Entrepreneurship
and The Indian Scenario Specially Agribusiness (Based on Notes for the Address
at MMU, Sadopur Campus, Ambala District)
- Some Inputs,
Some thoughts (includes notes fifteen odd years old)
By Dinesh K
Kapila
I have always advocated the concept of
entrepreneurship. This is one economic activity which is open to entry, on
merit, to a large extent. Concerns of access to finance are certainly there, as
specially in rural areas, banks are the only source of finance. However of
late, NBFCs and NBFC MFIs have made a presence. Plus the projects are mostly
basic and do not attract glamour or attention. Yet they are the foundations of
small rural areas and as they add up in mass and scale, they evolve as vital
cogs of the economy. Facilitative Government Policies over the years have
created a huge core of entrepreneurs across all communities and are leading to
many young citizens exploring the option of entrepreneurship. I feel during my
interactions a tremendous hunger for economic success and ambition across
social classes in rural and semi urban India. Many entrepreneurs are also developing
their own linkages and understanding of the operating environment.
Commitment, a knowledge of the particular market
and ecosystem and an understanding of basic finance can certainly lead to
success. In the rural hinterland, rigidities do prevail even now and community
rigidities, but the consistent flow of information is certainly diluting
barriers.
In his landmark book
Innovation and Entrepreneurship, published in 1985, Peter Drucker already
anticipated the shift towards a society that is that is characterized by entrepreneurship,
innovation and dynamics. Based upon the ideas of another great Austrian
thinker, Joseph Schumpeter, the entrepreneur should be, according to his
opinion, in the heart of the economic life – as the driving force of a
market-based, competitive and wealth-creating economy.
The entrepreneurial society
Peter Drucker turned out to be right. Never before
in the history of mankind has change had a bigger impact on business and
society than today. Change invariably creates room for innovation, and those
unable to adapt will not survive. Innovation is the key to successful
competition, growth, progress and prosperity. “But innovation does not happen
on its own. It takes people who are passionate about making it happen: Someone
needs to identify opportunities for innovation, turn ideas into products,
services or business models and help them succeed in the face of adversity. And
this is exactly what entrepreneurs do,” explains Prof. Franke while discussing
this.
The capacity and willingness to develop, organize and manage a
business venture along with any of its risks in order to make a profit. The
most obvious example of entrepreneurship is the starting of new businesses. In economics, entrepreneurship combined with
land, labor, natural resources and capital can produce profit. Entrepreneurial
spirit is characterized by innovation and risk-taking, and is an essential part
of a nation's ability to succeed in an ever changing and increasingly
competitive global marketplace.
Entrepreneurship
has been described as the capacity and willingness to develop, organize and
manage a business venture along with any of its risks to make a profit. Due to the high risks involved in launching a start-up, a
significant proportion of start-up businesses have to close due to A lack of funding, bad business decisions, an
economic crisis, lack of market demand, or a combination of all of these. We
may remember to draw lessons from failures too.
A broader definition of the term is sometimes
used, especially in the field of economics.
In this usage, an Entrepreneur is an entity which has the ability to find and
act upon opportunities to translate inventions or technologies into products
and services: The entrepreneur is able to recognize the commercial potential of
the invention and organize the capital, talent, and other resources that turn
an invention into a commercially viable innovation.In this sense, the term
"Entrepreneurship" also captures innovative activities on the part of
established firms, in addition to similar activities on the part of new
businesses
Historical
Context
Alberuni :
About us - 1000 AD, stated about us, that we exhibited a marked preference for
theoretical over practical learning. We have
to become tinkerers : combine knowledge with a
manual hands on approach, this produces innovation. Entrepreneurs in our society have often shied
away from manual labour and technology – noted author Gurcharan Das has stated
if I remember correctly that this is one reason to have missed the industrial
revolution. Ofcourse the operating
scenario has evolved of late and a new entrepreneurial vigour is evident in
India as a result of talent, hard work and professional skills. We have to build on it – bankers and
investors must be facilitative in this process.
Gunnar Myrdal
has stated in the 1960s or 1970s that India’s social attitudes and systems were
responsible for low industrialisation : the main factors as stated were low productivity, primitive production technology, low levels of
living due to - poor work discipline, contempt for manual work, lack of
punctuality, alertness and ambition, low aptitude for cooperation, superstition. This plus ofcourse the debilitating land
tenure system, low standards of efficiency and integrity in public administration,
low peoples participation and rigid social structures. This may hurt but we can assess ourselves
where we have evolved and reached in this long journey since then. Product
Development and innovation is also a concern, this is an Indian manufacturing
weakness, it’s quite lacking and applies equally to the rural artisan
also. Japan had an immense curiosity for
western science and technology - even in the 17 century and literally
reinvented itself from a semi feudal agrarian society to an industrial society.
Japan of course moved up technologically tremendously due to a higher literacy
levels, I would stress technical literacy rooted in a good mix of the
theoretical and practical knowledge.
Wealth
Creation
In this
context, it is only pertinent to stress that Wealth creation is atleast as
important or more important than wealth redistribution. a competitive economy
produces high productivity, efficiency, innovation
and higher investments in human resources.
The Japanese industrial or economic miracle – as we know it, is based on
brutal domestic competition
The Non Farm
Sector or Off Farm Sector or promoting industrialization and even related
services from the units with a minimal viable investment to increased investments
as it evolves is about fostering entrepreneurship. In the USA for example, in
the 1970s - it was stated to be the De-industrialisation
era which had begun. But Peter Drucker emphasized that it was actually a shift from the managerial to an entrepreneurial
economy. Demography Data indicates that
from 1974 to 1985 : 25 million jobs were added, while workforce grew from 129
million to 180 million. The impact of
the oil shock in that period led to the closure
of many smokestack industries : Western Europe had in 1970, 20 million more jobs than the USA. But in 1984
it had 2 million less. 2.40 million jobs
were lost in Europe in 1974-84.
Japan had a
10 % growth rate, during 1970-82 in job creation – The USA had a 40% increase.
at the same time in the USA, 1 in 2 women were in jobs in 1984 vis a vis 1 in 5
earlier, this indicates the potential of the benefits of encouraging
entrepreneurship.
This creation
of jobs in the USA was in small and medium industries / institutions /
businesses - not in Govt./ large Co’s / huge schools and colleges. Of the 40
million new jobs : 5-6 million jobs were in high tech only - high tech gives
the excitement but the real growth is in the so called mundane sectors. Pertinently,
we should respect the excitement around the hitech sector as it builds an
environment for entrepreneurship and creates a vision for innovation and receptivity,
for entry in this sector as also for a shift
in the employment market . It spawns a willingness to work in small Co’s – as
per data I could assess, the top 20 public Co’s of the USA at that time, in the
bracket of 5-15 years old, only 5 were high tech and 15 were restaurants /
health care and women's wear manufacturing. Or building contractors, physical
exercise manufacturers and chain of hair cutting saloons etc. Incidentally, as regards venture capital
firms, their focus was 1/3rd on services.
To be clear,
entrepreneurship to succeed must be systematic and managed. Being Innovative and creativity ; are the heart
of entrepreneurship : ICEDIP Principles are the key : identification /
clarification / distillation / incubation / perspiration / evaluation. This leads to a belief of win - win, and an
understanding of the need to improvise / compare / innovate.
Indian Context.
Agricultural Expansion
is not enough to conquer poverty, we know this. We lack capital but have people
but also huge disguised unemployment in the countryside; we need to put the
people to productive work at the lowest capital cost, be it in leather,
textiles, cloth merchandise, selling snacks, manufacturing eats and even shoes
etc. This shall generate surpluses which
can feed investments into agriculture, rural infrastructure, agro industry etc.
The terms of trade have often fluctuated
and may not be agriculture friendly but we shall ignore that aspect and it’s impact
for now.
We can agree with
many that economists that state that cultural traits are not that important to
move to an industrial economy, – Example - South East Asia – where success is by
an efficient employment of resources, exports by labour intensive industries,
vigorous literacy and govt. role in building competitiveness and correcting
distortions. Maybe we can learn and attempt to replicate. However I personally
feel that cultural traits do matter and need to be addressed.
My notes
indicate that for India – The share of agriculture and allied activities
dropped from 45.80 % in 1960-61 to 38.10 % in 1980-81 and 27.90 % in
1995-96. share of agriculture and allied
activities in gross capital formation fluctuated likewise from 16.90% to 18.8 % to 10.9 %. also the Indian industry’s share of GDP is
only 26 % - for China it is 50 % and in Indonesia 45 %. India’s industrial sector is the smallest in the region – it needs
to grow at 11 %. The picture is largely
the same even now. We cannot sustain or achieve 8 % growth in GDP with a
stagnant industrial sector.
The World Bank
in it’s view has stated that for effective Rural Development – the growth of
the rural farm and non farm sectors is required and this growth has to be
widespread across subsectors and populations, the World Bank has often held the
view that a private and competitive agriculture and agri business scenario are
the main engine of growth. In addition, family farms and non farm enterprises
provide ample remunerative opportunities to men and women. The Plan Documents of the then Planning
Commission are uniform in stating that they seek to ensure the rapid growth of
those sectors which are capable of creating high quality employment and deal
with policy issues : such as SSI, construction , real estate and housing,
retailing, services.
Some
Practical Aspects.
Be hands on,
always, and demonstrate and learn from it. There is no embarrassment in being
hands on and gaining practical insights. Secondly, even if at home mainly in
Hindi or Punjabi languages, but if you have a sound business plan and a passion
for the activity, pursue it. Do not be under confident, ever because of
language issues. I have noticed this over
the years and hence have shared this. Plus
there is no age for starting out as an entrepreneur, young or old. I often
state at interactions that the only thing certain in life is your future, no
matter how much philosophers say it’s uncertain, as you have the power and
capacity to work on your future.
As an
entrepreneur, you start your own business or trade, you are a job creator, you
are responsible for your own as well as the well being of your associates and
the team, you have to take decisions throughout the day and you have to manage
risk, informally and formally. More important, it’s a process which is without
a timeline, hence the mental stamina and self confidence has to be there and
within. You manage people, you are the boss, you are the first employee, more
important – you are the Brand, Always, let there be no mis-step even once. You
are the back office, you are the master of everything. And you manage People,
Risk, Money, Customers, Suppliers, Building the Business and Complying with Regulations
and Laws.
You could be
an entrepreneur for passion, tapping a perceived opportunity, social
responsibility, to change the world or because you are a rebel. It could be a mix. But to me what is important
is that You Must Understand that Business is about Money. It’s not about the
idea or the technology. It’s about making the idea happen, in the commercial
execution. Organise your market research in detail, and know your trade margins
and norms. Tweak your model, if planned for, after the research. Such as the
Flipkart Entrepreneurs had; The Product with all Varieties on the website,
Quick Delivery and Returns Allowed. It worked. Then learn to discount slowdowns
and recessions, in the sense, prepare for them, but remember cycles are there
in the economy and businesses, you have to manage and survive.
This will be
hard, incredibly hard. But the pluses in the autonomy and sense of ownership
are there plus in the income generated. A note of caution, failure could be a reality
and don’t be afraid about it, just learn honestly from a failure, minor or
major, and move on. Never stop trying, that is the key, be mentally robust
always. And your customer orientation should be stellar consistently. Build
relationships, this is a major and key area. I will stress that building relationships
across a major spectrum is really important, and this need not be the
commercial but a genuine all encompassing relationship.
Agribusiness.
Agriculture
and rural businesses are the areas of maximum social impact but remain
underinvested in India from an equity/start-up investment standpoint. Many
investors do not invest in these sectors on account of perceived long gestation
period, exit issues etc. Rural
areas remain underinvested in terms of healthcare, education, infrastructure
etc. and are ripe for entrepreneurship. A shift from
agriculture to agribusiness is an essential pathway to revitalize Indian
agriculture and to make it more attractive and a profitable venture. Agripreneurship
has the potential to generate growth, diversifying income, providing widespread
employment and entrepreneurial opportunities in rural areas. Today, we need a
focus on basic concepts of agripreneurship, entrepreneurship skills, and the
financing options as available and maybe as evolving. There
is a viewpoint and it’s also my own personal observation that the youth is not
keen to join agriculture, therefore, there is a need to glamorise the farm
sector. The ABIC would or should enable in due course a movement of the youth,
especially in rural areas, to endeavour to be employment generators instead of
employment seekers. In any case we need to foster agri-business
entrepreneurs/ agripreneurs, who can work with farmers. What
Agripreneurs need to know and realise is that they must from inception develop
a deep expertise in agriculture and consumer domains and specially at the their
own level. An inefficient supply chain, a dominant set of suppliers, agents /
buyers / middleman etc impacting direct sales and the share of prices, the lack
of financing options are a reality. Then the distributor and aggregator
doubling up as a financer in addition to banks, inadequate
irrigation and the inverse relationship between farm size and productivity are
major challenges. Secondly, they should align the products and
business models with the constraints and aspirations of the farmers and consumers,
do not offer a solution based on your perception, work with them. Cnduct
extensive pilots across different crop settings, climatic zones and harvesting
seasons for building relevance and encourage adoption. Build a partnership with
organisations which can manage and know the mode of managing farmers groups and
their produce. Try to tap CSR Funds too.
As a person from this region, I must add that the current socio cultural
milieu, specially of many members of the land owning community, is not of
marketing. It’s quite feudalistic. We now need to move to a business
orientation in terms of thought, action and social norms. In Punjab and Farmers
I have heard farmers say, they have gone to drop the Sugarcane or paddy at the market. This betrays a non
commercial mindset and a false bravado. Think business, think sales, cash
realised, think margins and profits.
There are barriers or concerns too such for someone evolving a major agribusiness
model as urban centric investors are reluctant to invest in a service they
don’t understand, payments from farmers do carry a certain unpredictability,
farmers may be ready to use the technology but somewhat reluctant to invest. Moreover,
the level of technology is on a lower scale in agribusinesses and the mode of
selling is also different. We have to adapt to this mode.
The Areas to Invest in
Natural Resources Management.
Better and Efficiently Driven Supply Chain
Marketing Arrangements for outputs.
Informatics and Big Data Analytics
Genetic Improvement of Genetic Species
Resilience to weather / climatic variability
Suitable business models for increasing the profitability of farmers
Suitable models for farmers aggregation
Organic farming, farmer friendly IPM IMM
Value addition and processing
Tapping the export market.
Some Examples
Drone Technology – Agri Input Applications and Crop data for insurance
Agri IOT – Farming automation and digitisation
Weather Tracking – Weather advisory services
Pervasive Automation – Plug and play farm equipment
Vertical farming – Hydroponics and Aeroponics
INM and IPM – Bio Control of Pests.
Food Processing – Logistics, markets, production systems,
storage.
Financing and Compliance.
An entrepreneur must be very aware about financing options, the mode and
manner of reaching out to the financing institutions, and if attempting an
innovation in processes or technology, then knowledge about venture capital and
investors. It’s very that entrepreneurs be very focused on project finance and
its intricacies, the potential balance sheets, margins and profitability.
Understand the importance of knowing the terms and conditions of banks. Maybe
think small and scale up, if that is possible in the business you seek.
Secondly, the marketing aspects, channels to trade partners are equally
important. These must be absorbed by the entrepreneurs. Read up on the GOI and
State Government facilities (PMEGP, KVIB, MSMEs, CGTSME etc) and follow up on
them, and sites like GeM, Start up India and Stand up India, these are result
oriented sites. Do not ignore them. And keep plugging away, the subsidy will
come, if eligible, even if takes time. Network and remain in the loop. Have
patience as regards Governmental Facilitation but do not preferably build your business
model on a frame of being totally dependent on subsidy.
In addition, focus on adhering to the complete set of regulatory
compliances and laws. If necessary take advise or hire consultants even. But
this is most crucial. An entrepreneur must be aware about the relevant laws,
their intricacies and implications. Be fully aware of patents too, if evolving
as an entrepreneur in such a sector. Patents, both in India and abroad,
particularly the USA. Alongside, be aware about Insurance and it’s modes and
applicability and benefits, the need and comfort for financiers and customers
or suppliers. Then if it’s a
manufacturing unit, be aware about Health and Safety Aspects, the relevant
provisions of the Industrial Regulations, Factories Act, Shops and Establishment
Act etc. I would suggest availing the
services of competent consultants, depending upon the type, size and nature of
investment.
Try The Agri Business Incubation Centre at the HAU, Hisar or the
Incubation Centre at ISB, Mohali. They are certainly supportive and would
counsel on the approach and business potential, as also the testing modes.
These are the broad thoughts and ideas I have sought to share. Each
entrepreneur has to work on his individual business plan and scale. Think Big,
Think Success and Think Commercially.
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Your views on agripreneurship and the potential therein are enlightening and encouraging sir. You are bang on it when you underscore that we, as farmers, are yet to embrace the mindset of a 'marketeer'. I understand that marketing remains a core area of concern for rural entrepreneurs. They have product and real good products, something we witnessed in our Rural Immersion programme, but the 'reach' is limited. While finances could certainly be an issue, innovative marketing/advertising could help them tap much better markets even with financial constraints, at least to some extent. The option of linking graduates from good management institutions, may be through internship, shareholding in rural ventures etc. could help such ventures explore the scope of widening their markets. That is, however, just one aspect.
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