Intergenerational Entrepreneurship to Foster Sustainable Development: A Methodological Training Proposal
Abstract
:1. Introduction
- Q1: How to encourage potential young and senior entrepreneurs to collaborate to develop a viable and sustainable business project?
- Q2: What direction and content a training methodology should be taken to generate strong synergies for sustainable business projects?
- Q3: Which hard and soft skills should be developed, and in what stage of the business process?
2. Literature Review
2.1. Previous Matching for Intergenerational Business Teams
2.2. Training Methodologies in Entrepreneurship
2.3. Skills and Entrepreneurial Competencies
3. Materials and Methods
4. Results
- Q1: How to encourage potential young and senior entrepreneurs to collaborate to develop a viable and sustainable business project?
- Both groups show strengths and weaknesses which can be approached with an appropriate integrative training methodology.
- Mutual respect and empathy should be encouraged in group interaction.
- Each group has different needs as to “hard” and “soft” skills, some of which might be worked out separately to avoid damaging comparisons and tensions.
- Soft skills are more transversal and necessary for all team members to acquire and build up team culture.
- Those skills which one group has and can transmit to the other one under a respectful and welcoming atmosphere should be worked together to reinforce mutual understanding, knowledge transmission and social cohesion.
- It is keen to design activities aimed at building and reinforcing mutual respect and value as the basis for effective intergenerational collaboration. These activities must provide a framework in which each group can bring their skills to achieve a common goal via collaboration and need of achievement.
- Intergenerational activities should be durable enough and result-oriented (rewards, recognition, and incentives of any kind) to foster the exchange of feelings, dependability, and team building. This means that each group will have its learning experience with a unique output.
- Not all team members should acquire the same hard skills since there can be, and should be, task specialists within the group.
- Activities oriented to develop sensitivity and knowledge in sustainability are required for both groups.
- Q2: What purpose and content should a training methodology take to generate strong synergies for sustainable business projects?
- Inspiration: in which the participants, both young and senior, approach the option to take entrepreneurship as a lead line for their future;
- Engagement: aimed at developing the basic hard and soft skills—basically a technical knowledge, networking, analysis, and group dynamics—needed to start the entrepreneurial track under a “make up your mind” approach;
- Business Design: related to outlining and defining the business idea and managing the entrepreneurial team to design a road map justifying the project’s viability before putting it into practice under the “look before you leap” approach;
- Deployment: aimed at the implementation and management of all the new company’s processes involved with everyday operations—marketing and sales, operations, financing, administrative, people, legal and tax issues, sustainability, etc.;
- Management: related to the issues affecting everyday operations once the company is under course, and the future evolution of the new firm, such as scenario analysis, goal orientation, strategic management, etc., and eventually, the sale or discontinuity of the business under future circumstances. This phase is a rather open-end situation in which the entrepreneurial experience may be very far behind for the protagonists.
- Its contents should be designed for a 2–4-h learning session, although, if needed, can be linked to other pills with complementary contents.
- Its structure should include the following elements:
- ○
- Title;
- ○
- Brief description and justification;
- ○
- Expected learning objectives and related topics;
- ○
- Basic concepts and technical terms;
- ○
- Suggested activities and active learning methods (open discussions, case analysis, challenges, problems, role-playing, simulation, etc.) either for the whole group or in separate teams;
- ○
- References (academic literature, online resources, and multimedia).
- The pill is an input for the instructor to develop the specific content and how it will be delivered to a specific group or project. This adaptive feature is considered crucial to broaden the methodology’s scope of application.
- Q3: Which hard and soft skills should be developed and in what stage of the business process?
- A team of trainers (teachers and specialists) and mentors or facilitators providing the knowledge and the expertise required for the teams to acquire the skills they need throughout the whole itinerary;
- A road map to adapt knowledge acquisition to the process of sustainable business venturing following the inventory of skills presented above;
- A template design to develop teaching materials under the same format and structure to facilitate content coordination and homogeneity of design.
5. Conclusions and Discussion
Author Contributions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Acknowledgments
Conflicts of Interest
References
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Phase and Learning Goal | Hard Skills | Soft Skills |
---|---|---|
INSPIRATION “Is Intergenerational entrepreneurship a solution to address my future?” | Professional technical competences “What am I good at?” | Motivation: “Why do I want to start a business?” Self-confidence Cross-age interviews about strengths and challenges * |
ENGAGEMENT “Do I have the knowledge, skills, and attitudes needed to shape a business idea?” | Canvas Design thinking Lean Start-up Agile Collaborative tools The viewpoint of sustainability Environmental analysis (General and Specific) | Tribal leadership team building * Emotional intelligence Business acumen Intergenerational team building for working as a team Creativity (Problem solving) and Creative thinking Detect market opportunities and cause-effect dynamics Communication and persuasion Risk management Time management |
BUSINESS DESIGN “Do I have the practical abilities to create a viable business project?” | SWOT Analysis Methods to evaluate business ideas Market research (the overall market, the targeted segments, the competition,) Business Model Design and Strategy formulation (Business strategy and value proposition modelling) Product/Service development Industrial and intellectual protection Cost-benefit analysis Project management Marketing and sales strategy Operations strategy Business Plan edition | Leadership Team building and Group-work Networking and embedding ability Ability to overcome external constraints Resilience Creative Information search Effective presentations Story telling Writing reports Negotiation Respecting differences/managing conflict * |
DEPLOYMENT “Do I have the practical abilities to start a viable business project?” | Financial analysis (break-even, turnover, KPI, etc.) Outsourcing Understanding financial statements ICT solutions Back Office management (people, administrative issues) Entry strategy: when (time to market) and how (start-up, acquisition, franchising, etc.) Financial strategy: personal funding, banks, public financing, subsidies, business angels, crowdfunding, etc. Legal and tax issues | Resourcefulness and ability to cope with unexpected situations Need of achievement and stamina Conflict resolution Share learnings * |
MANAGEMENT “Do I know how to create value through time with my project?” | Goal orientation (SMART) Scenario analysis Strategic transformation Licensing rights, sales of patents and franchising. IPO (initial public offering) Next generation Buy out–Sell out | Knowledge management Flexibility and multi-skill capacity to respond to unexpected events Strategic competence |
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Perez-Encinas, A.; de Pablo, I.; Bueno, Y.; Santos, B. Intergenerational Entrepreneurship to Foster Sustainable Development: A Methodological Training Proposal. Sustainability 2021, 13, 9654. https://doi.org/10.3390/su13179654
Perez-Encinas A, de Pablo I, Bueno Y, Santos B. Intergenerational Entrepreneurship to Foster Sustainable Development: A Methodological Training Proposal. Sustainability. 2021; 13(17):9654. https://doi.org/10.3390/su13179654
Chicago/Turabian StylePerez-Encinas, Adriana, Isidro de Pablo, Yolanda Bueno, and Begoña Santos. 2021. "Intergenerational Entrepreneurship to Foster Sustainable Development: A Methodological Training Proposal" Sustainability 13, no. 17: 9654. https://doi.org/10.3390/su13179654
APA StylePerez-Encinas, A., de Pablo, I., Bueno, Y., & Santos, B. (2021). Intergenerational Entrepreneurship to Foster Sustainable Development: A Methodological Training Proposal. Sustainability, 13(17), 9654. https://doi.org/10.3390/su13179654