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TUSCALOOSA, Ala. - A team of faculty members from the Culverhouse
College of Commerce and Business Administration at The University
of Alabama has won two major awards for research and publishing
in entrepreneurship.
“This is a very significant achievement,” said Dr.
Walter S. Misiolek, professor of economics and interim dean of the
College. “Entrepreneurship embodies the principals of organization,
management and risk and is a cornerstone of the American economy.
For our faculty members to be recognized by their peers for excellence
in this area is further evidence of the strength of our faculty.”
Authors of both papers were Patrick Kreiser, a doctoral student
at UA, Dr. Louis Marino, assistant professor of strategic management
at UA, and Dr. K. Mark Weaver, former professor of management at
UA, currently at Rowan University.
The first award was the Michael H. Mescon Best Empirical Paper
Award in the Entrepreneurship Division presented by the Academy
of Management for 2002. Between 250 and 300 papers were submitted
from around the world.
The Mescon award was for a paper titled, “Reassessing the
Environment-EO Link: The Impact of Environmental Hostility on the
Dimensions of Entrepreneurial Orientation.”
“The primary focus of the study was to answer the question
of how small to medium sized enterprises with between five and 500
employees respond to challenging external conditions,” Marino
said. “To examine this question, we used a sample of almost
1,700 firms across eight countries to explore the relationship between
the state of the external environment and a firm’s propensity
to employ entrepreneurial strategies.
“We found that as resources become increasingly scarce and
the external environment becomes more hostile, small to medium sized
companies become less innovative. Further, the study showed that
those firms were most likely to take risks in environments seen
as having moderate levels of available resources, and less likely
to take risks in environments that were seen to have either an abundance
of resources or a very low level of available resources.”
The second award is the Stevens Institute of Technology Wesley
J. Howe Award for Excellence in Research on the Topic of Corporate
Entrepreneurship. The award was presented by the Babson College/Kauffman
Foundation Entrepreneurship Research Conference, the foremost entrepreneurship
conference in the world.
“It is a commonly held belief that entrepreneurial firms
will outperform more conservative organizations,” Marino said.
“In this study we examined more than 1,500 firms representing
nine countries to see if entrepreneurial firms -- those that are
more innovative, proactive and willing to take risks - indeed outperformed
more conservative firms in terms of satisfaction with sales levels,
sales growth and profitability.
“The study found that firms that were highly innovative and
proactive performed better than those that were less innovative
and proactive, but that firms with a moderate willingness to take
risks performed worse than either firms who were the least willing
to take risks or those who were the most willing. External environments
that we characterized as having abundant resources and those that
were seen as rapidly changing both enhanced the relationships between
a firm’s entrepreneurial orientation and firm performance.”
The annual Babson College-Kauffman Foundation Entrepreneurship
Research Conference (BKERC) is the premier scholarly forum for entrepreneurial
research in the world. It is sponsored jointly by Babson College
and the Center for Entrepreneurial Leadership at the Ewing Marion
Kauffman Foundation.
Founded by Babson in 1981, the Entrepreneurship Research Conference
was established to provide a venue where academicians and real-world
practitioners could link theory and practice. Each year, the conference
attracts more than 200 entrepreneurial scholars who come to hear
the presentations of more than 140 papers. Nine reviewers select
the 40 best papers for publication in “Frontiers
of Entrepreneurship Research” and the best paper submissions
are presented with cash awards.
The Culverhouse College of Commerce
and Business Administration, which was founded in 1919, began
offering graduate education in 1923. The undergraduate business
school is 45th nationally in the latest U.S. News and World Report
rankings.
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