Unit 3
HO 3-3 (continued)
STAGES
OF SMALL
BUSINESS
DEVELOPMENT
Three
stages of small
business development-the
start-up stage,
stabilization
stage, and growth
stage-will
be considered.
As
the business moves
from one
stage to another,
its emphasis
shifts.
As
such, different
strategic postures
seem appropriate
for different
stages and
conditions
within
stages.
The discussion
of stages of
growth is adapted
from the
work of Arnold
C. Cooper.
3
igure
4-3
FmSds to CamiEa
When OMcun A Sfegik
Neazr
Stw
of &*f Dsm.u
Dawpeamn
Stat-Up
Stage
The first stage
in Cooper's typology
is the
start-up stage.
This stage encompasses
the
decision
to
start a new
business and the
initial period
when the business
attempts
to become established
and get
on its feet.
During the
start-up stage,
the un'.!'lying
concern is
typically one
of
survival.
Often, the
firm's products
or services
are adequate
and properly
conceived,
but
owners
or managers possess
limited
understanding
of how to make
the consumer
aware of these
products
and services.
The manager
struggles with
the decision of
where and how
to position
the business
within the chosen
industry.
Typically, a
business in this
stage will
limit its scope
to one or two
products; thus
a single
product/market
posture
is emphasized.
Given the
limited financial
and personnel
resources
available to
businesses during
the start-up
stage, a
single product/market
posture
is the most
realistic.
' Arnold C.
Cooper. "Strategic
Management:
New
Ventures and
Small Business."
In
StrategicManagement,
ed. by
Dan E. Schendel
and Charles
W. F. Hofer.
Boston:
Little,
Brown, and
Company,
1979, 316-327.
293