Freel Mark, Gordon Ian
Telfer School of Management, University of Ottawa, Ottawa, ON, Canada.
Lancaster University Management School, Lancaster, UK.
Int Small Bus J. 2022 Sep;40(6):684-709. doi: 10.1177/02662426221074053. Epub 2022 Sep 17.
Recent contributions to the literature on small firm growth have been marked by a growing sense of frustration with the state-of-the-art and what it implicates in both theory and policy. In short, while growth episodes appear relatively common, a tiny proportion of firms sustain growth and 'scale'. This calls into question the very basis upon which policies seeking to target high growth firms (HGFs) rest. In addition, it cautions against perspectives that view growth as the essence of entrepreneurship. In this paper, we argue that understanding the frequency of growth episodes and the rarity of sustained growth requires a better understanding of growth consequences. To this end, we describe case study evidence from ambitious entrepreneurs whose firms experienced an episode of high growth followed by longer periods of mixed performance. Our goal is to shed light on how the experience of growing affects further growth. Our data provide initial insights into the mechanisms linking past growth to growth motivations and into the ways in which past growth lays the foundations for future performance.
近期关于小企业增长的文献呈现出一种对现有研究水平及其在理论和政策方面所蕴含内容日益增长的挫败感。简而言之,虽然增长阶段似乎相对常见,但只有极小比例的企业能够维持增长并实现“规模化”。这对旨在瞄准高增长企业(HGFs)的政策所基于的根本依据提出了质疑。此外,它也警示人们不要将增长视为创业精神的本质。在本文中,我们认为,要理解增长阶段的频率以及持续增长的罕见性,需要更好地理解增长的后果。为此,我们描述了雄心勃勃的企业家的案例研究证据,这些企业家的企业经历了一段高增长期,随后是较长时间的业绩参差不齐的阶段。我们的目标是阐明增长经历如何影响进一步的增长。我们的数据初步洞察了将过去的增长与增长动机联系起来的机制,以及过去的增长为未来业绩奠定基础的方式。