Entrepreneurship
ASSESSING ENTREPRENEURIAL INCLINATIONS 7
© 2000 Psychology Press Ltd
http://www.tandf.co.uk/journals/pp/1359432X.html
EUROPEAN JOURNAL OF WORK AND ORGANIZATIONAL PSYCHOLOGY, 2000, 9 (1), 7–30
Assessing entrepreneurial inclinations:
Some approaches and empirical evidence
Stanley Cromie
University of Ulster, Jordanstown, Northern Ireland
Interest in entrepreneurship is intense in many parts of the world and this has
arisen because of the association between new venture creation and economic
development. Entrepreneurship is a process that often leads to the creation of new
enterprises but in this article the concept is broadened to include innovative and
enterprising behaviour within existing organizations. While it is recognized that
entrepreneurs and entrepreneurship are the products of various societal,
organizational, and individual factors, this article focuses on the inherent personal
traits of individuals that dispose them to engage in entrepreneurial acts.
Some approaches to assessing the entrepreneurial personality are examined, but
the principal focus is on pencil and paper measures of entrepreneurial attributes.
Various instruments that purport to measure key entrepreneurial characteristics
such as need for achievement, locus of control, and creative tendencies are
considered and relevant empirical evidence is reported. A consideration of the
appropriateness of the Durham University Business School’s General Enterprising
Tendency test as a composite instrument for assessing enterprising or entrepreneurial
tendencies follows along with some statistical norms for this test, which
should prove useful for practitioners and academics alike. Finally, some problems
with trait theories of entrepreneurship are discussed.
INTRODUCTION
Recent years have witnessed a remarkable increase in discussion and research on
entrepreneurship; indeed, it is difficult to listen to a political debate nowadays
without some reference to the subject. It is...
View Full Essay