Competitive advantages and the SMEs: the role of distinctive competences as determinants of success, are there differences across gender, sector, and size?

This dissertation explores and examines, via qualitative and quantitative research methods, the competitive advantages and distinctive competencies that determine success in firms established in Puerto Rico for at least three years across sectors. The study embraces case analysis, in-depth interview...

Full description

Saved in:
Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Coplin, Leonora C. Hamilton
Format: UMK Etheses
Published: 2002
Online Access:http://discol.umk.edu.my/id/eprint/14490/
Tags: Add Tag
No Tags, Be the first to tag this record!
Institution: Universiti Malaysia Kelantan
id my.umk.eprints.14490
record_format eprints
spelling my.umk.eprints.144902024-09-24T06:36:08Z http://discol.umk.edu.my/id/eprint/14490/ Competitive advantages and the SMEs: the role of distinctive competences as determinants of success, are there differences across gender, sector, and size? Coplin, Leonora C. Hamilton This dissertation explores and examines, via qualitative and quantitative research methods, the competitive advantages and distinctive competencies that determine success in firms established in Puerto Rico for at least three years across sectors. The study embraces case analysis, in-depth interviews of successful and non-successful firms, and an extensive island-wide survey mailed to CEOs of established firms. Data was examined and analyzed using multiple statistical analyses; results were summarized and presented in table and graph forms. Moreover, a model of success was created with the intention of using it as a success guideline and failure deterrent. Findings support the idea, within limitations, that the competitive advantages present in Puerto Rico's firms relate to other empirical findings. Results strongly suggest that success determinants across size, sector, and gender seem to be nearly the same, though, in the case of females, results show that women owners seem to possess less experience; their firms remain smaller; report more difficulties, are in areas less prone to grow, and under-perform. Findings also suggest measures for policy makers, bankers, educators, and lenders geared to increase programs oriented towards educating SMEs, as well as to stimulate current and prospective entrepreneurs to better cope with economic and cultural changes, and as a deterrent to failure. 2002-11-10 UMK Etheses NonPeerReviewed Coplin, Leonora C. Hamilton (2002) Competitive advantages and the SMEs: the role of distinctive competences as determinants of success, are there differences across gender, sector, and size? Doctoral thesis, Universitat Autonoma De Barcelona.
institution Universiti Malaysia Kelantan
building Perpustakaan Universiti Malaysia Kelantan
collection Institutional Repository
continent Asia
country Malaysia
content_provider Universiti Malaysia Kelantan
content_source UMK Institutional Repository
url_provider http://umkeprints.umk.edu.my/
description This dissertation explores and examines, via qualitative and quantitative research methods, the competitive advantages and distinctive competencies that determine success in firms established in Puerto Rico for at least three years across sectors. The study embraces case analysis, in-depth interviews of successful and non-successful firms, and an extensive island-wide survey mailed to CEOs of established firms. Data was examined and analyzed using multiple statistical analyses; results were summarized and presented in table and graph forms. Moreover, a model of success was created with the intention of using it as a success guideline and failure deterrent. Findings support the idea, within limitations, that the competitive advantages present in Puerto Rico's firms relate to other empirical findings. Results strongly suggest that success determinants across size, sector, and gender seem to be nearly the same, though, in the case of females, results show that women owners seem to possess less experience; their firms remain smaller; report more difficulties, are in areas less prone to grow, and under-perform. Findings also suggest measures for policy makers, bankers, educators, and lenders geared to increase programs oriented towards educating SMEs, as well as to stimulate current and prospective entrepreneurs to better cope with economic and cultural changes, and as a deterrent to failure.
format UMK Etheses
author Coplin, Leonora C. Hamilton
spellingShingle Coplin, Leonora C. Hamilton
Competitive advantages and the SMEs: the role of distinctive competences as determinants of success, are there differences across gender, sector, and size?
author_facet Coplin, Leonora C. Hamilton
author_sort Coplin, Leonora C. Hamilton
title Competitive advantages and the SMEs: the role of distinctive competences as determinants of success, are there differences across gender, sector, and size?
title_short Competitive advantages and the SMEs: the role of distinctive competences as determinants of success, are there differences across gender, sector, and size?
title_full Competitive advantages and the SMEs: the role of distinctive competences as determinants of success, are there differences across gender, sector, and size?
title_fullStr Competitive advantages and the SMEs: the role of distinctive competences as determinants of success, are there differences across gender, sector, and size?
title_full_unstemmed Competitive advantages and the SMEs: the role of distinctive competences as determinants of success, are there differences across gender, sector, and size?
title_sort competitive advantages and the smes: the role of distinctive competences as determinants of success, are there differences across gender, sector, and size?
publishDate 2002
url http://discol.umk.edu.my/id/eprint/14490/
_version_ 1811604471562633216