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Informationen zum Autor Greg Clydesdale lectures in the Department of Management and International Business at Massey University, Auckland, New Zealand. Klappentext Successfully starting a new business venture depends upon more than having a brilliant idea, getting funding, and getting the product or service to market. Entrepreneurs must also learn to read the market and understand the environments in which they must operate. Entrepreneurial Opportunity places the emphasis on reading and making the most of things that may be beyond the entrepreneur's control, from defaulting contractors to the opening and closing of business niches. It also considers previously under-considered options, such as "the political entrepreneur." This long over-due text provides a far more realistic view of entrepreneurial opportunity and the importance of the business environment. Yet despite its realist stance, the book is decidedly optimistic, showing readers how markets evolve over time and present opportunities through that evolution. As Clydesdale states, "it's not always fair out there," but this book captures the excitement of the market and its role in delivering opportunities.Drawing on a broad range of academic research, Entrepreneurial Opportunity is written in a manner that is accessible for students and practitioners, with examples and mini-cases from a variety of industries, including high technology, hospitality, and motion pictures. Zusammenfassung The areas of opportunity recognition and entrepreneurial environments have been emerging streams of research that are of particular interest to practitioners. This book provides insight into the environmental changes that open up opportunities for entrepreneurs. Inhaltsverzeichnis 1. If you're such a genius, why aren't you rich? 2. Creativity and opportunity recognition 3. Environmental change and windows of opportunity 4. Technology, new products and pioneers 5. Market evolution: Niches and opportunity 6. Trajectories and emerging niches 7. Industrial development: Linkages and opportunities 8. Environments of constraint and abundance 9. It's not always fair out there 10. Leaping, Failing, Learning - Success! 11. Government policy and new business development 12. What type of entrepreneur should I be? ...