Entrepreneurial Cooperation Model between University and SMEs: A Case Study in Iran
Abstract
:1. Introduction
- What are the elements and conditions of development of entrepreneurial cooperation between universities and small and medium-sized enterprises?
- What is the proper conceptual model for entrepreneurial cooperation between universities and SMEs to strengthen and develop the entrepreneurship dimensions within them?
2. Theoretical Foundations of the Research
2.1. Components and Concepts of SME Cooperation with Environment
2.1.1. Types of Cooperation
2.1.2. Motivations of Cooperation
2.1.3. Stages and Approaches of Cooperation
2.1.4. The Scope of Cooperation
2.2. Comparison of Large Enterprises and SMEs with Regard to Cooperation with Universities
3. A Review of the Research History
4. Research Method
4.1. Open Coding
4.2. Axial Coding
4.3. Selective Coding
5. Findings
5.1. A Response to the First Research Question: What Are the Dimensions and Components of Entrepreneurial Cooperation between Universities and Small and Medium-Sized Enterprises?
5.2. A Response to the Second Research Question: What Is the Proper Conceptual Model for Entrepreneurial Cooperation between Universities and Small and Medium-Sized Enterprises?
6. Discussion and Investigation
6.1. Causal Conditions (Goals and Motivations of Entrepreneurial Cooperation)
6.2. Axial Category (Entrepreneurial Cooperation between Universities and Small and Medium-Sized Enterprises)
6.3. Background Conditions (Environmental Issues and Entrepreneurial Cooperation Ecosystem)
6.4. Mediating Conditions (Entrepreneurial Cooperation Infrastructure and Context)
6.5. Entrepreneurial Cooperation Strategies
- Be based on the power of the private sector and avoid relying on government sectors (codes 35–40).
- Be self-driven and largely ignore the public budget (code 19).
- Be demand oriented and change based on the required (supply and demand) mechanisms (codes 16–40).
- Consider risk taking, accountability and cultural differences (codes 5–6–16).
- Be native and avoid emphasizing alien patterns (codes 15–24–30–34–35–37).
- Adhere to the following topics and cases by creating and establishing cooperation between academic stakeholders and SME stakeholders: industrial clinics, SMEs diagnosing complications, launching demand-oriented startups, helping to develop new SME products, marketing (technology and products), making knowledge-based SMEs (codes 16–30–35).
- Be executive and attract the will and desire of academic and public senior managers (codes 34–38).
6.5.1. Strategies Related to the Private Sector
Private Sector Agent (Intermediary) Model
The Model of New Emerging Knowledge-Based Company Establishment
6.5.2. Non-Private Sector Strategies
Jihad-Based Native Model
Support-Oriented University
6.6. Entrepreneurial Cooperation Consequences
6.6.1. Consequences Related to the University Stakeholders
6.6.2. The Consequences Related to the SMEs Stakeholders
6.6.3. The Consequences of Implementing the Model for Other Cooperation Stakeholders
7. Summary and Conclusions
- -
- Entrepreneurial cooperation models between universities and SMEs in different universities, divided into technical engineering and non-technical engineering universities.
- -
- Entrepreneurial cooperation models between universities and SMEs, divided into small enterprises (up to 50 employees) and medium enterprises (from 50 to 100 employees).
- -
- The relationship between the performance of each stakeholder (academic and SME stakeholders) with the success of entrepreneurial cooperation between universities and SMEs.
- -
- The effect of the geographical location of universities and SMEs on the success of the entrepreneurial cooperation between them.
- -
- -
- The impact of Information Systems (IS) and block chain technology on the development of cooperation between universities and SMEs (see [56]).
Author Contributions
Funding
Acknowledgments
Conflicts of Interest
Appendix A
Educational Level | Scientific/Executive Post | Date of Interview | Code of Interviewee |
---|---|---|---|
Ph.D. | Vice-chancellor for Research and Technology of Iran Science and Technology University | 2016.07.23 | 30 |
Ph.D. | Research manager of Iran Science and Technology University | 2016.07.23 | 31 |
Ph.D. | Incubator manager of Iran Science and Technology University | 2016.07.23 | 33 |
Ph.D. | Manager of Scientific–Industrial Cooperation Office of Iran Science and Technology University | 2016.07.23 | 34 |
Ph.D. | Vice-chancellor of Railway Faculty of Iran Science and Technology University | 2016.11.16 | 35 |
Ph.D. | Economy faculty member of Sharif University | 2016.12.08 | 36 |
Ph.D. | Faculty member of a university | 2016.12.08 | 37 |
Ph.D. | Faculty member of Allameh Tabataba’i University | 2016.12.08 | 38 |
Ph.D. | The head of an innovation fund | 2016.12.08 | 40 |
M.A. | Vice-chancellor of supporting knowledge enterprises, the knowledge enterprise office and vice-president of science and technology companies | 2016.12.27 | 43 |
Ph.D. | Lecturer at Allameh Tabataba’i University | 2017.01.25 | 44 |
M.A. | Previous programming vice-chancellor of the Ministry of Industry, Mine and Trade/Ph.D. student | 2017.01.20 | 45 |
Ph.D. | Previous head manager of Tehran municipality; current counsellor of the Ministry of Industry, Mine and Trade | 2017.01.30 | 46 |
B.A. | Teacher and member of the board of directors of Research and Development Committee of Industries and Mines of Iran | 2017.03.13 | 47 |
B.A. | Marketing manager of Takab Ettesal company; producer of polyamine and polypill connections | 2017.02.19 | 48 |
B.A. | Marketing manager of Tekab Ettesal company | 2017.02.19 | 48 |
B.A. | Vice-chancellor of National Cooperative Union of Petrochemical Downstream Industry | 2017.02.19 | 49 |
Diploma | Director of plastic production company | 2017.02.20 | 50 |
B.A. | Substitute and member of board of directors of a company; member of board of directors of the industrial park of Nasirabad | 2017.02.20 | 51 |
B.A. | Vice-president of Morvarid Papyrus company | 2017.02.20 | 52 |
M.A. | Research and development expert from Iran Nasb Niroo company | 2017.02.20 | 53 |
B.A. | Sale manager of Arian lift company | 2017.02.20 | 54 |
Diploma | Vice-president of the board of directors of Sabalan plastic production company | 2017.02.20 | 55 |
B.A. | Director of Teknometa company | 2017.02.20 | 56 |
M.A. | Staff department manager of a university | 2017.02.21 | 57 |
B.A. | Quality control manager of Shayan Valve company | 2017.02.22 | 58 |
B.A. | Sale manager of Tarahan Furniture company | 2017.02.22 | 59 |
B.A. | Sale manager of Aria Electronic company | 2017.02.22 | 60 |
B.A. | The head of the board of directors of Avisa Pak company | 2017.02.22 | 61 |
M.A. | Small industries’ chancellor of industrial parks of Tehran | 2017.02.22 | 62 |
B.A. | Previous manager of science and technology higher education center/vice-president of a production company | 2017.03.01 | 63 |
B.A. | Expert from Assoplast | 2017.02.22 | 64 |
M.A. | Management development vice-chancellor—Industry, Mine and Trade office of Lorestan | 2017.03.25 | 65 |
M.A. | Head manager of the standards of Lorestan province | 2017.03.25 | 66 |
M.A. | Vice-president of industrial block production company (knowledge enterprise) | 2017.03.26 | 68 |
M.A. | Manager of investment of Industry, Mine and Trade of Lorestan province | 2017.03.25 | 69 |
M.A. | Vice-president of industrial parks in Lorestan province | 2017.03.26 | 70 |
B.A. | Accountant at Boroujerd industrial park | 2017.03.28 | 71 |
M.A. | Manager of industrial offices of Industry, Mine and Trade offices of Boroujerd/Ph.D. student of industrial engineering | 2017.03.28 | 72 |
Ph.D. | The head of workshops, laboratories and the library of Ayatollah Boroujerdi University | 2017.04.03 | 73 |
Axial Coding (Concepts) | Axial Coding (Subcategories) | Selective Coding (Main Categories) |
---|---|---|
Individual characteristics (internal motivation, interest, etc.) | Individual goals and motivation in the university | Causal conditions (entrepreneurial cooperation goals and motivations) |
Material goals (income, etc.) | ||
Immaterial goals (professional responsibility, etc.) | ||
Organizational goals (social responsibility, organizational responsibility, wealth, etc.) | Organizational goals and motivations of the university | |
Individual characteristics (internal motivation, interest, etc.) | Individual goals and motivation in the SME | |
Material goals (income, etc.) | ||
Immaterial goals (professional responsibility, etc.) | ||
SME growth | Organizational goals and motivation of the SME | |
SME survival | ||
Incentives resulting from rules and regulations | Goals and motivation of external factors | |
Pursuing cooperation trustees | ||
Entrepreneurial characteristics of stakeholders in the university | Individual factors in the university for cooperation | Category orientation (entrepreneurial cooperation between the university and the SMEs) |
Demand and will of academic stakeholders for cooperation | ||
Analysis of stakeholders in the university | ||
Useful and applied research of the university | Organizational factors of the university for cooperation | |
Entrepreneurship and commercialization of the technology of university | ||
Entrepreneurial education of the university | ||
Entrepreneurial program and structure of the university | ||
Professional management of the university | ||
Capabilities and facilities of the university | ||
Entrepreneurial characteristics of stakeholders in the SME | Individual factors of the SME for cooperation | |
Demand and will of SME stakeholders for cooperation | ||
Analysis of stakeholders in the SME | ||
Problems and needs of SME | Organizational factors of the SME for cooperation | |
Entrepreneurial program and structure of the SME | ||
Professional management in the SME | ||
Administrative problems (administrative corruption, administrative bureaucracy, etc.) | Macro environmental problems | Background conditions (environmental issues and entrepreneurial cooperation ecosystem) |
Cultural problems (work culture, the culture of looking outside, etc.) | ||
Political problems (politicizing, etc.) | ||
Economic problems (instability, imports, etc.) | ||
Guild societies and related institutions and centers | Cooperation ecosystem | |
Protecting cooperation | ||
Multilateral cooperation | ||
Difficulties and barriers of cooperation (lack of feeling/distrust/cultural differences/differences of opinion/previous unsuccessful experiences/abundant involvements) | Cooperation context and background | Mediating conditions (entrepreneurial cooperation context and infrastructure) |
Cooperation threats (creating competition/lack of stakeholder participation/incomplete cooperation ecosystem cycle) | ||
Budget | Cooperation requirements | |
Facilities | ||
Communicational mechanisms (informal communications/informing systems) | ||
Legal issues (cooperation contracts/ownership/stock/commitments and guarantees) | ||
Beginning cooperation (creative methods, beginning from the university and from a few other locations, etc.) | Cooperation process | |
Stakeholders’ participation in the cooperation | ||
Need and demand mechanism in the cooperation | ||
Agent (intermediary) in the private sector | Strategies related to the private sector | Strategies (entrepreneurial cooperation strategies) |
Knowledge based companies | ||
Jihad-based native model | Strategies related to the non-private sector | |
Support oriented university | ||
Material consequences (increasing income-job creation, etc.) | Cooperation consequences for individual factors of the university | Consequences (entrepreneurial cooperation consequences) |
Immaterial consequences (scientific growth/professional responsibility/meeting internal requirements, etc.) | ||
Material consequences (creating stable incomes, etc.) | Cooperation consequences for organizational factors of the university | |
Immaterial consequences (professional and social responsibility/meeting stakeholders appropriately, etc.) | ||
Material consequences (increasing income/maintaining income level, etc.) | Cooperation consequences for individual factors of the SME | |
Immaterial consequences (professional responsibility/meeting internal requirements, etc.) | ||
Material consequences (producing wealth and value added, survival, development, and growth of the SME) | Cooperation consequences for organizational factors of the SME | |
Immaterial consequences, appropriate accountability of the stakeholders | ||
Graduate job creation | Cooperation consequences for other stakeholders | |
Economic development and growth for the country (entrepreneurship revolution) |
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Topic | Years | Number |
---|---|---|
Entrepreneurial Cooperation between Universities | 1990–2020 | 86 |
Entrepreneurial Cooperation—Universities and SMEs | 1990–2020 | 31 |
Entrepreneurial Cooperation between Universities and SMEs | 1990–2020 | 2 |
Entrepreneurial Cooperation Model | 1990–2020 | 0 |
Entrepreneurial Cooperation Model between Universities and SMEs | 1990–2020 | 0 |
Topic | Large Enterprises | SMEs |
---|---|---|
Cooperation Goals and Strategies |
| |
Cooperation Forms and Methods |
|
|
Beginning and Continuity of Cooperation |
| |
Barriers and Challenges of Cooperation |
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Moradi, Y.; Noori, S. Entrepreneurial Cooperation Model between University and SMEs: A Case Study in Iran. Sustainability 2020, 12, 9140. https://doi.org/10.3390/su12219140
Moradi Y, Noori S. Entrepreneurial Cooperation Model between University and SMEs: A Case Study in Iran. Sustainability. 2020; 12(21):9140. https://doi.org/10.3390/su12219140
Chicago/Turabian StyleMoradi, Yazdan, and Siamak Noori. 2020. "Entrepreneurial Cooperation Model between University and SMEs: A Case Study in Iran" Sustainability 12, no. 21: 9140. https://doi.org/10.3390/su12219140
APA StyleMoradi, Y., & Noori, S. (2020). Entrepreneurial Cooperation Model between University and SMEs: A Case Study in Iran. Sustainability, 12(21), 9140. https://doi.org/10.3390/su12219140