Description
Data about entrepreneurship and start ups in the boston region.
ABSTRACT. The use of entrepreneurship to stimulate
economic growth in lagging regions of the world has grown
over the last decade. The type of business needed for job
creation is a new venture rather than a micro-business. The
experience of a major program in the U.S., empowerment
zones, has failed to produce many jobs, mostly because the
program has stimulated micro-businesses rather than growth
ventures. This paper analyzed the factors differentiating
between the formation of high-growth ventures and micro
businesses, and discussed how these factors may best influ-
ence the activities of organizations that either nurture ventures
or create government policies for regional development. The
data consisted of ninety business plans submitted to a business
plan competition in Boston. The results showed that founders
of high-growth ventures have work experience or advanced
training in their technologies, and teams rather than individ-
uals created the plans. The results suggest that a combination
of exogenous and endogenous approaches may be needed to
stimulate a lagging region’s economic growth.
Introduction
Entrepreneurship has been shown to be a signifi-
cant engine of job creation and economic growth.
In the U.S., studies have shown that 90% of
new jobs come from small firms (Allen, 1999).
Cross-country studies of economic growth have
shown that much of the difference in the growth
rates is due to entrepreneurial activity (Global
Entrepreneurship Monitor, 1999). Because of
such findings entrepreneurship has emerged as
a key policy tool for regional development,
economic growth, and job creation (Laukkanen,
2000; Rosa et al., 1996). This has led to a
change in regional policy: from a redistributive
exogenous approach to one of endogenous devel-
opment of regional capabilities. In other words,
the primary aim has shifted to promoting genera-
tive rather than competitive growth (Maillat,
1998). This shift has changed the focus to local
economies, as a country’s economic growth is
considered to be the sum of the local economies’
growths rather than the local economy being
totally dependent on the national, exogenous
growth. Over the past decade, therefore, there has
been a strong emphasis on the analysis of local
economic development and the improvement of
the local milieu for entrepreneurship (Ritsila,
1999).
Three activities have been identified as policies
to improve a local milieu for economic develop-
ment (Maillat, 1998):
1. Stimulate the generation of entrepreneurs
2. Stimulate the creation of networks
3. Perform R&D to stimulate new technology
Entrepreneurship and Start-Ups
in the Boston Region: Factors
Differentiating High-Growth
Ventures from Micro-Ventures
Small Business Economics 21: 145–152, 2003.
© 2003 Kluwer Academic Publishers. Printed in the Netherlands.
Final version accepted on August 15, 2001
John H. Friar
Executive Professor
Center for Technological Entrepreneurship
Northeastern University
Boston, Massachusetts 02115
U.S.A.
E-mail: [email protected]
Marc H. Meyer
Sarmanian Professor of Entrepreneurial Studies
Northeastern University
Boston, Massachusetts 02115
U.S.A.
E-mail: [email protected]
John H. Friar
Marc H. Meyer
An example of the first activity’s use in
regional policy in the United States is the devel-
opment of empowerment zones in 1994 by the
Clinton Administration. A major goal of empow-
erment zones is to make the local populace of an
economically lagging part of the country more
entrepreneurial. These zones, typically in urban
settings, are defined as areas that suffer from
chronic unemployment and lack investment by the
private sector. Incentives to start businesses in
these areas include tax breaks, guaranteed loans,
and worker training. The hope is that increased
entrepreneurial activity will stimulate economic
growth by providing both increased employment
and needed goods and services. The programs
were initially instituted in six areas in the U.S.
with great fanfare and optimism. Although no
study has been done on the Boston empowerment
zone, the administrators of the program feel that
their experience has been similar to the other
zones. Reports on the programs in other zones,
however, have begun to question their effective-
ness, especially in being able to start new busi-
nesses.
A review of the program in Los Angeles after
4 years found that the program continues to fall
short on its core mandate to create jobs because
the recipients of the program benefits were not
creating jobs (Romney, 1999). The program has
financed businesses that could not receive other
sources of funding. Not only have these businesses
failed to create jobs, they have a default rate of
32% on the loans.
In Cleveland, $26.2 million in loans and grants
have led to the creation of 322 jobs in the empow-
erment zone (Ford, 1999). The creation of 300
jobs is considered to be negligible and the pace
of progress is being questioned, especially during
a time of unprecedented regional prosperity. In
Detroit, the program was supposed to have
launched 100 businesses by creating a “One Stop
Capital Shop” (Dixon, 2000). Instead, the program
is bankrupt, having spent $1.2 million with no
companies started within the zone and six started
outside of the zone.
Further details on the Detroit empowerment
zone can shed some light on the mixed results
from these programs. Needed service companies,
such as supermarkets and drug stores, are not
moving into the zone (Dixon, 2000). While some
micro-businesses are being created, they have
provided minimal increased employment. A
typical example of a new empowerment zone
startup is the “Bubble Laundromat” (Stringer,
1998). Started by two entrepreneurs, the laun-
dromat consists of 20 self-operating washers
and dryers. The entrepreneurs and their family
members, who are not residents of the empower-
ment zone, work at the store. Instead of vital
services, less capital-intensive micro-businesses
are being formed, such as franchised fast food
restaurants. It is questionable how many subma-
rine sandwich shops Detroit’s empowerment zone
can support. In any event, these fast food restau-
rants will provide only a limited number of low
paying, non-skilled jobs, which runs counter to the
aims of the empowerment zone.
Approach
This paper explores the factors differentiating
between the formation of high-growth ventures
and low growth micro-businesses, and discusses
how these factors may best influence the activities
of organizations that either nurture ventures or
create government policies for regional develop-
ment. To do this, we examined those ventures that
have been developed within a particular entrepre-
neurship center at a major urban university in one
of the world’s leading entrepreneurial environ-
ments: Boston, Massachusetts.
At issue for the authors is what type of busi-
nesses one would like to see started to substan-
tively fuel new economic development. We, and
others, categorize startups roughly into two types:
the micro-business and the high-growth venture
(Allen, 1999).
• A micro-business is independently owned and
operated, does not dominate either its local or
national field, and tends not to engage in
innovative practices (Hunger and Wheelen,
1998). A micro-business is generally started to
generate an income for the owner or the family.
It tends to remain relatively small, with fewer
than 25 employees.
• A high-growth venture, on the other hand, has
the primary goals of profitability and growth.
Its management uses innovative strategic prac-
tices. The entrepreneurial venture creates value
146 John H. Friar and Marc H. Meyer
through innovation, through bringing new jobs
to the economy that do not merely draw from
other businesses currently existing, and through
finding unserved niches in the market (Allen,
1999).
While micro-businesses are important, the
implicit assumption for regional policy is that
innovation is required to generate economic
growth (See for example Maillat, 1998 and
Landabaso, 1997). The type of businesses that
one seeks for job creation and economic growth,
therefore, are high-growth ventures. Part of
the difficulty with the empowerment zone
experience is that it has resulted in the develop-
ment of some micro-businesses or the moving of
existing jobs. It has not resulted in the creation
of high-growth ventures needed to stimulate
economic growth. As a Boston empowerment zone
administrator observed while wishing to remain
anonymous, “We have received many plans
for starting beauty salons but no real business
plans.”
The results of the empowerment zone experi-
ment are not too dissimilar from the experiences
of the Northeastern University Entrepreneurship
Center Business Plan Competition. Our general
feeling has been that we have helped generate
a number of sustainable micro-businesses but few
high-growth ventures. We analyzed the results of
the first four years of the competition, therefore,
to find key differentiating factors between high-
growth ventures and the more micro-businesses.
The Entrepreneurship Center
The purpose of the Entrepreneurship Center is
to facilitate the creation of new businesses by
members of the university community – students,
faculty, staff, and alumni. Northeastern University
already has a rich innovative milieu because of the
research productivity of its engineering and
biotechnology faculty. Associated with that is the
entrepreneurial productivity of the Northeastern
University community – NU is second in the
Boston area only to MIT in the number of com-
panies started by alumni, and NU alumni have
started three of the five leading companies
in Massachusetts (Roberts, 1991; Wiseman,
1999). Northeastern is playing an important part
in the growth of the economy and jobs in the
Massachusetts area.
The Center has four main functions: to provide
entrepreneurship education at the undergraduate,
graduate, and community levels; to provide con-
sulting help to entrepreneurs; to provide seed
money for startups; and to create networks for
entrepreneurs to find money, professional services,
personnel, and business/technical contacts. The
Center runs a business plan competition each year.
Students are trained in entrepreneurship courses
on how to write a business plan, raise money, put
together a team, and run a startup business. From
these courses, approximately 200 business plans
are generated a year. Through several screening
processes, the plans are whittled to the best 20 to
enter the competition each year. An outside panel
of venture capitalists and successful entrepreneurs
evaluates the plans and awards the money. Plans
that are attempting to create new high-growth
ventures rather than micro-businesses are pre-
ferred by the judges, just as the judges would
seek in investing their own funds. Guidelines for
judging a new venture are: how large is the
company likely to become, how many people will
it employ, and how likely is the company to go
through multiple rounds of financing and a
possible initial public offering. Winners of the
competition split an award package of $60,000
plus the in-kind services of several professional
organizations such as legal and accounting firms.
All semi-finalists are exposed to a dozen investors
who are connected with the competition in order
to generate deal flow.
Within an already rich milieu of entrepreneur-
ship, therefore, the Business Plan Competition
is attempting to facilitate the creation of even
more new high-growth ventures rather than micro-
businesses. The Center is providing training, fos-
tering an environment of entrepreneurship, and is
making available a significant amount of resources
for entrepreneurs through its own resources and
through its network. The activities of the Center,
therefore, mirror the recommendations of Maillat
in the policies that should be created for economic
development. The results of the first four years of
our activities offer some insights into issues
related to entrepreneurship and economic devel-
opment.
Entrepreneurship and Start-Ups in the Boston Region 147
The data: Four years of high-growth ventures
and micro-businesses
The data used for this analysis come from the 90
plans that have survived into the semifinal rounds
of the annual business plan competition over the
past four years. External judges have evaluated
these plans as to their potential to create new high-
growth ventures if properly funded. These judges
are venture capitalists and successful entrepre-
neurs primarily from the Boston area. Multiple
judges review each plan submitted to the compe-
tition. Part of the judges’ task is to assess each
business plan for the reasonable probability of
eventually becoming a high-growth venture, for
it is these firms that are most likely to receive
successive rounds of funding, to draw the best
local managerial talent, and to make the largest
long-term impact in their respective industries.
“Finalists” in the competition have tended to be
technology-intensive companies.
There were 90 business plans in the sample. 52
of these were deemed by the judging panels as
most likely to remain as micro-businesses. 38 were
deemed to have the reasonable potential to initiate
and prosper as high-growth ventures.
We found two key factors: the founders of the
high-growth venture plans had significant work
experience and/or advanced training in their
industries/technologies (p < 0.001). Second,
business plans for new high-growth ventures were
submitted predominantly by teams of people versus
individuals (p < 0.001).
Figure 1 shows both of these results in the form
of contingency tables and statistical tests. In the
first test, the semi-finalists for all four years
were categorized as either high-growth venture
or micro-business, and then examined for the
presence of a founding team or a single individual
founder. The second was similar. The judges’
high-growth versus micro-business categorization
was compared to the specific industry experience
of the founders, gleaned from the plans by exam-
ining the resumes and other related material con-
tained in the plans. Figure 1 shows the solid
statistical significance of both results.
We also examined whether founders with
industry experience were also more likely to form
teams. The third test shown in Figure 1 shows a
strong relationship between industry experience
and team formation (p = 0.09). An inference from
this finding is that people who have experience
working in companies realize earlier that one
person alone cannot do everything required by
new venture. They therefore seek team members
from the beginning.
As a further screen, we examined those plans
that became “finalists” in our competition,
receiving financial and other types of rewards in
the annual competitions. These “winners” pos-
sessed a strong balance between marketing and
technology, as well as reasonable business models.
For example, one of the sample ventures has
created a financial services marketing “ASP” for
independent mortgage brokers. Its founding team
included two successful mortgage brokers and a
highly experienced systems architect. Another
venture distributes specialized accessories to
farriers in the United States, and comprised a
founding team of both international class horse-
back riders and marketers with strong industrial
sales experience. Yet a third venture is a Web
based distribution portal for independent film pro-
ducers. The founders of this venture included an
engineering manager from a leading film editing
systems manufacturer and a distribution manager
from an automotive supplies company.
The strengths demonstrated by these and other
successful founders were attributable to their
tendency to work in teams and their industry expe-
rience. More specifically, the winners had cross-
functional experience within the founding team.
Gender appeared to have no impact of these
findings: female entrepreneurs have led five of the
twelve “winning” teams over the past four years.
Discussion
Where have our students and alumni derived the
best high-growth venture ideas? Roberts (1991)
and Allen (1999) suggest that entrepreneurs’
personal experiences are the rock-bed for new
ventures. Our data have been consistent with this
finding. For example, entrepreneurs who are
currently students tend to write plans for student-
focused needs and issues – Web sites for night-
clubs, for book exchanges, or, in the case of one
of our more notorious Northeastern students,
swapping royalty-free MP3 music clips. Our best
148 John H. Friar and Marc H. Meyer
plans, however, have come from people who have
experience working in an industry or from faculty
who are performing directed research for an
industry and then come up with an idea for that
industry.
Our team-related findings are also directly con-
sistent with prior research. Utterback et al. (1988)
studied sixty Swedish innovative startups. They
found that two-thirds of the fast growing firms
were formed by teams of founders (as opposed to
individuals), the majority of whom were in their
30’s and had substantial work experience prior to
startup. It was found that “having little diversity
of management skills, in this case meaning only
technical and design skills, almost guarantees that
the firm will grow slowly” (p. 19).
Roberts (1991) found that the probability of
success for new ventures was strongly associated
with teams of 2 or 3 individuals, each of whom
represented different skill sets (engineering versus
sales and business), and who collectively had sub-
stantial work experience in the industries targeted
by their respective startups. In addition to robust
technologies and value-added products, the “super
successful” firms in Roberts sample had a clear
market orientation, focusing their sales on
growth markets and the development of strong
channels.
Building experienced management teams with
expertise across the various functions required in
a venture continues to be a major emphasis of suc-
cessful entrepreneurs and venture capitalists. Our
Entrepreneurship and Start-Ups in the Boston Region 149
Figure 1. Analyses of factors associated with plan categorization four years of business plans.
research would suggest, however, that even to
come up with a good plan the team must be in
place.
These findings pose a dilemma for those trying
to use entrepreneurship as a vehicle for regional
growth. Providing resources and training to a
group of people will help them become more
entrepreneurial, but their efforts are likely best
applied to industries where they collectively
already possess substantial work experience. If
they have no industry experience, the entrepre-
neurial team will tend to form business ideas from
what they have experienced as consumers. That
is one reason why the empowerment zone
programs have generated beauty salons, laundro-
mats, and sandwich shops, but few new, high-
growth ventures. Likewise, if people need industry
experience, then one might expect to see a clus-
tering of new businesses within a region from the
same industry.
The other issue for regional development is that
most of the programs have been directed to indi-
viduals; i.e., to train and help individuals start
businesses. Our findings would suggest that more
effort go into helping teams of people become
entrepreneurs, and that these teams contain indi-
viduals with complementary skills. Most entre-
preneurship programs assume that the teams can
be formed as the business develops, but that may
have to be rethought to bringing a couple of people
together from the very beginning. For example,
at the Northeastern center, we target students and
alumni who have specific industry experience, as
opposed simply to students with general entre-
preneurial interest and desire. We also seek to
place faculty members performing directed
research for industry on entrepreneurial teams,
ideally coupled with individuals with sales and
marketing experience in related industries. We
place our strongest emphases on understanding the
market place and forming diverse teams, and
attack these issues right from the very beginning.
Instead of looking for individuals to come up with
good business plans, we are now suggesting that
teams come up with the plans. Also, instead of
relying just on projections of market growth easily
procured on the Internet, we force students to talk
to customers to learn specific needs and frustra-
tions. The findings reported here – the importance
of cross-functional teams and industry experience
for the development of high-growth ventures –
have directly influenced our own approach to nur-
turing entrepreneurs.
Clustering of related companies is common-
place. During the 1960’s and 1970’s, Boston had
a clustering of minicomputer companies. Today,
Boston prospers with its telecommunication and
biotech startups. In another study we are doing,
we found that Providence, Rhode Island has a
clustering of jewelry manufacturers (515 busi-
nesses) while an hour away in Boston there are
only 15 such businesses. Other researchers, such
as Porter (1998), have reported clusterings of busi-
nesses of the same type in a region.
Clustering of companies also suggests greater
opportunity to develop forums, associations, and
events of a local nature to encourage and
nurture networking between fellow entrepreneurs.
Within the Boston area, there are a number of
examples, such as several major universities
host annual business plan competitions as well as
more frequent entrepreneurial forums. Industry
groups also sponsor networking activities. The
Massachusetts Technology Collaborative, the
Massachusetts Software Council, and the Route
128 Ventures Forum are but a few of the many
organizations that host conferences and meetings
for entrepreneurs and investors.
Building upon regional technology strengths is
a key policy implication that we recommend. A
good ex-ante indicator of what types of businesses
will be generated by providing resources and
training to potential entrepreneurs is the industrial
base that is already present in a region. A region
that already has a technology base and an indus-
trial base will generate more businesses of that
type if entrepreneurial resources are provided. On
the other hand, an area with little industry skill
base is not likely to generate many new high-
growth ventures. This explains the experiences of
the empowerment zones. The locals have started
small companies that have employed some family
members but have created few jobs. The compa-
nies that have created some jobs have mostly
moved in from outside of the region. But this
brings us back to an exogenous approach rather
than an endogenous growth approach.
What may be required in areas that are lagging
economically because of an underdeveloped indus-
trial base is a combination of both exogenous
150 John H. Friar and Marc H. Meyer
and endogenous approaches. An example of a
combined approach is the experience of Ireland.
On a recent trip to Ireland, we saw a burgeoning
high-tech industry formed within the context of an
economy traditionally beset with underdevelop-
ment, joblessness, and other economic and social
woes. Those familiar with the Irish situation will
point to two key factors underpinning growth
(Industrial Policy Review Group, 1992):
• National economic tax policy to lure large
technology-intensive multinationals to build
manufacturing centers for the European market
in Ireland.
• An aggressive government-supported educa-
tional initiative at the university level to
produce substantial numbers of highly trained
engineers to work in these manufacturing plants
and design enhancements for products and
systems necessary for the European market.
Within Dublin alone, one can find excellent
technical programs at Trinity, University
College Dublin, and Dublin City University.
With the stage set as such, it was perhaps
inevitable that Irish entrepreneurs would start
companies to supply software, design services, and
other forms of support to the locally situated
multinationals. Many of these entrepreneurs have
first worked for the multinational, learned its
products, services, and management, and are
thereafter well suited to make the former employer
an industrial customer. With this first wave of
sales in hand, the Irish venture could then look to
other markets beyond the local multinational oper-
ation, including high-tech customers on the con-
tinent and increasingly, in the United States.
Once the high-tech entrepreneur achieves initial
success, it is equally inevitable in this day and age
that venture money will soon find that entrepre-
neur and seek a partnership to first expand, and
then, create wealth through stock offerings or
acquisition.
However, a process such as the one described
above takes time. People often forget that in the
United States, the development of the high-tech
entrepreneurial phenomenon really took hold
during the 1970s, and was still arguably in its
formative stages during the first part of the
1980s. The educational infrastructure for science
and engineering was strong in California and
Massachusetts. Large computer companies, such
as Apple, Hewlett Packard, Sun Microsystems,
and Digital Equipment Corporation, served as
applied learning environments for technical grad-
uates. Significant numbers of these then left their
corporate employers, only to build products and
provide services to sell directly back into their
former employers. The same factors are also at
play in new centers of entrepreneurship in
the United States, such as Austin, where the
University of Texas, large corporations such as
Compaq, Dell, and IBM (RISC6000), and venture
firms have all combined to help educate, fund, and
buy products from technological entrepreneurs.
References
Allen, K. R., 1999, Launching New Ventures: An
Entrepreneurial Approach, Boston: Houghton Mifflin.
Dixon, J., 2000, ‘Residents in Detroit’s Empowerment
Zone See No Progress in 5 Years’, Detroit Free Press,
January 17.
Ford, T., 1999, ‘Empowerment Zone Yields Benefits in Early
Life: Some Say Slide in Economy May Change Picture’,
Crain’s Cleveland Business, April 12, 3.
Global Entrepreneurship Monitor, 1999, Analysis of
Ten Countries Quantifies Economic Impact of
Entrepreneurship.
Gray, M. J., 1999, ‘Blimpie Hunts for Franchisees That Can
Make Tasty Subs: Urban Initiative Waives an $18,000
Franchise Fee’, The Detroit News, April 11, S3.
Hunger, J. D. and T. L. Wheelen, 1998, Strategic
Management, Menlo Park: Addison Wesley.
Industrial Policy Review Group, 1992, A Time for Change:
Industrial Policy for the 1990s, Dublin: Ministry for
Industry and Commerce.
Landabaso, M., 1997, ‘The Promotion of Innovation in
Regional Policy: Proposals for Regional Innovation
Strategy’, Entrepreneurship and Regional Development 9,
1–24.
Laukkanen, M., 2000, ‘Exploring Alternative Approaches
in High-level Entrepreneurship Education: Creating
Micro-mechanisms for Endogenous Regional Growth’,
Entrepreneurship and Regional Development 12, 25–47.
Maillat, D., 1998, ‘Innovative Milieux and New Generations
of Regional Policies’, Entrepreneurship and Regional
Development 10, 1–16.
Porter, M., 1998, Competitive Advantage of Nations, New
York: Simon & Schuster.
Ritsila, J. J., 1999, ‘Regional Differences in Environments for
Enterprises’, Entrepreneurship and Regional Development
11, 187–202.
Roberts, E., 1991, Entrepreneurs in High-Technology: Lessons
from MIT and Beyond, New York: Oxford University
Press.
Entrepreneurship and Start-Ups in the Boston Region 151
Romney, L., 1999, ‘HUD Criticizes L.A. Over Community
Bank’, Los Angeles Times, November 5, C1.
Rosa, P., M. G. Scott and H. Klandt (eds.), 1996, Educating
Entrepreneurs in Modernising Economies, Ipswich:
Avebury.
Stringer, K., 1998, ‘Two Friends Hope to Clean Up in Detroit
Empowerment Zone’, The Detroit News, December 1,
B2.
Utterback, J., M. Meyer, E. Roberts and G. Reitberger, 1988,
‘Technology and Industrial Innovation in Sweden: A Study
of Technology-based Firms Formed between 1965 and
1980’, Research Policy 17, 15–26.
Wiseman, F. and P. Bolster, 1999 ‘Annual Survey of
Massachusetts Companies’, Boston Herald.
152 John H. Friar and Marc H. Meyer
doc_902714446.pdf
Data about entrepreneurship and start ups in the boston region.
ABSTRACT. The use of entrepreneurship to stimulate
economic growth in lagging regions of the world has grown
over the last decade. The type of business needed for job
creation is a new venture rather than a micro-business. The
experience of a major program in the U.S., empowerment
zones, has failed to produce many jobs, mostly because the
program has stimulated micro-businesses rather than growth
ventures. This paper analyzed the factors differentiating
between the formation of high-growth ventures and micro
businesses, and discussed how these factors may best influ-
ence the activities of organizations that either nurture ventures
or create government policies for regional development. The
data consisted of ninety business plans submitted to a business
plan competition in Boston. The results showed that founders
of high-growth ventures have work experience or advanced
training in their technologies, and teams rather than individ-
uals created the plans. The results suggest that a combination
of exogenous and endogenous approaches may be needed to
stimulate a lagging region’s economic growth.
Introduction
Entrepreneurship has been shown to be a signifi-
cant engine of job creation and economic growth.
In the U.S., studies have shown that 90% of
new jobs come from small firms (Allen, 1999).
Cross-country studies of economic growth have
shown that much of the difference in the growth
rates is due to entrepreneurial activity (Global
Entrepreneurship Monitor, 1999). Because of
such findings entrepreneurship has emerged as
a key policy tool for regional development,
economic growth, and job creation (Laukkanen,
2000; Rosa et al., 1996). This has led to a
change in regional policy: from a redistributive
exogenous approach to one of endogenous devel-
opment of regional capabilities. In other words,
the primary aim has shifted to promoting genera-
tive rather than competitive growth (Maillat,
1998). This shift has changed the focus to local
economies, as a country’s economic growth is
considered to be the sum of the local economies’
growths rather than the local economy being
totally dependent on the national, exogenous
growth. Over the past decade, therefore, there has
been a strong emphasis on the analysis of local
economic development and the improvement of
the local milieu for entrepreneurship (Ritsila,
1999).
Three activities have been identified as policies
to improve a local milieu for economic develop-
ment (Maillat, 1998):
1. Stimulate the generation of entrepreneurs
2. Stimulate the creation of networks
3. Perform R&D to stimulate new technology
Entrepreneurship and Start-Ups
in the Boston Region: Factors
Differentiating High-Growth
Ventures from Micro-Ventures
Small Business Economics 21: 145–152, 2003.
© 2003 Kluwer Academic Publishers. Printed in the Netherlands.
Final version accepted on August 15, 2001
John H. Friar
Executive Professor
Center for Technological Entrepreneurship
Northeastern University
Boston, Massachusetts 02115
U.S.A.
E-mail: [email protected]
Marc H. Meyer
Sarmanian Professor of Entrepreneurial Studies
Northeastern University
Boston, Massachusetts 02115
U.S.A.
E-mail: [email protected]
John H. Friar
Marc H. Meyer
An example of the first activity’s use in
regional policy in the United States is the devel-
opment of empowerment zones in 1994 by the
Clinton Administration. A major goal of empow-
erment zones is to make the local populace of an
economically lagging part of the country more
entrepreneurial. These zones, typically in urban
settings, are defined as areas that suffer from
chronic unemployment and lack investment by the
private sector. Incentives to start businesses in
these areas include tax breaks, guaranteed loans,
and worker training. The hope is that increased
entrepreneurial activity will stimulate economic
growth by providing both increased employment
and needed goods and services. The programs
were initially instituted in six areas in the U.S.
with great fanfare and optimism. Although no
study has been done on the Boston empowerment
zone, the administrators of the program feel that
their experience has been similar to the other
zones. Reports on the programs in other zones,
however, have begun to question their effective-
ness, especially in being able to start new busi-
nesses.
A review of the program in Los Angeles after
4 years found that the program continues to fall
short on its core mandate to create jobs because
the recipients of the program benefits were not
creating jobs (Romney, 1999). The program has
financed businesses that could not receive other
sources of funding. Not only have these businesses
failed to create jobs, they have a default rate of
32% on the loans.
In Cleveland, $26.2 million in loans and grants
have led to the creation of 322 jobs in the empow-
erment zone (Ford, 1999). The creation of 300
jobs is considered to be negligible and the pace
of progress is being questioned, especially during
a time of unprecedented regional prosperity. In
Detroit, the program was supposed to have
launched 100 businesses by creating a “One Stop
Capital Shop” (Dixon, 2000). Instead, the program
is bankrupt, having spent $1.2 million with no
companies started within the zone and six started
outside of the zone.
Further details on the Detroit empowerment
zone can shed some light on the mixed results
from these programs. Needed service companies,
such as supermarkets and drug stores, are not
moving into the zone (Dixon, 2000). While some
micro-businesses are being created, they have
provided minimal increased employment. A
typical example of a new empowerment zone
startup is the “Bubble Laundromat” (Stringer,
1998). Started by two entrepreneurs, the laun-
dromat consists of 20 self-operating washers
and dryers. The entrepreneurs and their family
members, who are not residents of the empower-
ment zone, work at the store. Instead of vital
services, less capital-intensive micro-businesses
are being formed, such as franchised fast food
restaurants. It is questionable how many subma-
rine sandwich shops Detroit’s empowerment zone
can support. In any event, these fast food restau-
rants will provide only a limited number of low
paying, non-skilled jobs, which runs counter to the
aims of the empowerment zone.
Approach
This paper explores the factors differentiating
between the formation of high-growth ventures
and low growth micro-businesses, and discusses
how these factors may best influence the activities
of organizations that either nurture ventures or
create government policies for regional develop-
ment. To do this, we examined those ventures that
have been developed within a particular entrepre-
neurship center at a major urban university in one
of the world’s leading entrepreneurial environ-
ments: Boston, Massachusetts.
At issue for the authors is what type of busi-
nesses one would like to see started to substan-
tively fuel new economic development. We, and
others, categorize startups roughly into two types:
the micro-business and the high-growth venture
(Allen, 1999).
• A micro-business is independently owned and
operated, does not dominate either its local or
national field, and tends not to engage in
innovative practices (Hunger and Wheelen,
1998). A micro-business is generally started to
generate an income for the owner or the family.
It tends to remain relatively small, with fewer
than 25 employees.
• A high-growth venture, on the other hand, has
the primary goals of profitability and growth.
Its management uses innovative strategic prac-
tices. The entrepreneurial venture creates value
146 John H. Friar and Marc H. Meyer
through innovation, through bringing new jobs
to the economy that do not merely draw from
other businesses currently existing, and through
finding unserved niches in the market (Allen,
1999).
While micro-businesses are important, the
implicit assumption for regional policy is that
innovation is required to generate economic
growth (See for example Maillat, 1998 and
Landabaso, 1997). The type of businesses that
one seeks for job creation and economic growth,
therefore, are high-growth ventures. Part of
the difficulty with the empowerment zone
experience is that it has resulted in the develop-
ment of some micro-businesses or the moving of
existing jobs. It has not resulted in the creation
of high-growth ventures needed to stimulate
economic growth. As a Boston empowerment zone
administrator observed while wishing to remain
anonymous, “We have received many plans
for starting beauty salons but no real business
plans.”
The results of the empowerment zone experi-
ment are not too dissimilar from the experiences
of the Northeastern University Entrepreneurship
Center Business Plan Competition. Our general
feeling has been that we have helped generate
a number of sustainable micro-businesses but few
high-growth ventures. We analyzed the results of
the first four years of the competition, therefore,
to find key differentiating factors between high-
growth ventures and the more micro-businesses.
The Entrepreneurship Center
The purpose of the Entrepreneurship Center is
to facilitate the creation of new businesses by
members of the university community – students,
faculty, staff, and alumni. Northeastern University
already has a rich innovative milieu because of the
research productivity of its engineering and
biotechnology faculty. Associated with that is the
entrepreneurial productivity of the Northeastern
University community – NU is second in the
Boston area only to MIT in the number of com-
panies started by alumni, and NU alumni have
started three of the five leading companies
in Massachusetts (Roberts, 1991; Wiseman,
1999). Northeastern is playing an important part
in the growth of the economy and jobs in the
Massachusetts area.
The Center has four main functions: to provide
entrepreneurship education at the undergraduate,
graduate, and community levels; to provide con-
sulting help to entrepreneurs; to provide seed
money for startups; and to create networks for
entrepreneurs to find money, professional services,
personnel, and business/technical contacts. The
Center runs a business plan competition each year.
Students are trained in entrepreneurship courses
on how to write a business plan, raise money, put
together a team, and run a startup business. From
these courses, approximately 200 business plans
are generated a year. Through several screening
processes, the plans are whittled to the best 20 to
enter the competition each year. An outside panel
of venture capitalists and successful entrepreneurs
evaluates the plans and awards the money. Plans
that are attempting to create new high-growth
ventures rather than micro-businesses are pre-
ferred by the judges, just as the judges would
seek in investing their own funds. Guidelines for
judging a new venture are: how large is the
company likely to become, how many people will
it employ, and how likely is the company to go
through multiple rounds of financing and a
possible initial public offering. Winners of the
competition split an award package of $60,000
plus the in-kind services of several professional
organizations such as legal and accounting firms.
All semi-finalists are exposed to a dozen investors
who are connected with the competition in order
to generate deal flow.
Within an already rich milieu of entrepreneur-
ship, therefore, the Business Plan Competition
is attempting to facilitate the creation of even
more new high-growth ventures rather than micro-
businesses. The Center is providing training, fos-
tering an environment of entrepreneurship, and is
making available a significant amount of resources
for entrepreneurs through its own resources and
through its network. The activities of the Center,
therefore, mirror the recommendations of Maillat
in the policies that should be created for economic
development. The results of the first four years of
our activities offer some insights into issues
related to entrepreneurship and economic devel-
opment.
Entrepreneurship and Start-Ups in the Boston Region 147
The data: Four years of high-growth ventures
and micro-businesses
The data used for this analysis come from the 90
plans that have survived into the semifinal rounds
of the annual business plan competition over the
past four years. External judges have evaluated
these plans as to their potential to create new high-
growth ventures if properly funded. These judges
are venture capitalists and successful entrepre-
neurs primarily from the Boston area. Multiple
judges review each plan submitted to the compe-
tition. Part of the judges’ task is to assess each
business plan for the reasonable probability of
eventually becoming a high-growth venture, for
it is these firms that are most likely to receive
successive rounds of funding, to draw the best
local managerial talent, and to make the largest
long-term impact in their respective industries.
“Finalists” in the competition have tended to be
technology-intensive companies.
There were 90 business plans in the sample. 52
of these were deemed by the judging panels as
most likely to remain as micro-businesses. 38 were
deemed to have the reasonable potential to initiate
and prosper as high-growth ventures.
We found two key factors: the founders of the
high-growth venture plans had significant work
experience and/or advanced training in their
industries/technologies (p < 0.001). Second,
business plans for new high-growth ventures were
submitted predominantly by teams of people versus
individuals (p < 0.001).
Figure 1 shows both of these results in the form
of contingency tables and statistical tests. In the
first test, the semi-finalists for all four years
were categorized as either high-growth venture
or micro-business, and then examined for the
presence of a founding team or a single individual
founder. The second was similar. The judges’
high-growth versus micro-business categorization
was compared to the specific industry experience
of the founders, gleaned from the plans by exam-
ining the resumes and other related material con-
tained in the plans. Figure 1 shows the solid
statistical significance of both results.
We also examined whether founders with
industry experience were also more likely to form
teams. The third test shown in Figure 1 shows a
strong relationship between industry experience
and team formation (p = 0.09). An inference from
this finding is that people who have experience
working in companies realize earlier that one
person alone cannot do everything required by
new venture. They therefore seek team members
from the beginning.
As a further screen, we examined those plans
that became “finalists” in our competition,
receiving financial and other types of rewards in
the annual competitions. These “winners” pos-
sessed a strong balance between marketing and
technology, as well as reasonable business models.
For example, one of the sample ventures has
created a financial services marketing “ASP” for
independent mortgage brokers. Its founding team
included two successful mortgage brokers and a
highly experienced systems architect. Another
venture distributes specialized accessories to
farriers in the United States, and comprised a
founding team of both international class horse-
back riders and marketers with strong industrial
sales experience. Yet a third venture is a Web
based distribution portal for independent film pro-
ducers. The founders of this venture included an
engineering manager from a leading film editing
systems manufacturer and a distribution manager
from an automotive supplies company.
The strengths demonstrated by these and other
successful founders were attributable to their
tendency to work in teams and their industry expe-
rience. More specifically, the winners had cross-
functional experience within the founding team.
Gender appeared to have no impact of these
findings: female entrepreneurs have led five of the
twelve “winning” teams over the past four years.
Discussion
Where have our students and alumni derived the
best high-growth venture ideas? Roberts (1991)
and Allen (1999) suggest that entrepreneurs’
personal experiences are the rock-bed for new
ventures. Our data have been consistent with this
finding. For example, entrepreneurs who are
currently students tend to write plans for student-
focused needs and issues – Web sites for night-
clubs, for book exchanges, or, in the case of one
of our more notorious Northeastern students,
swapping royalty-free MP3 music clips. Our best
148 John H. Friar and Marc H. Meyer
plans, however, have come from people who have
experience working in an industry or from faculty
who are performing directed research for an
industry and then come up with an idea for that
industry.
Our team-related findings are also directly con-
sistent with prior research. Utterback et al. (1988)
studied sixty Swedish innovative startups. They
found that two-thirds of the fast growing firms
were formed by teams of founders (as opposed to
individuals), the majority of whom were in their
30’s and had substantial work experience prior to
startup. It was found that “having little diversity
of management skills, in this case meaning only
technical and design skills, almost guarantees that
the firm will grow slowly” (p. 19).
Roberts (1991) found that the probability of
success for new ventures was strongly associated
with teams of 2 or 3 individuals, each of whom
represented different skill sets (engineering versus
sales and business), and who collectively had sub-
stantial work experience in the industries targeted
by their respective startups. In addition to robust
technologies and value-added products, the “super
successful” firms in Roberts sample had a clear
market orientation, focusing their sales on
growth markets and the development of strong
channels.
Building experienced management teams with
expertise across the various functions required in
a venture continues to be a major emphasis of suc-
cessful entrepreneurs and venture capitalists. Our
Entrepreneurship and Start-Ups in the Boston Region 149
Figure 1. Analyses of factors associated with plan categorization four years of business plans.
research would suggest, however, that even to
come up with a good plan the team must be in
place.
These findings pose a dilemma for those trying
to use entrepreneurship as a vehicle for regional
growth. Providing resources and training to a
group of people will help them become more
entrepreneurial, but their efforts are likely best
applied to industries where they collectively
already possess substantial work experience. If
they have no industry experience, the entrepre-
neurial team will tend to form business ideas from
what they have experienced as consumers. That
is one reason why the empowerment zone
programs have generated beauty salons, laundro-
mats, and sandwich shops, but few new, high-
growth ventures. Likewise, if people need industry
experience, then one might expect to see a clus-
tering of new businesses within a region from the
same industry.
The other issue for regional development is that
most of the programs have been directed to indi-
viduals; i.e., to train and help individuals start
businesses. Our findings would suggest that more
effort go into helping teams of people become
entrepreneurs, and that these teams contain indi-
viduals with complementary skills. Most entre-
preneurship programs assume that the teams can
be formed as the business develops, but that may
have to be rethought to bringing a couple of people
together from the very beginning. For example,
at the Northeastern center, we target students and
alumni who have specific industry experience, as
opposed simply to students with general entre-
preneurial interest and desire. We also seek to
place faculty members performing directed
research for industry on entrepreneurial teams,
ideally coupled with individuals with sales and
marketing experience in related industries. We
place our strongest emphases on understanding the
market place and forming diverse teams, and
attack these issues right from the very beginning.
Instead of looking for individuals to come up with
good business plans, we are now suggesting that
teams come up with the plans. Also, instead of
relying just on projections of market growth easily
procured on the Internet, we force students to talk
to customers to learn specific needs and frustra-
tions. The findings reported here – the importance
of cross-functional teams and industry experience
for the development of high-growth ventures –
have directly influenced our own approach to nur-
turing entrepreneurs.
Clustering of related companies is common-
place. During the 1960’s and 1970’s, Boston had
a clustering of minicomputer companies. Today,
Boston prospers with its telecommunication and
biotech startups. In another study we are doing,
we found that Providence, Rhode Island has a
clustering of jewelry manufacturers (515 busi-
nesses) while an hour away in Boston there are
only 15 such businesses. Other researchers, such
as Porter (1998), have reported clusterings of busi-
nesses of the same type in a region.
Clustering of companies also suggests greater
opportunity to develop forums, associations, and
events of a local nature to encourage and
nurture networking between fellow entrepreneurs.
Within the Boston area, there are a number of
examples, such as several major universities
host annual business plan competitions as well as
more frequent entrepreneurial forums. Industry
groups also sponsor networking activities. The
Massachusetts Technology Collaborative, the
Massachusetts Software Council, and the Route
128 Ventures Forum are but a few of the many
organizations that host conferences and meetings
for entrepreneurs and investors.
Building upon regional technology strengths is
a key policy implication that we recommend. A
good ex-ante indicator of what types of businesses
will be generated by providing resources and
training to potential entrepreneurs is the industrial
base that is already present in a region. A region
that already has a technology base and an indus-
trial base will generate more businesses of that
type if entrepreneurial resources are provided. On
the other hand, an area with little industry skill
base is not likely to generate many new high-
growth ventures. This explains the experiences of
the empowerment zones. The locals have started
small companies that have employed some family
members but have created few jobs. The compa-
nies that have created some jobs have mostly
moved in from outside of the region. But this
brings us back to an exogenous approach rather
than an endogenous growth approach.
What may be required in areas that are lagging
economically because of an underdeveloped indus-
trial base is a combination of both exogenous
150 John H. Friar and Marc H. Meyer
and endogenous approaches. An example of a
combined approach is the experience of Ireland.
On a recent trip to Ireland, we saw a burgeoning
high-tech industry formed within the context of an
economy traditionally beset with underdevelop-
ment, joblessness, and other economic and social
woes. Those familiar with the Irish situation will
point to two key factors underpinning growth
(Industrial Policy Review Group, 1992):
• National economic tax policy to lure large
technology-intensive multinationals to build
manufacturing centers for the European market
in Ireland.
• An aggressive government-supported educa-
tional initiative at the university level to
produce substantial numbers of highly trained
engineers to work in these manufacturing plants
and design enhancements for products and
systems necessary for the European market.
Within Dublin alone, one can find excellent
technical programs at Trinity, University
College Dublin, and Dublin City University.
With the stage set as such, it was perhaps
inevitable that Irish entrepreneurs would start
companies to supply software, design services, and
other forms of support to the locally situated
multinationals. Many of these entrepreneurs have
first worked for the multinational, learned its
products, services, and management, and are
thereafter well suited to make the former employer
an industrial customer. With this first wave of
sales in hand, the Irish venture could then look to
other markets beyond the local multinational oper-
ation, including high-tech customers on the con-
tinent and increasingly, in the United States.
Once the high-tech entrepreneur achieves initial
success, it is equally inevitable in this day and age
that venture money will soon find that entrepre-
neur and seek a partnership to first expand, and
then, create wealth through stock offerings or
acquisition.
However, a process such as the one described
above takes time. People often forget that in the
United States, the development of the high-tech
entrepreneurial phenomenon really took hold
during the 1970s, and was still arguably in its
formative stages during the first part of the
1980s. The educational infrastructure for science
and engineering was strong in California and
Massachusetts. Large computer companies, such
as Apple, Hewlett Packard, Sun Microsystems,
and Digital Equipment Corporation, served as
applied learning environments for technical grad-
uates. Significant numbers of these then left their
corporate employers, only to build products and
provide services to sell directly back into their
former employers. The same factors are also at
play in new centers of entrepreneurship in
the United States, such as Austin, where the
University of Texas, large corporations such as
Compaq, Dell, and IBM (RISC6000), and venture
firms have all combined to help educate, fund, and
buy products from technological entrepreneurs.
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