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Entrepreneurship and Marketing Session 1, 2016 Assignment 1: Case Analysis – Zambrero
Core Information:
Due: Before 11:00 pm, Friday 8thth April 2016 Weighting: 20% Individual/Group Individual Assignment Word limit: 1200-1500 words in total (plus or minus 10%)
Please read the following article, sourced from http://www.australiaunlimited.com/business/aprince-among-men. Questions related to the article will appear following:
"Here I am, a Scottish-born Australian doctor with Sri Lankan heritage running a chain of Mexican restaurants and doing aid work in the Asia-Pacific region in places like Cambodia, Sri Lanka and Vietnam and now in remote communities in the Northern Territory,†says Dr Sam Prince. “So I guess I find my life a bit of a mess.â€
It’s a mess that many other 28-year-olds would like to find themselves in.
Prince started the restaurant chain Zambrero Fresh Mex Grill at 21 while still at medical school and has gone on to grow the chain to over 17 stores while holding down a full-time job as a doctor. With 170 staff and an annual turnover of $13.7 million, BRW magazine named it the fastest-growing franchise in Australia for 2011.
Soon afterwards, Prince set up the Emagine Foundation, through which he’s built 15 schools in Sri Lanka, Vietnam and far north Queensland, and plans 100 more in the Asia-Pacific region by 2014. Then there’s the ‘plate for plate’ initiative, which means for every meal sold at Zambrero, a plate of food is donated to the developing world. Working through its distribution partner, Action Against Hunger, it has already delivered 279,000 plates of food to the Therapeutic Feeding Centre in Liberia, Africa.
Prince is also chairman and founder of One Disease at a Time, set up in 2010 to work on eradicating scabies, a disease rife among Indigenous communities. His prodigious achievements saw him named as the 2012 Young Australian of the Year for the Australian Capital Territory.
“Sam Prince does the work of 100 men, improving the lives of thousands through his innovative medical, business and aid projects,†stated GQ in naming him the 2011 Man of Chivalry in its annual Men of the Year list.
When we meet at the Hilton Hotel in Sydney, Prince, who lives between Canberra and Sydney, is on a six-month sabbatical from practicing medicine. But this is no schoolboy break – he’s using the time
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to set up a stem cell company and an alternative energy company. He’s also planning to open about 30 new restaurants in Australia, taking the number of Zambrero outlets to 50 by the end of the year, and fit in some fieldwork in East Arnhem Land before returning to clinical practice in the middle of the year.
From the wise age of 28, Prince admits to being fairly naïve when he first headed to Asia as a 21year-old. He’d made a bit of money in business and wanted to give something back. He chose SouthEast Asia as the initial focus of his aid work because he’d seen the value a free education had given his own parents who came from humble beginnings in Sri Lanka.
He learnt three significant lessons.
Lesson one: before you do any kind of aid work ensure you have a clear understanding of what you believe is a basic human right and what you believe is a basic human responsibility. And, yes, there’s a clear line between the two, he says. “As doctors we take the Hippocratic Oath of ‘first do no harm’. If you actually don’t understand where that line is you can end up harming people by taking power away from them when you start doing things that you think are basic human responsibilities,†says Prince.
"You have to run an aid organisation with the same rigour as you would a business."
Lesson two: When he thinks back to working in emergency departments in hospitals, he recalls the look of sheer desperation in the eyes of people wheeled into the emergency departments after suffering a medical emergency, such as a heart attack. He saw the same look in the eyes of the people he was helping. “It’s the eyes of people who are truly desperate for your help, money, time, effort, education or healthcare,†says Prince. “For me to sleep at night and to be able to look into the mirror and know that I’ve done things ethically every step of the way I knew I could have no agenda. No political or financial or religious agenda. That seemed so important to me and it was a value that we didn’t ever cross.â€
Lesson three: You have to run an aid organisation with the same rigour as you would a business. “I thought that just because people were in need and needed a hand up that they were all good people,†he says. “The reality is that’s not the truth. People are good and bad, just like there are good and bad people in every other demographic.â€
From Asia, his focus shifted closer to home to indigenous communities. The idea behind One Disease at a Time was sparked by a conversation with one of his mentors, Frank Bowden. The professor of medicine at the Australian National University Medical School had eradicated the sexually transmitted disease donovanosis out of Australia permanently in four years at a cost of $4 million and 10 staff. “That’s not a lot of money, time or resources and I thought ‘wow, that’s something I can do as a doctor, aid worker and entrepreneur’,†says Prince.
Professor Bowden, who sits on the board of One Disease at a Time, first met Prince when he was a resident medical officer at the Canberra Hospital in 2008. “He was already running a number of businesses and had begun his philanthropic work in Sri Lanka,†says Professor Bowden. “I am constitutionally suspicious of medical entrepreneurs who, in my experience, can put the pursuit of financial gain before the desire to care for their patients. The exact opposite applied to Sam – the son of one of my friends had been looked after by Sam in our emergency department one Saturday afternoon. My friend described the appearance of Sam amid the controlled chaos of the hospital as something like a magician waving his wand to create a bubble of peace and calm around his son. This is a special and rare talent.â€
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Another key person involved with One Disease at a Time is Professor Jonathan Carapetis, head of the Menzies School of Health Research at Charles Darwin University. His research revealed a link between skin infections caused by the scabies mite and the potentially fatal rheumatic heart disease. The mite that gets under the skin can also lead to kidney failure. While the disease doesn’t register among non-Aboriginal Australians, in communities such as those in East Arnhem Land, seven out of 10 children are infected with scabies.
Prince takes the question of ‘why Aboriginal health?’ as a philosophical challenge. His view is that while not everyone should end up in the same place, everyone should be given a chance to start off at the same place. “While education is great at liberating people from dire circumstances,†he says, “there’s a basic level of healthcare you need to reach before you can then go on to catapult yourself with a great education.â€
This realisation flipped the hierarchy of basic human rights for Prince from education one, healthcare two, to healthcare one, education two.
When his mother, Dr Thilaka Prince, topped the district in her final exams in her rural village near Galle in Sri Lanka, his maternal grandfather was distraught because he couldn’t afford to send her to university. Never mind, his mother won a scholarship to study economics at Colombo University and went on to get five degrees. Another scholarship took her to the UK to do a PhD in statistics; Prince was born in Dundee, Scotland, five days after she finished her doctorate. Her journey would shape who he would become.
“I’d been born in to a completely different world – one where everything was possible if I put my mind to it – to the one she had known,†says Prince. “And I owed it all to a very humble beginning. It wasn’t just me who benefited from this. My Mum continued her life with a great amount of dignity and passion and a deep-seated responsibility to give something back to her family and the community to which she came from.â€
The Prince family moved to Canberra in 1986 after his parents decided it was safer in Australia than Sri Lanka because of the civil war. While they’d lived in the relatively safe Colombo it was hardly a safe haven considering the prevalence of suicide bombers. “It didn’t matter where you lived, it didn’t matter if you were living in the front line or Colombo, because your kids might go out one day to a market and that could be the end of their lives, or they could be seriously injured,†says Prince. “They decided they didn’t want that for myself and my sister and they decided to emigrate. Mum was an amazing statistician and got a job in the Australian Bureau of Statistics.â€
Prince obviously inherited his mother’s penchant for study. He did his final years of high school at Lake Ginninderra College and at 16 was at Australian National University (ANU) studying literature and astrophysics. After a year he decided he preferred biology, and its practical application in medicine, and enrolled in med school. He graduated with a Bachelor of Medicine and a Bachelor of Surgery at Monash University before returning to Canberra.
His mother is now retired. But after all the sacrifices she made she’d probably prefer it if he was just a doctor.
“She gets a bit worried when I get stressed out about other things, but it’s very interesting because she had a life of struggle and now while I’m not struggling, I am working very hard,†he says. “You do what you’ve learnt and seen and I’ve watched my Mum work hard all her life, so I don’t think I can do anything differently.â€
For the past decade, he’s been getting by on four hours sleep a night. Asked about the risk of burning out, he admits it’s his biggest fear.
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While medicine has always been a really fulfilling career for Prince – he loves the patient care, the art of the bedside manner, and the challenges – he recalls going through a process where he thought he was an entrepreneur masquerading as a medical student rather than the other way around. In 2009 Prince appointed his first chief executive officer, Stuart Cook, to run the Mexican food chain. He’d met the then 23-year-old Cook on a bus on the way to the Taj Mahal. Prince was in India to pick up an award from the Junior Chamber International making him one of the 10 Outstanding Young People of the World in 2008. The award was in recognition of the aid work he’d done in South-East Asia. This included the aforementioned 15 schools and the public education campaigns he’d run in Sri Lanka to reduce the number of deaths from snake bites and dengue fever.
Prince says the financial success of Zambrero has essentially bought him his freedom.
“You can get to a point in life where you are not forced to do anything, you are not forced to go to work 9-5 for a job or a career because you’ve got golden handcuffs to a house that you can’t quite afford, and you have to do this work for a third of your life,†he says. “I figured out early on that what makes me really happy is adventure and discovery. If I have those two things in my life I am really, really happy.â€
While his plans to roll out 30-plus new restaurants this year sounds risky, Prince claims he’s inherently averse to risk. All the restaurants in the chain are profitable and have grown organically rather than by taking on debt.
The idea of starting a restaurant struck while he was working at a chef in at a Mexican restaurant to put himself through medical school. He saw the growth of a new sort of Mexican grill in the US and a gap in the market locally for fresh, healthy, gourmet Mexican food. He opened his first restaurant in Canberra in 2005 with an investment of $10,000.
“It was one of those things that you feel so strongly about that you actually have to do something about it,†he says. “Plus I love Mexican food. I was absolutely obsessed about chocolate mole, nachos, chipotle and jalapenos. Real Mexican food is so different to what Australians had been taught to expect.â€
While he doesn’t know exactly what drives the extremely ambitious Prince, Professor Bowden says unlike most entrepreneur/philanthropists who make their money and then distribute it in their fifties, Prince seems intent on distributing it now. “I would venture that some of his motivation is competitive – he likes to succeed where the stakes are high, but his actions are underpinned by a philosophy of service to the community,†says Professor Bowden. “I have pushed myself to do new things and to persist where I may have otherwise given up after talking to him about his owns plans.â€
He adds that the elimination of scabies from East Arnhem Land is an incredibly difficult task and noone has any illusions that a simple investment of more money will solve a complex problem that is as much a social issue as a medical one. However, Professor Bowden is confident that the energy Prince has already expended and the relationships he will continue to develop will pay off.
“You have to be patient with initiatives in Aboriginal health. But you also have to be brave and resilient as there will always be people who will criticise your actions and question your motives,†says Professor Bowden. “I have no doubt Sam will persevere and that we will be able to develop a successful model that can be applied in other communities in Australia.â€
Prince clearly clocks up an impressive number of hours each week, but for him work and play blend into one. For the past decade he’s been getting by on about four hours sleep a night. Asked about the risk of burning out, he admits it’s his biggest fear, something he’s constantly pontificating about
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with his friends, mentors and colleagues. Perhaps harking back to that year of literature at ANU, he reads out a quote from Ayn Rand that sums up his feelings about living a full life.
“… It is a sense of enormous expectation, a sense that one’s life is important, that great achievements are within one’s capacity and that great things lie ahead. It is not in the nature of man, or that of any living entity to start by giving up, or spitting in one’s own face and damning existence. This requires a process of corruption whose rapidity differs from man to man. Some give up at the first touch of pressure, some sell out, some run down by imperceptible degrees and lose their fire, never knowing when or how they lost it…â€
Giving up is simply not an option for Prince, but the reason he manages to get so much done is he’s attracted a team of talented people around him. About 300 people are involved in his various enterprises.
Samantha Cran, chief executive officer of One Disease at a Time, first met Prince at a business/networking event. She recalls being taken aback by his ability to translate his core values into actions and felt she had to be part of the movement. She started as a volunteer before becoming the CEO. “Sam is the ultimate definition of an entrepreneur,†says Cran. “Whether it’s in business or healthcare, for each industry he is the visionary who can see a gap in the market before others do and then diligently backs himself to fill it. He also has the tenacity to push through any barriers – it is this ‘will’ that people recognise early and are truly inspired by.â€
Prince puts the willingness of others to get involved down to him wearing his dreams on his sleeves. “By virtue of claiming it and saying, ‘I want to do this’, and being open about it, this activates the people around you,†says Prince. “I think there’s just such an abundance of people who can help you. We live in a scarcity concept where we feel like there’s only one person in the world who can help you achieve your dream, there’s probably 10 of them and they are probably sitting in this cafe right now.â€
The Overall Task
The following questions are all based on the above Zambrero article published in Australia Unlimited. Basing your arguments on the topics that you have studied in the first five weeks of this unit, write a report addressing the following two questions:
a) Entrepreneurs have been identified as having certain traits and characteristics. Discuss the extent to which Zambrero founder Sam prince exemplifies these traits and characteristics. Justify your response with reference to academic sources (e.g. academic journal articles, textbooks, etc.). b) The article clearly outlines what we might consider 'social entrepreneurship', whereby an entrepreneur establishes and/or leads an organisation or initiative engaged in social change. Outline three current trends that illustrate the social entrepreneurship movement. Again, you should be looking to use academic sources as the foundation of your review. Wikipedia or web blogs are not considered as 'sound' academic sources.Page 6 of 9
Write up your analysis. This should be in a report format. Here is a suggested structure:
a. Executive Summary b. Introduction c. Analysis of Entrepreneur traits/characteristics (ie. linking them to Dr Sam Prince) d. Recent Trends in Social Entrepreneurship e. Conclusion f. References g. Appendix (if required)
Submit the report via the Turnitin Submission Link (under Assessment Details on the Blackboard site)…be fully aware of the plagiarism rules in the School; plagiarism will not be tolerated.
The marking criteria for the assignment can be found on the following page. They are published to give you detailed guidelines about the way in which your mark will be calculated. Please read them carefully. Note that they are a guide, not a definitive formula for allocating marks, and no set of criteria can accurately describe every possible assignment. Your final mark will reflect the application of academic judgement by your marker to your whole assignment.
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Subject | Business | Pages | 7 | Style | APA |
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Answer
Case Analysis Zambrero
Introduction
Entrepreneurship is the capacity and willingness to create or develop a business venture together with all the risks involved in order to make the necessary profits. An example is a startup business. The entrepreneurship spirit is usually combined with innovation and taking risks, which is an essential part of the competitive global world of business. Business on the other hand is the process of circulating goods and services to customers. The process involves coordination and other elements that are essential for its progress (Sahouri &Rantissi, 2015:2). This particular report will cover the organizational procedures involved in Zambrero line of business and how effective they have been run up to this point. The case analysis will involve different business models and their impacts on the organizational development.
Entrepreneur Traits
Most successful entrepreneur must have common traits that define them. Entrepreneurs are known to be passionate and driven by clear sense of humor. The passion comes from two main sources, the business one is handling and the game of building the business. Entrepreneurs must also be resilient meaning that they need to have the spirit of determination and tolerance in their work. They have to be willing to learn from their mistakes when they are knocked down and not to give up. Self-possession is another trait. A self-possessed individual is one who has a strong sense of self to succeed one need to have self-confidence that they can make it. One should not let their ego overrule them when it comes to managing their business (Sahouri & Rantissi, 2015:2). In the current case study, Dr Sam Prince has proven to have all these traits while meaning the movement as he has endured all odds to get the business where it is.
Successful entrepreneurs have very unique characteristics that distinguish them from other common leaders. They are often motivated to work harder in order to make their business successful without having to look upon others for help. For instance, Prince needs to be optimistic and enthusiastic for future orientations. Next, he needs to be creative and persuasive, every successful entrepreneur must be creative and recognize the abilities they have to pursue new opportunities, and they have strong selling skills and are persuasive. He must also have strong business skills that will enable him set up necessary procedures and processes. He must be a risk take and tolerate all the risks involved in the business venture. By having these characteristics the manger will be able to take the business to another level (Sahouri &Rantissi, 2015:2).
Entrepreneurs are normally driven by diverse and unique traits that define them. They may be driven by the chance of provision of new products, services, solutions, or even procedures. Entrepreneurs see opportunity of coming up with something new in places where many would rather not venture into. The traits that define entrepreneurs include; inspiration, courage, innovative and creativity, action taker, and resilience (Harris, 2016:n.p). As an entrepreneur, one has to be inspired in whatever they decide to venture. Besides that, entrepreneurs are motivated since they normally empathize with frustrated people. Entrepreneurs are creative in their ways as they come with new mechanisms of approaching problems to find a solution. They never hesitate to take action in what they are doing as part of their business. Entrepreneurship requires courage more so during innovation process and the fact that every venture remains a big risk (Harris, 2016:n.p). Resilience is relatively imperative since any venture cannot succeed without facing setbacks. In this case analysis, Prince established the Zambrero food chain at the age of 21 years of age. It is imperative to note that he lacked any experience in business, although he had wide knowledge having worked at a Mexican food outlet. Zambrero grew to an amazing 17 stores with a credible yearly turnover of $13.7 million, and Prince was eyeing growth of Zambrero up to 50 food chains, which is a very big risk but act of courage. Therefore, Prince possesses all the traits of an entrepreneur.
In this case, analysis, social entrepreneurship is a procedure mainly of addressing the locally existing elementary needs that are not addressed. This is dependent on the needs or services to be addressed, the method normally comprises creating the missing organizations or going to an extent of changing those that remain as inadequate. Therefore, it is essential to note that the main aim is modifying or changing the social structures that exist in a certain economic society. In social entrepreneurship, earned income is an essential pillar although it is not sufficient. Social entrepreneurship is evident over the entire analysis of Zambrero. For instance, the ‘plate for plate’ initiative is a product of the Zambrero food chains. It donates a plate of food to the developing world countries for every meal sold at Zambrero. A good example is the 279,000 plates that were delivered in at the Therapeutic Feeding Centre in Liberia. Zambrero is an initiative demonstrating social entrepreneurship, whereby a business is driven by a social change that will improve a certain initiative in a certain community. Therefore, the most significant social change occurs via modification of organizations that define the economic and social daily activities at the local level (Mishra, 2015:361). This means that the local framework determines the chances of social entrepreneurship together with the best approaches for deployment.
Privatization of Public Responsibilities
The first major trend of social entrepreneurship is privatization of the public responsibilities more so the welfare of the public. It is imperative to note that this trend is made up of the essential shifts that take place in organization outlines associated with the social protection happening in majority of the progressive industrialized countries in the world. This means that there a change and shift from the social welfare type to the one that is more market driven. This is becoming a common reality to the social entrepreneur in their daily activities that normally take place in the places where their initiatives are based. This trend reflects social entrepreneurship because the entrepreneurs have enhanced the privatization of the social welfare as they seek to be more entrenched in the welfare initiatives. This kind of trend will be very helpful to the organization as it will produce more revenues for the organization and expand its markets globally (Zboroń, 2015:239).
Corporate Social Responsibility
The second trend is corporate social responsibility. This is a kind if regulation that is self-effective to the specific organization and the model is usually integrated into the business to help it become self-disciplined in its overall performance. In this aspect, a socially responsible business will actively comply with monitoring corporate activities and comply with the law to avoid any form of friction with the law. The ethical standards are their first priority as they thrive to keep up the international norms and standards. The goal of CSR for this company is to make sure that all employees are accountable for their actions and end up achieving notable positive impacts on the environment too. The community and all stakeholders are held accountable for their responsibilities too (Bhattacharya, 2010:600). The CSR is designed in such a way that it will support the organization’s mission and at the same time guide the company on the standards to take and deliver good services to their customers (Banytė, 2015:706). By adopting this trend, the company will be able to adhere to all social responsibilities and act in accordance to the regulations of organizations.
Sustainable Accounting
The third recent trend for the company is sustainable accounting. This trend is likely to increase the popularity of the organization as many other companies have adapted this trend and has proven to be successful. This technique provides financial disclosure to the stakeholders by providing them with information about the organization’s main activities and their supposed impacts on the environment. As a result, all the people involved including the suppliers, the government will have a clear understanding of the organizational management policies and resources, and this will lead to the company achieving sustainability and development. In this case, sustainability accounting will help the organization by connecting its strategies to more sustainable frameworks environmentally, economically and socially. Most organizations always find it hard to put together policies that will help promote environmental and economic goals for the organizations. However, this trend will make things easier for the management team as their work will be less difficult (Sears, 2016:45).
Conclusion
Entrepreneurship is the capacity and willingness to create or develop a business venture together with all the risks involved in order to make the necessary profits. Just as many other entrepreneurs Prince had the chance to develop his business to the global level and he managed to do so with the help of his entrepreneurial skills and characteristics. Although the business has been a success in most parts, there are still challenges that every entrepreneur has to deal with including competition and emerging trends that leave one vulnerable. The most significant social change occurs via modification of organizations that define the economic and social daily activities at the local level.
References
Sahouri, D, Rantissi, I, Bishouti, S, & Ozgul, A 2015, 'Entrepreneurial Characteristics and Decision Making: Evidence from Jordan',Middle East Journal Of Business, 10, 3, pp. 3-24, Chell, E, Spence, L, Perrini, F, & Harris, J 2016, 'Social Entrepreneurship and Business Ethics: Does Social Equal Ethical?', Journal of Business Ethics, Mishra, S, & Modi, S 2016, 'Corporate Social Responsibility and Shareholder Wealth: The Role of Marketing Capability', Journal Of Marketing, 80, 1, pp. 26-46, Zboroń, H 2015, 'Social Economics - From The Profit Oriented Market To The Social Entrepreneurship',Research Papers Of The Wroclaw University Of Economics / Prace Naukowe Uniwersytetu Ekonomicznego We Wroclawiu, 387, pp. 229-239, Singh, R, Bakshi, M, & Mishra, P 2015, 'Corporate Social Responsibility: Linking Bottom of the Pyramid to Market Development?',Journal Of Business Ethics, 131, 2, pp. 361-373, Smith, N, Palazzo, G, & Bhattacharya, C 2010, 'Marketing's Consequences: Stakeholder Marketing and Supply Chain Corporate Social Responsibility Issues', Business Ethics Quarterly, 20, 4, pp. 617-641, Gadeikienė, A, & Banytė, J 2015, 'Discourse on Corporate Social Responsibility in the Context of Marketing Scientific Research',Procedia - Social And Behavioral Sciences, 213, 20th International Scientific Conference "Economics and Management 2015 (ICEM-2015)", pp. 702-708, Sears, J 2016, 'Nurturing New Businesses', Independent Banker, 66, 2, pp. 40-45,
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