Das “Babson Colledge”:http://www3.babson.edu/ hat die “Zusammenfassung des Global Entrepreneurship Monitor 2005″:http://www3.babson.edu/Newsroom/Releases/globalgem11206release.cfm veröffentlicht. Eine weitere spannende Studie zu weltweiten Innovationsaktivitäten und deren Erfolgsfaktoren.
Einige Erkenntnisse (im Original und auf Englisch – der Uhrzeit geschuldet):
* ‘Innovative’ entrepreneurs drive economic growth.
* Middle income countries tend to start more businesses than high income countries.
* Success is best among ‘opportunity-driven entrepreneurs’, who have lower failure rates among early-stage businesses.
* Early-stage businesses catch young entrepreneurs (25-34 years old) while more mature adults (45-54) own and operate established ventures.
* The gender gap exists for both early-stage and established businesses, and in both country clusters.
* Open global markets.
* High-income countries need policies to help businesses survive and to develop technological innovation and growth through exports.
* Middle-income countries moving from ‘technology adopting’ to ‘technology creating’ also need to foster an entrepreneurial culture and business sector.
* Low-income countries need policies that insure “fundamental institutional conditions” to develop active markets.
Die Erkenntnisse ähneln denen des European Innovation Scoreboard 2005 (Blog-Eintrag “hier”:http://www.work-innovation.de/blog/2006/01/13/innovation-in-europa/). Nehmen wir also mal an, dass etwas dran ist. Und forcieren wir die sinnvollen Schritte in den Unternehmen.
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