Abstract
This paper seeks a good measure of new business performance, and then explains this measure by various dimensions of business strategy. Three criteria are used to create a one dimensional ordinal ranking of high, medium and low performance for new business starts: employment growth; return on capital employed; and labour productivity. It is shown that statistical cluster analysis provides a convincing separation of a sample of new business starts into high, medium and low performance categories, using a minimum distance criterion for clustering. An ordinal logit model (with selection) is then used to explain this performance ranking. The results indicate that many widely discussed features of small business strategy have little, or even negative, impact on performance. Of the numerous aims that owner managers may adopt (survival, growth etc.), only one appears to have a major impact on performance; the pursuit of the highest rate of return on investment. Many entrepreneurial perceptions of their own capabilities appear false or unimportant, with the exception of organisational features and systems.
We’re sorry, something doesn't seem to be working properly.
Please try refreshing the page. If that doesn't work, please contact support so we can address the problem.
References
Ansoff, H. I., 1965, Corporate Strategy: An Analytical Approach to Business Policy for Growth and Expansion, New York: McGraw Hill.
Becker, W. E. and P. E. Kennedy, 1992, ‘A Graphical Exposition of the Ordered Probit’, Econometric Theory 8, 127–131.
Beggs, S. S. Cardell and J. Hausman, 1981, ‘Assessing the Potential Demand for Electric Cars’, Journal of Econometrics 17, 19–20.
Binks, M. and J. Coynes, 1983, The Birth of Enterprise: An Analytical and Empirical Study of the Growth of Small Firms, London: IEA.
Birch, D., 1996, Paper presented to the Jönköping International Business School Conference on ‘Entrepreneurship, SMEs and the Macro Economy’, 13–14 June 1996 (mimeo).
Blanchflower, and A. Oswald, 1990, ‘What Makes an Entrepreneur?’ NBER Working Paper No. 3252.
Daly, M. A. and A. McCann, 1992, ‘How Many Small Firms?’, Employment Gazette 100(2), 47–51.
Everitt, B. S., 1980, Cluster Analysis (2nd Edn), London: Heineman.
Frank, M. Z., 1988, ‘An Intemporal Model of Industrial Exit’, Quarterly Journal of Economics 103, 333–344.
Greene, W. H., 1992, Limdep User's Manual and Reference Guide, Bellport, NY: Econometric Software Inc.
Greene, W. H., 1993, Econometric Analysis (2nd edn), New York: Macmillan.
Hay, D. A. and D. J. Morris, 1991, Industrial Economics and Organization (2nd edn.), Oxford: OUP.
Johnson, G. and K. Scholes, 1993, Exploring Corporate Strategy, Englewood Cliffs, NJ: Prentice-Hall.
Jovanovic, B., 1982, ‘Selection and the Evolution of Industry’, Econometrica 50, 649–670.
Lee, L.-F., 1982, ‘Some Approaches to the Correction of Selectivity Bias’, Review of Economic Studies 49, 355–720.
Lee, L.-F., 1983, ‘Generalized Econometric Models with Selectivity’, Econometrica 51(2), 507–512.
Manly, B. F. J., 1986, Multivariate Statistical Methods: A Primer, London: Chapman and Hall.
Mintzberg, H., 1987, ‘Crafting Strategy’, Harvard Business Review 60, 66–75.
Mintzberg, H., 1994, ‘The Fall and Rise of Strategic Planning’, Harvard Business Review 72, 107–114.
Norusis, M. J., 1994, SPSS Professional Statistics 6.1, Chicago: SPSS Inc.
Reid, G. C., 1987, Theories of Industrial Organization, Oxford: Basil Blackwell.
Reid, G. C., 1991, ‘Staying in Business’, International Journal of Industrial Organization 9, 545–556.
Reid, G. C., 1993, Small Business Enterprise, London: Routledge.
Reid, G. C., 1999a, ‘Capital Structure at Inception and the Short-run Performance of Micro-firms’, Chapter 7 in Z. J. Acs, B. B. Carlsson and C. Karlsson (eds), Entrepreneurship, Small & Medium-Sized Enterprises and the Macroeconomy, Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, pp. 186–205.
Reid, G. C., 1999b, ‘Making Small Firms Work: Policy Dimensions and the Scottish Context’, Chapter 10 in K. Cowling (ed.), Industrial Policy in Europe, London: Routledge, pp. 164–179.
Reid, G. C., L. R. Jacobsen and M. E. Anderson, 1993, Profiles in Small Business: A Competitive Strategy Approach, London: Routledge.
Salavrakos, I. D., 1996, An Economic and Business Strategy Analysis of Joint Ventures Between Greek Enterprises and Enterprises in the Balkan Countries and Russia from the Greek Parent Company Perspective. PhD thesis, University of St Andrews, Scotland.
Smith, J. A., 1997, Small Business Strategy: An Empirical Analysis of the Experience of New Scottish Firms. PhD thesis, University of Abertay Dundee, Scotland.
Smith, J.A., 1998, ‘Strategies for Start-ups’, Long Range Planning 31(6), 857–872.
Storey, D. J., 1994, Understanding the Small Business Sector, London: Routledge.
Ward, J. H., 1963, ‘Hierarchical Grouping to Optimize an Objective Function’, Journal of the American Statistical Association 58, 236–244.
Author information
Authors and Affiliations
Rights and permissions
About this article
Cite this article
Reid, G.C., Smith, J.A. What Makes a New Business Start-Up Successful?. Small Business Economics 14, 165–182 (2000). https://doi.org/10.1023/A:1008168226739
Issue Date:
DOI: https://doi.org/10.1023/A:1008168226739