The bidirectional relationship between entrepreneurial intention and entrepreneurial competencies for nascent and existing entrepreneurs

South African Journal of Economic and Management Sciences

 
 
Field Value
 
Title The bidirectional relationship between entrepreneurial intention and entrepreneurial competencies for nascent and existing entrepreneurs
 
Creator Botha, Melodi Taljaard, Amorie
 
Subject entrepreneurship Entrepreneurial intention; individual entrepreneurial competencies; bidirectional relationship; self-efficacy; nascent and existing entrepreneurs.
Description Background: Although many scholars focus their research efforts on predicting entrepreneurial intention, these scholars have not determined the bidirectional relationship between entrepreneurial intention and competencies.Aim: This article investigates whether entrepreneurial intention and various individual entrepreneurial competencies influence each other. The human agency and social cognitive theories suggest that these constructs have bidirectional relationships. Furthermore, the direction and strength of these relationships are established.Setting: Results from a sample of 342 nascent and existing entrepreneurs from South Africa are drawn.Method: A quantitative research study is undertaken and structural equation modelling conducted. As far as could be determined, this study is the first to test the model fit between entrepreneurial intention and the individual entrepreneurial competencies in one model.Results: The findings provide evidence of a bidirectional relationship between entrepreneurial intention and various entrepreneurial competencies, and the outcome thereof might lead to an increased business start-up. The strongest positive relationships were observed between entrepreneurial intention and self-efficacy, opportunity recognition, conveying a compelling vision, value creation through innovation (observing customer usage) and perseverance. Previous scholars confirmed that self-efficacy is a strong predictor of entrepreneurial intention. The article found a moderate positive significant bidirectional relationship between entrepreneurial intention and self-efficacy.Conclusion: The findings could assist policy-makers, educators, as well as potential, nascent and start-up entrepreneurs with the understanding that these specific entrepreneurial competencies are necessary for a successful business venture or for moving to the next stage of the venture life cycle. In addition to the previously mentioned practical implications, this study also shows educators, policy-makers and academics that they need to adapt their entrepreneurial training programmes to ensure that self-efficacy and entrepreneurial intention are taught simultaneously as these constructs influence each other.
 
Publisher AOSIS Publishing
 
Contributor None
Date 2019-05-29
 
Type info:eu-repo/semantics/article info:eu-repo/semantics/publishedVersion — Survey; quantitative research
Format text/html application/epub+zip application/xml application/pdf
Identifier 10.4102/sajems.v22i1.2230
 
Source South African Journal of Economic and Management Sciences; Vol 22, No 1 (2019); 12 pages 2222-3436 1015-8812
 
Language eng
 
Relation
The following web links (URLs) may trigger a file download or direct you to an alternative webpage to gain access to a publication file format of the published article:

https://sajems.org/index.php/sajems/article/view/2230/1811 https://sajems.org/index.php/sajems/article/view/2230/1810 https://sajems.org/index.php/sajems/article/view/2230/1812 https://sajems.org/index.php/sajems/article/view/2230/1808
 
Coverage South Africa; mainly Gauteng province 2015-2016 L26
Rights Copyright (c) 2019 Melodi Botha, Amorie Taljaard https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0
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