Abstract:
Acquiring financial resources for survival and growth continues to be a challenge for small businesses
in the developing world context. In many cases, small businesses have to resort to innovative and non-traditional
means to remain viable. The main objective of this study was to explore the influence of selected demographic
variables on the choice of bootstrap financing methods among owner-managers of small businesses which were
operating in an unstable economic environment characterised by limited access to business finance. Data was
collected from 62 owner-mangers of small business using a questionnaire that measured their preference of
bootstrap finance methods. Results of the study showed that the owner-mangers preferred bootstrap finance
methods that raised funds without going to the bank, and that owner-managers’ characteristics influenced their
choice of bootstrap finance methods. Implications of the results are discussed in the context of small businesses’
survival and growth in unstable macro-economic environments.