An inquiry into post-competition performance of business plan competition teams.

A common aim of a business plan competition (BPC) is to develop essential entrepreneurial skills in the participants and eventually aid them in creating sustainable businesses. The ability to nurture sustainable businesses has since been a key outcome of many BPCs. Despite that, little research has...

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Main Authors: Wu, Jia Min., Lim, Zoe Ping Yan., Soon, Nelia Ying Xian.
Other Authors: Nanyang Business School
Format: Final Year Project
Language:English
Published: 2013
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/10356/51562
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Institution: Nanyang Technological University
Language: English
id sg-ntu-dr.10356-51562
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spelling sg-ntu-dr.10356-515622023-05-19T03:30:08Z An inquiry into post-competition performance of business plan competition teams. Wu, Jia Min. Lim, Zoe Ping Yan. Soon, Nelia Ying Xian. Nanyang Business School David Matius Gomulya DRNTU::Business::General::Economic and business aspects A common aim of a business plan competition (BPC) is to develop essential entrepreneurial skills in the participants and eventually aid them in creating sustainable businesses. The ability to nurture sustainable businesses has since been a key outcome of many BPCs. Despite that, little research has studied the relationship between the participating teams’ performance at BPC and their business survival after the competition. Our study seeks to study this relationship, specifically, whether teams that performed well at BPC could perform well thereafter, and the reasons for such performance after BPC. Correlation analyses performed on 193 teams from the United States (US) and Singapore BPCs showed that performance at BPC was positively correlated to performance after the competition. Interviews conducted with four teams from the Singapore BPC revealed the four broad categories of factors that enabled businesses to survive after the competition, namely the human, intellectual, social, and financial capital. As the factors derived from the BPC were not the differentiating factors between the teams that survived and teams that did not survive, this showed that BPC had partial effect on the performance of teams after BPC. BUSINESS 2013-04-05T05:51:08Z 2013-04-05T05:51:08Z 2013 2013 Final Year Project (FYP) http://hdl.handle.net/10356/51562 en Nanyang Technological University 41 p. application/pdf
institution Nanyang Technological University
building NTU Library
continent Asia
country Singapore
Singapore
content_provider NTU Library
collection DR-NTU
language English
topic DRNTU::Business::General::Economic and business aspects
spellingShingle DRNTU::Business::General::Economic and business aspects
Wu, Jia Min.
Lim, Zoe Ping Yan.
Soon, Nelia Ying Xian.
An inquiry into post-competition performance of business plan competition teams.
description A common aim of a business plan competition (BPC) is to develop essential entrepreneurial skills in the participants and eventually aid them in creating sustainable businesses. The ability to nurture sustainable businesses has since been a key outcome of many BPCs. Despite that, little research has studied the relationship between the participating teams’ performance at BPC and their business survival after the competition. Our study seeks to study this relationship, specifically, whether teams that performed well at BPC could perform well thereafter, and the reasons for such performance after BPC. Correlation analyses performed on 193 teams from the United States (US) and Singapore BPCs showed that performance at BPC was positively correlated to performance after the competition. Interviews conducted with four teams from the Singapore BPC revealed the four broad categories of factors that enabled businesses to survive after the competition, namely the human, intellectual, social, and financial capital. As the factors derived from the BPC were not the differentiating factors between the teams that survived and teams that did not survive, this showed that BPC had partial effect on the performance of teams after BPC.
author2 Nanyang Business School
author_facet Nanyang Business School
Wu, Jia Min.
Lim, Zoe Ping Yan.
Soon, Nelia Ying Xian.
format Final Year Project
author Wu, Jia Min.
Lim, Zoe Ping Yan.
Soon, Nelia Ying Xian.
author_sort Wu, Jia Min.
title An inquiry into post-competition performance of business plan competition teams.
title_short An inquiry into post-competition performance of business plan competition teams.
title_full An inquiry into post-competition performance of business plan competition teams.
title_fullStr An inquiry into post-competition performance of business plan competition teams.
title_full_unstemmed An inquiry into post-competition performance of business plan competition teams.
title_sort inquiry into post-competition performance of business plan competition teams.
publishDate 2013
url http://hdl.handle.net/10356/51562
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