Diplomarbeit, 2023
216 Seiten, Note: Post Doc- Accepted.
Chapter One: Introduction
1.1 Introduction
1.2 Problem Statement
1.3 Research Objectives
1.3.1 Exploration of the Potential of Structured Incubators in Addressing Macroeconomic Challenges
1.3.2 Analysis of Influential Factors in the Development of a Framework for Structured Incubators
1.3.3 Evaluation of the Efficacy of Structured Incubators in Fostering New Enterprises and driving Economic Advancement
1.3.4 Capacitation and Enhanced Performance for Structured Incubation
1.3.5 Development of a Comprehensive Framework for Identifying Structured Incubator Opportunities within Macroeconomic Challenges
1.4 Research Questions
1.5 Significance of the Research
1.5.1 Significance to Academic Community
1.5.2 Significance to Industry
1.5.3 Significance to Others
1.6 Scope of the Research
1.7 Operational Definitions
1.8 Organization of Chapters
Chapter 2. Literature Review
2.1 Overview
2.2 The Broader Concepts
2.3 Specific Concepts
2.4 Industry Analysis
2.5 Gaps in the Literature
Chapter 3. Methodology
3.1 Overview
3.2 Research Design Phases
3.3 Unit of Analysis
3.4 Sampling Design
3.5 Data Collection Methodology
3.6 Analysis Methodology
3.7 Conclusion
Chapter Four: Research Results
4.1 Introduction
4.2 Concepts Identified from the Literature Review
4.3 Concepts Identified from the Industry Analysis
4.4 Concepts Identified from the Research Questionnaire to potential incubates.
4.5 Concepts identified from the researcher’s personal experience
4.6 Themes
Chapter Five: Conclusions and Recommendations
5.1 Introduction
5.2 Conclusion
5.3 Contribution to Literature Theory, Practice, & Policy
5.4 Limitations of the Study
5.5 Future Directions of Research
5.6 Possible Incubators
5.7 Summary
The primary aim of this research is to construct a comprehensive theoretical and practical framework for the establishment of "structured incubators." The study examines whether aligning Small and Medium-sized Enterprises (SMEs) with macroeconomic challenges—specifically by developing SME cohorts to address issues like energy shortages—can drive sustainable economic growth, reduce unemployment, and foster "Economic Emancipation" rather than relying on disparate, one-by-one enterprise development.
1.3.1 Exploration of the Potential of Structured Incubators in Addressing Macroeconomic Challenges
The first objective revolves around an extensive exploration of the capabilities of structured incubators in mitigating a spectrum of macroeconomic predicaments prevalent in South Africa. These encompass multifaceted issues such as energy sustainability, pollution reduction, water scarcity, and the pervasive problem of unemployment. According to (Hull, Millette, & Williams, 2021) the circular economy process requires trust and a localised interaction among stakeholders. The author elaborates on how government trust is a problem in Trinidad and Tobago in creating economic stimulation and growth. In South Africa, government policies in economic growth have failed to deliver significant economic growth. According to (Ndlovu, 2022), “After a quarter-decade of democratic governance, the South African state continues to encounter obstacles in altering society, including unemployment, inequality, and poverty. South Africa’s economic growth had been declining since the late 1970s, and it had fallen below the pace of population increase by the mid-1980s. Population growth rates are now at 1.3%, with a pre-pandemic 2019 growth rate slightly around zero.
Chapter One: Introduction: Introduces the research context, highlighting the severity of unemployment and economic stagnation in South Africa while proposing structured incubation as a transformative model for SME development.
Chapter 2. Literature Review: Provides a comprehensive overview of existing theories on macroeconomic challenges and current incubator models, identifying a significant gap in cohort-based support structures.
Chapter 3. Methodology: Details the hybrid research approach, utilizing conceptual modeling and Grounded Theory to synthesize literature, industry data, and expert personal experience.
Chapter Four: Research Results: Presents the primary findings derived from literature analysis, industry diagnostics, and researcher surveys, categorizing them into frameworks for structured incubation.
Chapter Five: Conclusions and Recommendations: Synthesizes the core research findings and offers a strategic roadmap for policymakers and industry practitioners to implement structured incubation models.
Structured Incubator, Economic Emancipation, SME Development, Macroeconomic Analysis, Scaffolding System, Entrepreneurial Cohorts, Unemployment Mitigation, Business Incubation, Sustainability, Economic Policy, Skills Development, Startup Ecosystem, Industrial Growth.
This research focuses on the transition from traditional, one-by-one business incubation to a "structured incubator" model that organizes entrepreneurs into cohorts to address specific macroeconomic problems, such as energy or water shortages.
The key themes include the integration of macroeconomic analysis into business incubation, the necessity for a structured "scaffolding" system, and the empowerment of youth through collective entrepreneurship.
The primary goal is to create a robust and practical framework that allows government agencies and the private sector to develop sustainable businesses at scale, thereby tackling unemployment and fostering economic self-sufficiency.
The research employs a mixed-methodology approach primarily anchored in Grounded Theory, utilizing both conceptual modeling and an analysis of existing incubation industry practices.
The main part of the research analyzes 58 existing incubators, identifies their lack of scalability, and proposes a new system that moves away from isolated startup support toward integrated industry-focused support.
The work is characterized by terms such as Economic Emancipation, Structured Incubator, SME development, and scaling entrepreneurship.
South Africa is chosen due to its high levels of unemployment, persistent electricity and water crises, and the lack of alignment between existing government-driven entrepreneurship support and these macroeconomic challenges.
Unlike traditional incubators that act primarily as facility providers, the proposed scaffolding system involves continuous mentorship, coaching, and professional management support, treating small business incubation as a long-term economic development strategy.
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