This paper is concerned with the role of networking in the development of ethnic minority enterprises, using empirical data drawn from a wider study of 82 ethnic minority businesses in North London. The paper uses a broadly based definition of networks that focuses on the exploitation of both formal and informal relationships for business development purposes, which includes social networks as well as voluntary and necessary business‐based linkages. More specifically, the paper considers the role of networking in raising capital, recruiting labour, identifying and finding customers, as well as accessing business support. The results show that personal and community‐based networks are used both to mobilise resources and to generate sales by business owners in all groups, although the nature and extent of the activity varies at different stages of business development. As other studies have shown, there is a very low level of take‐up of business advice and support from mainstream support agencies by these ethnic minority enterprises, not because of a lack of awareness but because of a range of negative attitudes towards them.
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1 September 2000
Research Article|
September 01 2000
Networking and ethnic minority enterprise development: insights from a North London study Available to Purchase
Akin Fadahunsi;
Akin Fadahunsi
Centre for Enterprise and Economic Development Research, Middlesex University Business School, The burroughs, Hendon, London, UK
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David Smallbone;
David Smallbone
Centre for Enterprise and Economic Development Research, Middlesex University Business School, The burroughs, Hendon, London, UK
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Salinder Supri
Salinder Supri
Centre for Enterprise and Economic Development Research, Middlesex University Business School, The burroughs, Hendon, London, UK
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Publisher: Emerald Publishing
Online ISSN: 1758-7840
Print ISSN: 1462-6004
© MCB UP Limited
2000
Journal of Small Business and Enterprise Development (2000) 7 (3): 228–240.
Citation
Fadahunsi A, Smallbone D, Supri S (2000), "Networking and ethnic minority enterprise development: insights from a North London study". Journal of Small Business and Enterprise Development, Vol. 7 No. 3 pp. 228–240, doi: https://doi.org/10.1108/EUM0000000006842
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