivial to outsiders (better coffee, better carpets and sexy furniture). Economic gardening means making things really convivial to local people; affordable, local and accessible.
Often community based enterprise development programmes struggle to help local people to access the business support infrastructure that was designed as an economic hunting tool. It is not designed to be convivial to local people, but to that special breed of entrepreneur from out of town who will pay £3.40 for a posh coffee and £20 an hour to hire a meeting room. More often than not such facilities fail to win in either of these two market places.
So which tribe do you belong to? The hunters or the gardeners?
What would happen if we took some of the budget for ‘inward investment’ and put it into the hands of ‘community development’?
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I think that enterprise is much more important for our communities than either entrepreneurship or economic development.
Entrepreneurship focuses on encouraging people to move into self-employment or to start, or grow their own business.
Enterprise is about people thinking about their current situation and how it might be improved and developing strategies that will move them towards their preferred future.
By promoting enterprise in this way we will of course encourage entrepreneurship. As people become more enterprising they may, on occasion, need to start a new business to get them from where they are to their preferred future.
However our default setting should be to dissuade people from starting a business. If we can easily put them off, then it is likely that they would not have the necessary perseverance to make the business work. If they are insistent that only by starting a business can they become the kind of person that they wish to be and create the kind of future that they wish to have, then, and only then, should we roll our sleeves up and do all we can to help them succeed in their entrepreneurial venture, safe in the knowledge that they have the determination and persistence that they will require to succeed.
By adopting a premise that we should persuade as many people as possible not to start a business I believe that we can significantly increase the survival rate of those businesses that do start-up. As people in the community begin to see businesses that are both well thought through and successful taking hold, more and more will begin to believe that starting a business is not, almost inevitably, going to end in more debt and misery. Slowly but surely start up rates too will start to climb.
However, even in the most entrepreneurial communities it is likely that fewer than 10 in 100 people of working age are ever likely to start their own business. I would contend that of those hundred people every one of them could benefit from learning how to become more enterprising. That is, how to identify their current situation, how to recognise what an improvement might look like, and to put in place plans and actions to move in that direction.
This is why I think that enterprise is much more important, as a concept or a philosophy, for our communities than entrepreneurship or ‘economic development’. If we wish to have more entrepreneurial communities then we must start by first making them more enterprising.
In The Alternative LEP we will endeavour to remember that the E stands for Enterprise, not Entrepreneurial or Economic.
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Not Economic.
Not Entrepreneurial.
ENTERPRISE.
If LEPs really focused on encouraging enterprise rather than economic growth how would things change?
If LEPs looked at how they create a culture where enterprise (the ability to act boldly in pursuit of progress) was the norm rather than the exception, a mass participation sport, something that was seen as cool and for everyone, not just those smart ‘entrepreneurial types in suits’ what sorts of things would they be doing?
How would our communities change?
What would happen to our economy?
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You will have to click through to watch them on You Tube – but I promise it is worth it!
[youtube=http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=-Ee9mz_P4zo]
[youtube=http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=hCRxzKXypEc]
Thanks to Joe Danzig for pointing me at these…great memories…