Abstract:
This study investigated the relationship between entrepreneurs’ mental resilience,
service delivery, and new venture sustainability among small and medium-sized
enterprises (SMEs) operating between 1-5 years in the Greater Accra Region of Ghana.
A total of 337 SME entrepreneurs participated in the study, and the data were analyzed
using structural equation modeling. The results showed that service delivery has a
strong positive and significant effect on new venture sustainability. SMEs that
consistently provide reliable and customer-focused services are more likely to survive,
grow, and compete effectively. High-quality service delivery builds customer
satisfaction, loyalty, and reputation, which are essential for long-term sustainability.
This supports the SERVQUAL model (Parasuraman et al., 1988), which emphasizes
service quality as a foundation for customer retention, and the Sustainable Development
Theory, which positions effective service delivery as a strategic pathway for achieving
long-term growth and socio-economic development. The mediation analysis revealed
that service delivery significantly mediates the relationship between entrepreneurs’
mental resilience and sustainability. While resilience enables entrepreneurs to
withstand stress and adapt to challenges, its positive impact on sustainability is
amplified when it is translated into effective and consistent service practices. This
finding reflects the Conservation of Resources Theory, which posits that individuals
with greater psychological resources such as resilience are better equipped to preserve
and deploy resources in ways that enhance performance and survival. By combining
these perspectives, the study provides both theoretical and practical contributions.
Theoretically, it extends SERVQUAL model, Sustainable Development Theory, and
COR into the SME context, showing how personal resilience and service delivery
interact to drive sustainability. Practically, the findings highlight the importance of
entrepreneurs not only cultivating resilience but also channeling it into high-quality,
customer-centered service delivery to secure long-term success. In summary, the
research demonstrates that service delivery is both a direct driver of sustainability and
a bridge through which entrepreneurial resilience is transformed into long-term venture
survival and growth.
Description:
A thesis in the Department of Marketing and Entrepreneurship,
School of Business, submitted to the School of
Graduate Studies in partial fulfilment
of the requirements for the award of the degree of
Master of Philosophy
(Marketing and Entrepreneurship)
in the University of Education, Winneba
SEPTEMBER, 2025