Entrepreneurs’ endogenous attributes necessary for small enterprise success in Vhembe rural areas, South Africa

Background: Enterprises in South Africa, especially in rural areas, continue to fail, despite the continuous support from government. A key contributing factor is that most enterprises’ support is channelled to exogenous factors without recognising their endogenous predisposition as well. Aim: This...

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Main Authors: Ishmael O. Iwara, Beata M. Kilonzo, Jethro Zuwarimwe, Vhonani O. Netshandama
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: AOSIS 2021-05-01
Series:The Southern African Journal of Entrepreneurship and Small Business Management
Subjects:
Online Access:https://sajesbm.co.za/index.php/sajesbm/article/view/331
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spelling doaj-20d3a4ae68b24d7ab989cdc8293e88992021-06-04T07:12:42ZengAOSISThe Southern African Journal of Entrepreneurship and Small Business Management2522-73432071-31852021-05-01131e1e1210.4102/sajesbm.v13i1.331106Entrepreneurs’ endogenous attributes necessary for small enterprise success in Vhembe rural areas, South AfricaIshmael O. Iwara0Beata M. Kilonzo1Jethro Zuwarimwe2Vhonani O. Netshandama3Institute for Rural Development, Faculty of Agriculture, University of Venda, ThohoyandouInstitute for Rural Development, Faculty of Agriculture, University of Venda, ThohoyandouInstitute for Rural Development, Faculty of Agriculture, University of Venda, ThohoyandouDepartment of Community Engagement Directorate, Faculty of Human and Social Science, University of Venda, ThohoyandouBackground: Enterprises in South Africa, especially in rural areas, continue to fail, despite the continuous support from government. A key contributing factor is that most enterprises’ support is channelled to exogenous factors without recognising their endogenous predisposition as well. Aim: This article isolated entrepreneurs’ endogenous attributes which if complemented with exogenous support could spur enterprise success. Setting: This study focussed on addressing enterprise failure in rural areas of Vhembe; however, the findings can be applied in other areas in South Africa and beyond. Methods: A sample of 81 participants was drawn using the snowball sampling technique. The qualitative data gathered from this sample using a semi-structured questionnaire were then analysed through Atlas-ti v8 from which 49 items were isolated. This informed a quantitative component that entailed the development of a 5-point Likert scale for data collection in the second phase of the study, where, subsequently, 280 respondents were engaged. The Principal Component Analysis was used to reduce the data dimension of 49 items to five principal components which accounted for 68.794% of the total variance. Results: The five principal components isolated were bridging-networks (38.044), self-belief (15.802), risk-awareness (6.144), resilience (4.532) and non-conforming (4.271). Further analysis was performed on data collected from 83 participants who met the 50% performance threshold using the linear regression. Bridging-network is the most important endogenous success factor in the study area, followed by nonnon-conformist risk-awareness, resilience and self-belief. Conclusion: Results conform to grassroots realities, thus, a framework anchored on this was developed to support enterprises grassroots enterprises.https://sajesbm.co.za/index.php/sajesbm/article/view/331endogenous attributesenterprise failurerural areasuccess factorsgrassroots realities.
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Ishmael O. Iwara
Beata M. Kilonzo
Jethro Zuwarimwe
Vhonani O. Netshandama
spellingShingle Ishmael O. Iwara
Beata M. Kilonzo
Jethro Zuwarimwe
Vhonani O. Netshandama
Entrepreneurs’ endogenous attributes necessary for small enterprise success in Vhembe rural areas, South Africa
The Southern African Journal of Entrepreneurship and Small Business Management
endogenous attributes
enterprise failure
rural area
success factors
grassroots realities.
author_facet Ishmael O. Iwara
Beata M. Kilonzo
Jethro Zuwarimwe
Vhonani O. Netshandama
author_sort Ishmael O. Iwara
title Entrepreneurs’ endogenous attributes necessary for small enterprise success in Vhembe rural areas, South Africa
title_short Entrepreneurs’ endogenous attributes necessary for small enterprise success in Vhembe rural areas, South Africa
title_full Entrepreneurs’ endogenous attributes necessary for small enterprise success in Vhembe rural areas, South Africa
title_fullStr Entrepreneurs’ endogenous attributes necessary for small enterprise success in Vhembe rural areas, South Africa
title_full_unstemmed Entrepreneurs’ endogenous attributes necessary for small enterprise success in Vhembe rural areas, South Africa
title_sort entrepreneurs’ endogenous attributes necessary for small enterprise success in vhembe rural areas, south africa
publisher AOSIS
series The Southern African Journal of Entrepreneurship and Small Business Management
issn 2522-7343
2071-3185
publishDate 2021-05-01
description Background: Enterprises in South Africa, especially in rural areas, continue to fail, despite the continuous support from government. A key contributing factor is that most enterprises’ support is channelled to exogenous factors without recognising their endogenous predisposition as well. Aim: This article isolated entrepreneurs’ endogenous attributes which if complemented with exogenous support could spur enterprise success. Setting: This study focussed on addressing enterprise failure in rural areas of Vhembe; however, the findings can be applied in other areas in South Africa and beyond. Methods: A sample of 81 participants was drawn using the snowball sampling technique. The qualitative data gathered from this sample using a semi-structured questionnaire were then analysed through Atlas-ti v8 from which 49 items were isolated. This informed a quantitative component that entailed the development of a 5-point Likert scale for data collection in the second phase of the study, where, subsequently, 280 respondents were engaged. The Principal Component Analysis was used to reduce the data dimension of 49 items to five principal components which accounted for 68.794% of the total variance. Results: The five principal components isolated were bridging-networks (38.044), self-belief (15.802), risk-awareness (6.144), resilience (4.532) and non-conforming (4.271). Further analysis was performed on data collected from 83 participants who met the 50% performance threshold using the linear regression. Bridging-network is the most important endogenous success factor in the study area, followed by nonnon-conformist risk-awareness, resilience and self-belief. Conclusion: Results conform to grassroots realities, thus, a framework anchored on this was developed to support enterprises grassroots enterprises.
topic endogenous attributes
enterprise failure
rural area
success factors
grassroots realities.
url https://sajesbm.co.za/index.php/sajesbm/article/view/331
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