Abstract

PurposeThe purpose of this study was to explore determinants that influence women entrepreneurs’ performance in micro and small enterprises in Gondar city, Northwest Ethiopia, and in turn contribute to entrepreneurship-related literature mainly in developing countries.Design/methodology/approachThe study employed an explanatory research design with agreement of primary data collection via a cross-sectional survey questionnaire followed by quantitative research approach. The sample of this study was 180 women entrepreneurs and selected using random sampling technique.FindingsThe findings of this study revealed that educational level, previous entrepreneurial experience, access to business training, access to finance, access to business information, government support, land ownership, and tax are significant in explaining women entrepreneurs’ performance in one hand. On the other side, however, age, marital status, access to market, and access to physical infrastructure are found to be insignificant variables in determining women entrepreneurs’ performance.Research limitations/implicationsThe study used one time data for determinants like level of education, previous working experience, age, and profitability of the enterprise. Thus, due to frequent change in such variables, the study may not reflect the dynamics of the data, which would have a convincing influence on the conclusion. In addition, the research has only consisted of 180 samples. Moreover, such number may not represent the whole population of the entrepreneurs of Ethiopian MSEs. In future research, it is advisable to expand study factors, use interviews as a research tool, and make a comparison between women and men entrepreneurial performances.Practical implicationsThe paper might serve as an input for officials to consider such determinants and encourage an environment that increases women entrepreneurs’ performance. In addition, the study might help women entrepreneurs in addressing the factors affecting performance to take actions towards improving their performance and in turn contribute to job creation, wealth, innovation, and poverty alleviation.Originality/valueThis study contributes to the literature on the determinants of women entrepreneurs’ performance in micro and small enterprises. Specifically, it tests the impact of educational level, age, marital status, previous entrepreneurial experience, access to business training, access to finance, access to business information, access to market, access to physical infrastructure, government support, land ownership, and tax on the performance of women entrepreneurs.

Highlights

  • In the twenty-first century, more attention is given to the subject of entrepreneurship through establishing micro and small enterprises

  • Access to business information was found to be statistically positive and significantly influence the performance of women entrepreneurs at p < 0.05 significant level (Table 4). This implies that women entrepreneurs in micro and small enterprises (MSEs) that have access to business information grow faster than their counterparts because using information can improve and strengthen customer relationships, enhance firm image, enhance market linkage, and enable them to compete with other firms

  • Considering that entrepreneurship is a key driver for economic growth and development (Mandawa, 2016; Mozumdar et al, 2020; Wangari, 2017), understanding which determinant variables influence the performance of women entrepreneurs appears to be a remarkable phenomenon

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Summary

Introduction

In the twenty-first century, more attention is given to the subject of entrepreneurship through establishing micro and small enterprises. In Ethiopia, the importance of enterprises owned by women entrepreneurs is noticed on different documents like industrial policy, MSE development strategy, and the growth and transformation plans I and II to accelerate growth and reduce poverty (Meressa, 2020). Both the growth and performance of women-owned MSEs remain a concern, women entrepreneurship has gained popularity in the country with a growing number of women to start and run their own business (Awoke, 2019). A desk review study on women entrepreneurs in Ethiopia was conducted by Solomon (2010) only using secondary data

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