Welcome to Grit & Growthâs masterclass on the effectiveness of small business interventions in emerging markets â with hard data to back it up. Thanks to researcher Stephen J. Andersonâs studies with African entrepreneurs, youâll hear why having a coach, getting classroom training, and learning how to delegate can drive growth and impact your bottom line.
Andersonopen in new window has spent his entire career trying to bring rigorous research to international development efforts, whether at the World Bank, Stanford Graduate School of Business, or his current post at McCombs School of Business at the University of Texas at Austin.
Anderson makes his case for research on the effectiveness of growth interventions. He explains, âIn the development sector someone says, âI have this great program,â and then they show you the best cases. But did this program or intervention really lead to that increase in firm sales and profits? I canât just cherry-pick or look at it anecdotally.â
Top Six Masterclass Research-Based Takeaways
- Remote coaching works. The study of 930 Ugandan businesses proved that those companies that received coaching over six months increased sales, profits, and employment â by up to 50 percent!
- Coaching on your value proposition had the biggest effect. Anderson advises entrepreneurs to ask themselves, âWhat am I offering? Who am I offering it to? And why should they buy from me?â Think about your business model, think about the strategic shifts that you might have to make in the value proposition. Coaching or access to coaching can help you do that.
- In-person classroom training increases profits. The study of small firms in South Africa showed that those who received training â whether finance & accounting or marketing â increased profits by about 25 to 30 percent.
- Networking with other entrepreneurs enhances learning. âWeâre social beings,â explains Anderson, âand we still want to network. I learn a concept, I take it out to my business. I come back a week later and share what worked and what didnât work. Iâm also going to hear from 10 or 15 other entrepreneurs. And so Iâm going to learn the theory from whatever the instructorâs telling me, but Iâm also going to learn practically from others.â
- Entrepreneurs need to delegate to scale. Andersonâs study of hundreds of businesses in Nigeria proved that to scale up, you need to let go. Anderson says, âProviding entrepreneurs with access to the expertise they need, that they can insource or outsource, grows the team, the managing team, and eventually grows the sales and profits of those firms.â
- Try not to hire family or friends. Anderson urges entrepreneurs to think hard before they hire and to look for ways to professionalize their workforce with the specific skills they really need to grow the business.
Hear more about how Andersonâs research can be the basis for more effective entrepreneurship programs across the world and apply his findings to your own entrepreneurial journey.
Latest Insights on Driving Business Growth
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Privacy Policyopen in new window
Research
- Pathways to Profits: the Impact of Marketing vs Finance Skills on Business Performanceopen in new window, by Stephen J. Anderson, Rajesh Chandy, Bilal Zia.
- Do Marketers Matter for Entrepreneurs? Evidence from a Field Experiment in Ugandaopen in new window, by Stephen J Anderson, Pradeep Chintagunta, Frank Germann, and Naufel Vilcassim. 2021. Journal of Marketing 85(3), 78-96.
- Improving Business Practices and the Boundary of the Entrepreneur: A Randomized Experiment Comparing Training, Consulting, Insourcing and Outsourcingopen in new window, by Stephen J. Anderson and David McKenzie. Journal of Political Economy.
Additional research support was provided by Stephen Kageraopen in new window, Janine Titleyopen in new window, and Christy Lazickyopen in new window.
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Grit & Growth is a podcast produced by Stanford Seed, an institute at Stanford Graduate School of Business which partners with entrepreneurs in emerging markets to build thriving enterprises that transform lives.
Hear these entrepreneursâ stories of trial and triumph, and gain insights and guidance from Stanford University faculty and global business experts on how to transform todayâs challenges into tomorrowâs opportunities.