Success Factors of Women Entrepreneurs in the Digital Economy

A ceaseless and often heated debate about gender-bias businesses continues to perpetuate a slanted but popular portrayal of male-prowess in successful business ventures and male-dominated corporate stewardship in every conceivable aspect of operating, managing, driving and growing business, technolo...

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Main Authors: Shoba, Gunarasa, Hock, Oo Yu, Yeop Ali, Dubi
Format: Journal
Language:English
Published: 2021
Online Access:http://ur.aeu.edu.my/911/1/document.pdf
http://ur.aeu.edu.my/911/
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spelling my-aeu-eprints.9112022-02-14T08:14:23Z http://ur.aeu.edu.my/911/ Success Factors of Women Entrepreneurs in the Digital Economy Shoba, Gunarasa Hock, Oo Yu Yeop Ali, Dubi A ceaseless and often heated debate about gender-bias businesses continues to perpetuate a slanted but popular portrayal of male-prowess in successful business ventures and male-dominated corporate stewardship in every conceivable aspect of operating, managing, driving and growing business, technology and innovation every time and any time since yesteryears and until today. This paper, not seeking to challenge the mendacity of this pervasive-myth of male entrepreneurship start-ups nor diminishing its leadership-dominant influence, attempts to reinforce the verity about women entrepreneurs, whose insidious but unannounced entry into various business ventures in the threshold of exclusive male-entrepreneurship domain has already started over the years. The purpose of this paper therefore is to verify the determinants of women entrepreneurial success in terms of ascertaining skills development (business attributes), entrepreneurial competencies (entrepreneurial practices) and personal traits of target-respondents through a self-administered google-form usage questionnairesurvey in the Klang Valley of Malaysia. A pilot study and subsequent survey-findings analysis using the Cronbach’s α test was conducted to test the reliability of the data collected, including a correlation analysis using the SPSS software to validate the acceptance or rejection of the research hypotheses. The results suggested that entrepreneurial competencies, out of the three-factor determinants of women entrepreneurial success, is ranked most influential among women-owned SMEs in Malaysia. A breakdown analysis suggests that 67 percent of the majority respondents asserted diligence (‘hard work’) as the first personal trait accountable for entrepreneurial success, followed by 65 percent respondents on the ability to endure challenges during economic or business downturn, and 64 percent of the respondents on willingness to take risks. Furthermore, formal education - irrespective of its level and specialization including literacy and ability to identify opportunities and market trends - is cited as a significant factor affecting entrepreneurial ventures. The accepted hypotheses confirm that the successful women entrepreneurs - from diverse ethnic backgrounds and life experiences - have common certificated qualifications, family support and network-social relationships to acquire skills-set to explore entrepreneurial opportunities. These determinants of their success, abetted by a blend of personality traits and behavioural orientation, can provide useful pointers for policy-makers and business community to further engage and strategize potential women entrepreneurs for country economic wealth creation. 2021 Journal PeerReviewed text en http://ur.aeu.edu.my/911/1/document.pdf Shoba, Gunarasa and Hock, Oo Yu and Yeop Ali, Dubi (2021) Success Factors of Women Entrepreneurs in the Digital Economy. Turkish Online Journal of Qualitative Inquiry (TOJQI), 12 (8). pp. 6015-6038.
institution Asia e University
building AEU Library
collection Institutional Repository
continent Asia
country Malaysia
content_provider Asia e University
content_source AEU University Repository
url_provider http://ur.aeu.edu.my/
language English
description A ceaseless and often heated debate about gender-bias businesses continues to perpetuate a slanted but popular portrayal of male-prowess in successful business ventures and male-dominated corporate stewardship in every conceivable aspect of operating, managing, driving and growing business, technology and innovation every time and any time since yesteryears and until today. This paper, not seeking to challenge the mendacity of this pervasive-myth of male entrepreneurship start-ups nor diminishing its leadership-dominant influence, attempts to reinforce the verity about women entrepreneurs, whose insidious but unannounced entry into various business ventures in the threshold of exclusive male-entrepreneurship domain has already started over the years. The purpose of this paper therefore is to verify the determinants of women entrepreneurial success in terms of ascertaining skills development (business attributes), entrepreneurial competencies (entrepreneurial practices) and personal traits of target-respondents through a self-administered google-form usage questionnairesurvey in the Klang Valley of Malaysia. A pilot study and subsequent survey-findings analysis using the Cronbach’s α test was conducted to test the reliability of the data collected, including a correlation analysis using the SPSS software to validate the acceptance or rejection of the research hypotheses. The results suggested that entrepreneurial competencies, out of the three-factor determinants of women entrepreneurial success, is ranked most influential among women-owned SMEs in Malaysia. A breakdown analysis suggests that 67 percent of the majority respondents asserted diligence (‘hard work’) as the first personal trait accountable for entrepreneurial success, followed by 65 percent respondents on the ability to endure challenges during economic or business downturn, and 64 percent of the respondents on willingness to take risks. Furthermore, formal education - irrespective of its level and specialization including literacy and ability to identify opportunities and market trends - is cited as a significant factor affecting entrepreneurial ventures. The accepted hypotheses confirm that the successful women entrepreneurs - from diverse ethnic backgrounds and life experiences - have common certificated qualifications, family support and network-social relationships to acquire skills-set to explore entrepreneurial opportunities. These determinants of their success, abetted by a blend of personality traits and behavioural orientation, can provide useful pointers for policy-makers and business community to further engage and strategize potential women entrepreneurs for country economic wealth creation.
format Journal
author Shoba, Gunarasa
Hock, Oo Yu
Yeop Ali, Dubi
spellingShingle Shoba, Gunarasa
Hock, Oo Yu
Yeop Ali, Dubi
Success Factors of Women Entrepreneurs in the Digital Economy
author_facet Shoba, Gunarasa
Hock, Oo Yu
Yeop Ali, Dubi
author_sort Shoba, Gunarasa
title Success Factors of Women Entrepreneurs in the Digital Economy
title_short Success Factors of Women Entrepreneurs in the Digital Economy
title_full Success Factors of Women Entrepreneurs in the Digital Economy
title_fullStr Success Factors of Women Entrepreneurs in the Digital Economy
title_full_unstemmed Success Factors of Women Entrepreneurs in the Digital Economy
title_sort success factors of women entrepreneurs in the digital economy
publishDate 2021
url http://ur.aeu.edu.my/911/1/document.pdf
http://ur.aeu.edu.my/911/
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score 13.160551