Original Research
Transforming a small business: A learning intervention
Submitted: 21 October 2011 | Published: 27 March 2012
About the author(s)
Dirk J. Geldenhuys, University of South Africa, South AfricaFrans Cilliers, University of South Africa, South Africa
Abstract
Motivation for the study: This study explored the important role of small businesses; the role of management; and, more specifically, organisation development models that were developed for large corporations; as these emphasise the need to study the purpose of organisation development interventions in small businesses.
Research design, approach and method: The study reported on in this article was a qualitative case study in a small brokers company with 21 staff members. The data were analysed manually by means of qualitative content analysis.
Main findings: The main finding of the research concerned how experiential learning intervention provided a space for participants to start exploring, and gradually changing the dynamics of their small business, by transforming their business into a more formal company.
Practical/managerial implications: The primary implication is that experiential learning interventions that are operationalised, from a psychodynamic perspective, can be valuable when consulted by small businesses during their transformation towards becoming more formal companies.
Contribution/value-add: This article contributes to the OD literature on small businesses, with fewer than 50 employees, by providing data on how the learning process, that commenced during an experiential learning intervention, assisted a small company to develop its identity towards that of a more formal company.
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Crossref Citations
1. Talk-about talent: underlying philosophies on talent in Thai SMEs
Aileen Lawless, Fuangfa Panya, Seamus O’Brien, Seng Kok
Human Resource Development International vol: 22 issue: 5 first page: 553 year: 2019
doi: 10.1080/13678868.2019.1656988