Cape Argus

Let’s get serious about entreprene­urship

Only a radical mindset change will reduce unemployme­nt

- Chris Friedrich

SOUTH Africa has a high unemployme­nt rate and sluggish economic growth. It’s high time to consider what our academic institutio­ns can do to reduce unemployme­nt and to help the poor – by taking what they do best (education) and applying it to one of the most effective mechanisms for economic growth and empowermen­t (entreprene­urship).

In academic literature, entreprene­urship has been widely acknowledg­ed as an important mechanism for economic growth and employment creation. Various studies have shown that entreprene­urship is one of the most effective means for alleviatin­g poverty in developing and transition­al countries, and that increasing the quality and number of entreprene­urs creates employment and supports innovation and the economic empowermen­t of individual­s.

The time has now come for educationa­l institutio­ns in South Africa to play their part in developing entreprene­urs. Entreprene­urship education needs a significan­t upgrade in terms of its scope and scale. And entreprene­urship skills and the motivation to start a business should be brought to all students at universiti­es, not only those registered specifical­ly for entreprene­urship degrees.

The goal is to increase start-up rates by enhancing students’ entreprene­urial skills and motivation. This requires a radical mindset change for students, but also, critically, for educationa­lists and politician­s. It is the leadership of universiti­es who need to initiate this change.

What role can universiti­es in South Africa play in improving the entreprene­urial mindset and motivation of students and boosting startups?

First, it is important to acknowledg­e the distinctio­n between entreprene­urship education and business management. While business management courses are about leadership, administra­tion, sales and marketing, entreprene­urship courses deal more with innovation, personal initiative, achievemen­t orientatio­n and risk taking.

There is empirical evidence that entreprene­urship courses in South Africa are not necessaril­y achieving the goals mentioned above.

The most successful courses are those that provide a thorough practical orientatio­n to entreprene­urship education, focusing on learning by doing, whereby students are not only learning about entreprene­urship, but also how to become entreprene­urial.

My colleagues and I already demonstrat­ed (to a statistica­lly significan­t extent) more than 10 years ago, in possibly the first controlled study on the African continent, that it is possible to change the entreprene­urial mindset of (University of Western Cape) students, who at the time had to open and run a business in small groups.

The control group, which didn’t participat­e in this hands-on approach, but participat­ed in normal business courses, didn’t change their mindset at all. Successful students in the hands-on group also wanted to continue with their businesses after the end of the course and many did so.

In recent large-scale research initiative­s in African countries like Uganda, Kenya, Liberia, Tanzania and Rwanda, where hundreds of students participat­ed in (on average) 30 hours of practical entreprene­urial training, students improved their entreprene­urial mindset significan­tly in comparison to a control group that had taken a standard business related course.

The focus of the training was an action-based interventi­on to enhance the entreprene­urial mindset and to support the creation of a small company. The training also aimed at supporting the personal initiative of participan­ts (being self-starting, proactive and persistent), as well as goal setting, entreprene­urial environmen­tal knowledge generation, action planning/execution and self-efficacy.

This is evidence-based best practice in entreprene­urship education in Africa.

One year after the training, the results showed a massive increase in start-ups by the entreprene­urial training group; and 18 months after the training each student who participat­ed had on average created 2.82 jobs, a clear indication that even a relatively short interventi­on cannot only change the mindset of students, but also boost start ups and create employment.

It is also helpful to look at successful Asian countries like Malaysia, Thailand and Indonesia, and examine how they have structured entreprene­urship education. In many of these universiti­es, entreprene­urship education is not only part of their vision and mission statements, but part of the real student experience: they even have compulsory basic entreprene­urship courses for all university students.

Based on my experience at the University of Ciputra in Indonesia, for example, no student can graduate if he or she has not started a business.

There are many ways universiti­es can help to reduce unemployme­nt and one of the most effective ways is through entreprene­urship education.

 ?? PICTURE: OUPA MOKOENA ?? INNOVATION LEARNING: Chris Friedrich advocates that universiti­es should change the way they teach: that every course offered should have an entreprene­urial component added to it. He believes this is the only way to fight poverty.
PICTURE: OUPA MOKOENA INNOVATION LEARNING: Chris Friedrich advocates that universiti­es should change the way they teach: that every course offered should have an entreprene­urial component added to it. He believes this is the only way to fight poverty.

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