This Palgrave Pivot examines the essence of competence value in corporate and small business finance, offering empirical evidence to better understand financial practices within entrepreneurial settings. Mantovani suggests an innovative methodology to detect the financial value of entrepreneurial capabilities. He shows how the concept of competence value and T-ratio, its measurement tool, are necessary to arrange sound entrepreneurial finance deals. This book opens with an analysis of how entrepreneurial skills contribute to the economics of entrepreneurial business, and then provides a financial background to estimate the competence value even when the financial markets fail to do so. The book goes on to introduce the idea of an entrepreneurial life-cycle made of stages based on the transformation of human skills into competitive hallmarks. Applications across a large sample of companies and Mantovani's concluding suggestions about the financial practice make this book essential to both academics and executives.
The Financial Value of Entrepreneurship: Using Applied Research to Quantify Entrepreneurial Competence
1.The Root: Why Competence Has Value2.Skill contributions to Entrepreneurial (and Small Business) Economics 3.In search of Competence Value into an Incomplete Financial Markets Context4.The Return-to-Risk Profile of Investing in a Competence Driven Business5.How to Measure the Competence Value (from Q-Ratio to T-ratio)6.Funding the Competence Life-Cycle to Create value and Let It Emerge7.The Next step: From Asset-backed to Competence-driven Financial Practices