Assessing intrapreneurship in a pharmaceutical manufacturing firm in the Eastern Cape

Continuous innovation in terms of products, processes, administration and structures is needed to compete effectively in the global markets of the 21st century. This continuous innovation within an existing firm can be described in terms of intrapreneurship. The extent to which intrapreneurship is p...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Allen, Kevin Ian
Format: Others
Language:English
Published: Nelson Mandela Metropolitan University 2014
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/10948/d1019758
id ndltd-netd.ac.za-oai-union.ndltd.org-nmmu-vital-8828
record_format oai_dc
spelling ndltd-netd.ac.za-oai-union.ndltd.org-nmmu-vital-88282017-12-21T04:22:39ZAssessing intrapreneurship in a pharmaceutical manufacturing firm in the Eastern CapeAllen, Kevin IanContinuous innovation in terms of products, processes, administration and structures is needed to compete effectively in the global markets of the 21st century. This continuous innovation within an existing firm can be described in terms of intrapreneurship. The extent to which intrapreneurship is practiced within a Pharmaceutical firm (Firm A) within the Eastern Cape is the main question addressed in the research conducted. The research conducted involved the collection of two data sets. The first set looked at the perceived intrapreneurial characteristics of employees and their superiors. The second data set involved an assessment of 13 constructs (Strong customer orientation; Entrepreneurial leadership; Resource availability and accessibility; Innovation and creativity / new ideas encouraged; Empowered teams / multi-disciplined teamwork and diversity; Tolerance for risk, mistakes and failure; Sponsors (champions); Discretionary time and work; Appropriate rewards and reinforcement; Flat organisational structure with open communication and strong sense of belonging; Vision and strategic intent; Continuous- and cross-functional learning; Management support) measuring the intrapreneurial climate within the firm. Research took place within Firm A via a survey questionnaire that measured intrapreneurial characteristics using a 20 question self and superior assessment. The intrapreneurial climate survey consisted of 68 statements, which were assessed using a likert scale. A census was used given that the firm size was 450 employees. Results for the intrapreneurial climate gave Cronbach alpha values of greater than 0.6 for all of the constructs thus proving reliability of the data. With regard to the intrapreneurial characteristics results indicated that superiors were perceived to have weak characteristics as opposed to self-assessments which indicated strong characteristics. Three intrapreneurial climate constructs (Tolerance for risk, mistakes and failure; Appropriate rewards and reinforcement and Flat organisational structure) had mean results between 1.5 and 2.5 indicating respondents are not satisfied and attention needs to be given to improvement initiatives. The remaining ten constructs had mean scores between 2.5 and 3.5 indicating that respondents are neutral to the statement, indicating that improvement is recommended. Inferential statistics did not find significant differences in all constructs for any of the demographic variables tested. From the research it was concluded that the level of intrapreneurship within firm A is poor and recommendations are given. Further research within the firm is recommended.Nelson Mandela Metropolitan UniversityFaculty of Business and Economic Sciences2014ThesisMastersMBAix, 109 leavespdfvital:8828http://hdl.handle.net/10948/d1019758EnglishNelson Mandela Metropolitan University
collection NDLTD
language English
format Others
sources NDLTD
description Continuous innovation in terms of products, processes, administration and structures is needed to compete effectively in the global markets of the 21st century. This continuous innovation within an existing firm can be described in terms of intrapreneurship. The extent to which intrapreneurship is practiced within a Pharmaceutical firm (Firm A) within the Eastern Cape is the main question addressed in the research conducted. The research conducted involved the collection of two data sets. The first set looked at the perceived intrapreneurial characteristics of employees and their superiors. The second data set involved an assessment of 13 constructs (Strong customer orientation; Entrepreneurial leadership; Resource availability and accessibility; Innovation and creativity / new ideas encouraged; Empowered teams / multi-disciplined teamwork and diversity; Tolerance for risk, mistakes and failure; Sponsors (champions); Discretionary time and work; Appropriate rewards and reinforcement; Flat organisational structure with open communication and strong sense of belonging; Vision and strategic intent; Continuous- and cross-functional learning; Management support) measuring the intrapreneurial climate within the firm. Research took place within Firm A via a survey questionnaire that measured intrapreneurial characteristics using a 20 question self and superior assessment. The intrapreneurial climate survey consisted of 68 statements, which were assessed using a likert scale. A census was used given that the firm size was 450 employees. Results for the intrapreneurial climate gave Cronbach alpha values of greater than 0.6 for all of the constructs thus proving reliability of the data. With regard to the intrapreneurial characteristics results indicated that superiors were perceived to have weak characteristics as opposed to self-assessments which indicated strong characteristics. Three intrapreneurial climate constructs (Tolerance for risk, mistakes and failure; Appropriate rewards and reinforcement and Flat organisational structure) had mean results between 1.5 and 2.5 indicating respondents are not satisfied and attention needs to be given to improvement initiatives. The remaining ten constructs had mean scores between 2.5 and 3.5 indicating that respondents are neutral to the statement, indicating that improvement is recommended. Inferential statistics did not find significant differences in all constructs for any of the demographic variables tested. From the research it was concluded that the level of intrapreneurship within firm A is poor and recommendations are given. Further research within the firm is recommended.
author Allen, Kevin Ian
spellingShingle Allen, Kevin Ian
Assessing intrapreneurship in a pharmaceutical manufacturing firm in the Eastern Cape
author_facet Allen, Kevin Ian
author_sort Allen, Kevin Ian
title Assessing intrapreneurship in a pharmaceutical manufacturing firm in the Eastern Cape
title_short Assessing intrapreneurship in a pharmaceutical manufacturing firm in the Eastern Cape
title_full Assessing intrapreneurship in a pharmaceutical manufacturing firm in the Eastern Cape
title_fullStr Assessing intrapreneurship in a pharmaceutical manufacturing firm in the Eastern Cape
title_full_unstemmed Assessing intrapreneurship in a pharmaceutical manufacturing firm in the Eastern Cape
title_sort assessing intrapreneurship in a pharmaceutical manufacturing firm in the eastern cape
publisher Nelson Mandela Metropolitan University
publishDate 2014
url http://hdl.handle.net/10948/d1019758
work_keys_str_mv AT allenkevinian assessingintrapreneurshipinapharmaceuticalmanufacturingfirmintheeasterncape
_version_ 1718564960501497856