Sustainable Entrepreneurship at the Bottom of the Pyramid: An Identity-Based Perspective
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Theoretical Background
2.1. Identity in Entrepreneurship
2.2. Sustainable Entrepreneurship
3. Materials and Methods
3.1. Data Collection
3.2. Data Analysis
4. Results
4.1. Founder Identities and Sustainable Enterprise Creation
4.1.1. Opportunity Recognition
4.1.2. Opportunity Development and Scaling
5. Discussion
Intervening Individual and Contextual Dimensions
6. Conclusions
Author Contributions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Acknowledgments
Conflicts of Interest
Appendix A
Don | Oscar | Gregory | Jan | Melvin | Patrick | Sam | |
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Frame of Reference/relevant others | Known Others: Providing a product that supports the local community seen as core to the entrepreneurial process. Increasing livelihoods of local communities. Unknown others: Demonstrating the feasibility of alternative practices and leading by example through helping society. Competing products: being distinct (differentness) by proving health and price benefits of products. | Unknown others: Demonstrating the feasibility of alternative social practices and leading by example core to the entrepreneurial process, i.e., alternative green building materials. Known others: engaging in activities that benefit the community. Competitors: Developing and offering products that are distinct from existing traditional products considered critical. | Competitors: Being different from others by coming up with a product distinct from available conventional products seen as core to the entrepreneurial process. Known others: offering products that support a community considered core to the entrepreneurial process. | Competitors: being distinct from others by offering products with competitively lower prices. | Competitors: Being different from others seen as core to the entrepreneurial process. Unknown others: Demonstrating that alternative social practices and products are feasible and leading by example seen as core to the entrepreneurial process. Known others: offering products (alternative green building material) products that support the community seen as core to the entrepreneurial process. | Competitors: Wanting to be different from others based on perceived skills. Known others: Helping known others. Unknown others: Doing good to known others (leading by example seen as core to the entrepreneurial process). | Known others: Providing a product that supports the community seen as core to the entrepreneurial process. Competitors: Being different from others seen as core to the entrepreneurial process. |
Basic Social Motivation | Advancing a cause: Saving trees and forests through creation of a enterprise that provides alternative product to firewood and charcoal. Reducing pollution in communal areas by providing clean fuel. To support and be supported by the community through business models that foster income generation for community members and profit for the enterprise. | Getting support from the community while offering products that supports the community-mutual and beneficial relationships. Advancing a cause: Having a positive impact on the market by solving social challenges. Inspired to address social challenges, e.g affordable housing and employment creation. | Self-interest: Creating employment for self to generate personal income (being own boss). Family pressure to do something that generate income. | Self-interest: coming up with own product designs that are attractive to customers-money making. | Self-interest: Enterprise creation to create employment for self. Supporting and be supported by a community because of mutually beneficial relationships. Advancing a cause: Enterprise creation supports individual’s ambition to advance a cause-environmental management. | Advancing a cause: Providing an alternative to people to conserve the environment. Support and being supported by the community by providing an alternative source of energy while making profit and engaging in activities that support the community. | Support and be supported by a community: Supporting a community by providing a product that solves a community challenge and getting support from the community to grow the enterprise-mutually beneficial relationships. Advancing a cause: enterprise creation supports one’s political vision and ambition to advance a cause-social. |
Basis of Self-evaluation | Socioenvironmental authenticity: coming up with something truly useful to the community as perceived as critical. | Socially and environmentally responsible behavior: Contributing to a just social order through environmentally responsible business considered core. Societal transformation through local solutions. Authenticity: Bringing a product and engaging in activities truly useful to the community perceived as critical. | Business related competences: Being able to successfully establish an enterprise that brings income is considered core to the entrepreneurial process. | Professionalism: professionally designed and attractive product. Being able to professionally design and develop products attractive to customers is considered core to the entrepreneurial process. ‘Making a product that can sell’. | Authenticity: bringing products and engaging in activities truly useful to the community is considered core to the entrepreneurial process. Responsible behavior: Contributing to a better world through business-responsible people do act. | Authenticity: Bringing a product and engaging in activities truly useful to the community and environment considered critical. | Responsible behavior: contributing to a better world through business perceived as critical-truly responsible people do act. Authenticity: Bringing a product and engaging in activities truly useful to the community perceived as critical. |
Appendix B
Aggregate Dimension | Illustrative Themes | Quote |
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Inventor | scanning for and pursuing new ideas | So, one of the focuses we’re doing is on invasive plant species. But we’re looking at them as resources, you know, don’t condemn them! Look at why they are there and then manage them and stop them… [], now we look at, why is it there? Then what is it doing? Where is it getting its nutrients from? Because from the digester, we’re gonna get back the nutrients. Uh, food security in the world is one of the leading global sustainable goals. Africa being one of the focus, Yeah. “-[D]. “I used to make my own gadgets for a company called (N) Engineering. So, with that, I realized that also the same clients needed security systems in their homes. So, we started to make kits for security, like motion sensors, GSM modules, but I realized it was a small market, and the other biggest problem I had also, was the enclosure for all those circuits i was making-how do i make the end product and it can sell? So, with 3D printing, now like, four years later we’re now making kits which are standardized. So, we’re able to play around with a lot of designs in the software and we prototype the designs.”-[J]. “Later, I moved on and I paid a visit to this area and I saw a lot of rice husks, and I asked myself, ‘What do they do with the rice husks?’ So, at that point, I realized, ‘Nothing.’ And I was like, ‘Seriously! That is a wasted resource; you know, these things should do something.’ So, I did some research and I started working on briquettes. And I realized they have a lot of ash content. The rice husks have a lot of ash, so, they cannot be used, more so, for, commercialization as pure. So, I said, ‘Okay, let me see, what else can I do!’ I started making mosquito coils and we realized they were not performing well, so we realized this might not be very feasible, and that time is when we thought, ‘What if,’ just ‘what if we take this back to the farm, what would happen?’”-[S]. “We look at where there exists an opportunity. The opportunities exist, I find that I can make garbage into housing material. From a medical perspective if I find that firewood causes the largest number of respiratory illnesses, I came up with a briquette that does not emit smoke. That’s how enterprise [A] was established. If I came up with how to recycle aluminum, I came up with how to recycle metal into jewelry… [] we look at African solutions. Yeah, we recycle plastic.”-[O]. |
Prototyping and fiddling with new product and process development | “Green Con is an enterprise that I started off in the year 2000 and it came as the result I’m a researcher. Yes. I’m a serious researcher. All, these companies I run are out of research and product development. So, I have been on this for some time-20 years now. Green Con was born in the year 2000 from my research. I was doing research in plastics… [O]. “Dr. Oscar began researching on plastic waste management in the year 2000 but had to wait for more than ten years to accumulate all the capital to actualize his idea.’- [K24 TV].” We came up with the way we are burning currently, it saves up to 95% of the emissions that would have otherwise been released. So, we hold them, yeah, as carbon. But we are working on a technology that will allow us to reduce that one to zero emission.” “we have partnered with the research organizations, we have partnered with Miadi, which majorly supplies much of the information. We did, uh, test pilot with MIT and it was very successful because we were able to get about 20 kg in one hour (laughs). I guess that’s small it sounds small but in terms of research that is a big milestone and now we are making a bigger version of it. So, hoping that, by either end of the year or early next year we will have a technology with, zero smoke. Yeah! because you must ensure that it must be made fast in the lab and it functions before, we can think of implementing it on the ground. So right now, we have partnered with two universities, we have MIT and University of California, Berkeley to ensure that we deliver this as soon as possible. Yeah, because we are developing new products every day. We are improving on our products every day and these guys must do the efficacy tests, because this is technology development. And in terms of improving the technology, you know, everyday things are changing.”-[S]. “We prototyped for about five years, constantly breaking the system down, building it up, changing the interior and working on that until we solved that problem.”-[D]. “You see, sometimes, I can say, within the idea creation to prototyping some of these things you can put your sweat equity into it. Like, for example, what we were doing. But sometimes you need money, for example, to access a laboratory that is going to test these prototypes for you and give you the specifications and, you know, actually, you try and come up with ideas, because that time we were not sure whether to make a roofing tile or to make a paving slab or what?”-[S]. | |
Adapting and innovating for solutions | “In Kenya, our biggest challenge, one of the biggest challenge other than universal healthcare is affordable housing. Now, we’ve gone beyond just this, and I’ve invented many others than what you see in Green Con. And we moved on to invent other materials and started other companies. Fine, a lot of people know me for Green Con, but we’ve got 16 other companies. You get it. Yes.” A lot of people want to partner with me, because there’s a new solution in waste management, in water recycling, in biomass-we are the owners of X Energy too. X energy recycles biomass into industrial and household charcoal briquettes. I also propagate fish somewhere, which takes care of food security. Are you seeing it? So, it’s a whole 360 degree turn on what was a problem to become something that is a resource. That’s how I work. “That’s what I do. It’s about innovation, it’s about social transformation, it’s about what we call the impact of social entrepreneurship and it’s about where we want to go to as a continent. You see, when you come up with your innovation, look at what positive impact will it have on the market, ‘what is Kenya’s housing challenge? -cost, quality, durability. And does it create employment? -yes! Along the value chain.” “Innovative firms such as Q Agritech will be key in contributing to a sustainable agribusiness development as we also race against time towards environmental conservation”- [K24 TV]. “So that is what innovation can do, but all this has societal challenges. Affordable African solution, my solution is local Kenyan solution.”-[O] “So, we’re developing hot water systems now to heat the digesters. I think the problem in developing countries is that we want to make everything… [] there’s no point in reinventing the wheels wholly. You can adapt this pump. This pump is designed for high pressure car washes. So, I want to use it for the solar pumps. It’s made for something else, but you can use it for something, very different. It’s gonna make a huge difference somewhere else. It’s good because we are rewriting the books on biogas to a large degree. We are coming up with something different from the conventional biogas and, we’re demonstrating the conventional one is actually bad.”-[S]. | |
Enacting new and innovative business models | “That’s one area that bring the kind of business we are in, we need to help them. So, we will, certainly! and then on the side of the agriculture, agricultural people we’re trying to reduce, post-harvest losses by providing enough energy to value-add to their farm projects. Um, as a waste management, as I said, from the circular economy system within municipalities. Uh whether invasive species like in Lake Victoria using water hyacinth, uh, you know, controlling invasive species. Then there’s domestic systems. So, we’ve such a wide range of products and then we’ve got the things that go on the tail end of it, the how to use the fertilizer, the hot water systems that also compliment. Solar, electric, solar PV also compliments the biogas. So, a lot of the gadgetry runs in combination-energy, biogas and solar. So, you know, I always advise people, you know, “if you’re gonna do that and you think that’s gonna work, do both.” Don’t compromise one with the other. You know? But do both, don’t put all your eggs in one basket. Because you know, if that basket breaks, you need something to lean on.”-[D]. “So, we make fencing posts. We make Lumber plans, we make driveway blocks, uh, as alternative materials to the formal construction. The challenges that we are addressing are basically four-fold; one is that we have in managing waste. Two, we have created employment within the value chain because i got like about 700 collectors who we clustered into community-based organizations of between 10 and 20. And we train them on how to segregate, and how to pre-process the plastic. There are cases where we lease them some machinery, the basic machinery and it has worked well. It’s a model that’s unique. But we’re looking to be an alternative building material supplier, the market has accepted it.”-[O]. “We have four lines of products. We have the planting, the original biochar, that is plain, and we call it the acid amender, acidic soil amender. we have a planting fertilizer; we have a top-dressing fertilizer and we have a foliar. so, those are the four lines that we have for the product, so far. What we are doing is co-own the enterprises-own the business together with youths in communities. Yeah. So, at the end of the day, we want wherever we go and open a new plant, we get a minimum share. We don’t want a majority share. We get a minimum share, we train them, and then we work together as a team, and that way we’re guaranteed that our cash will be well secured.”-[S]. | |
Developer | Creating and developing markets | “Another case is you could go somewhere; people do not know what you’re talking about. You must introduce them to the product, ‘this is this’. That’s another challenge especially on the side of briquettes. What is better? Why, are you telling me to use briquettes other than charcoal?—such things!… [] I moved from selling to the local ordinary people who were buying the briquettes at that time, because they were still buying them in small quantities. I moved on, looking for factories, those hotels that operate boilers. From there, I realized the demand was so high. I could not even be able to supply or to exhaust the market.”-[P]. “Apart from the technical, there’s also, basically the market, we had to sensitize people about 3D printing, because most of the people we meet think a 3D printer is a traditional paper. So, we must show this physically to the clients or to the people who are coming to exhibitions. Because most people don’t even know a 3D printer exist. And those who already know 3D printing exist, they only see it in YouTube or just in pictures. So, we do a lot of conferences. We also do speeches and we present our business model. We prepare presentations when it comes to forums. A lot of trainings and publications to create the knowledge about our 3D printers.”-[J]. “… [] after buying that electric machine i was able to produce more. But now the customers were not there, because now the production is more, you have more bags, so I still had to do more marketing, people had never seen briquettes. But one year down the lane, after I struggled, everything opened. I was able to make good sales. So eventually, I was able to capture many clients, many hotels. Right now, there are many hotels as my customers.”-[G]. “We’re looking to be an alternative building material supplier. The market has accepted it. So, a lot of what I engage in are negotiations, marketing, telling government and NGOs. When it comes to implementing that strategy in terms of corporate strategies with market linkages and partnerships it’s me, you get it? If it is selling, it’s my linkages because I see and meet people in many capacities. In church, I’m a pastor, in schools or universities, I’m a lecturer, then entrepreneurially, I sit in a number of entrepreneurial organizations.”-[O]. |
Sustaining enterprise growth | “We’re not big. We’re expanding. We are growing… [] you’d have to have multiple of these things and they’re expensive to put in, they’re not cheap because of the materials we use. They cost, so you need to earn enough to organically grow without going down the road of looking for donors and sponsorships… []. So, we hope to have them [biogas digesters] all over the place and they will be ours and we will be generating income from them and combining that to put more all over the place and continue growing like that. Sustainability is ownership! We’ve got to own what we do. Many people have said to us, ‘you’re doing such philanthropic work, you’re more of a social enterprise. Why didn’t you become an NGO?’ I said, ‘because then we would just become beggars.’ We would be constantly asking people, ‘give us money.’ So, our approach is completely the opposite.”-[D]. “So, what I want is a situation where you can’t avoid me when building locally or internationally-you can’t avoid me when building. Then I’ll feel safe. Then I would have grown it from where it was to the multimillion-dollar business it is today. My vision is to see a brand owned by Z ltd, the group of companies, go continental not just Kenya alone, not just Nairobi alone, but across Africa. That is why I diversify. If you know where to get your money from and you’ve got what it takes to grow it, then you can virtually own anything. The challenge is you might have an idea of what to do, but you do not know how to grow it or where to get the money to invest in it. I run my business fully and that’s how I’ve grown the empire I have now.”-[O]. “To meet this growing demand of their products, Green Con needed to increase the capacity of their equipment, which by now has recycled more than 700 tons of plastic from landfill.”-[K24 News]. “Before i answer that, you know there is one saying that people say, they say it in Kiswahili; ‘biashara niya mtu’, meaning to say; ‘the business is the owner’. So, if you put passion in anything. As long as you put passion and effort, it can never fail. I started with a manual machine for like three months. After saving, I was able to buy a small, electric machine. I worked with that electric machine for almost two years, then I bought the ones that you have seen here. that is when I moved to this place back in 2016.”-[G]. | |
Founder | Establishing an enterprise | “I wear many caps. I’m a serial entrepreneur. all, these companies I run, they’re over 10. So, I embarked, after I discovered this. I did a couple of presentations and made my prototype and then decided to patent it. The patent came out, I think 10 years later in 2010, 2011. And there we are. But they are owned by the same person, because i told you I’ve got 16 entities. am the owner of them because I control shares in all of them. If I sit back, there are all these companies. There is a holding company called Z company. It’s a holding company. It owns very many other and social entities.”-[O]. |
Commercializing and exploiting new opportunities | “I saw an opportunity that people did not see, an opportunity that had two ways, at the same time to conserve the environment, at the same to grow a business that nobody else had done, yeah! So, it was a two-way thing. Because I knew with both ways, you are making an income, whether you’re conserving an environment or you’re doing a business that has not many people, still you are earning an income. So, it was both ways.” “But i knew, i had did my calculations, i saw if i can make with this manual machine, if i can make three bags, and i sell, per day! by the end of sell, I sell out 500, that is 1,500, with zero cost because it is manual, and I am the one making it. So, 1,500 times thirty days, it is more than what a new graduate can be paid. So, I saw it was better I start my own empire instead of being employed.”-[G]. “So, when I came back to Kenya, we aggressively set up the production facility. We brought in the technology, finished up last year and end of 2017, we started production.”-[M]. “We started commercial production of it with the patent, local and international. It’s a different one, yeah. Plastic, biomass, power production, water purification, agro, consultancy, medical, you know, all these enterprises! So, to me waste is not waste, waste is a resource. We are in fertilizer, we are in plastic, we are in charcoal briquettes, we are in energy production, and we are in jewellery and we are in water. But they ran as different entities. The only common person here is Oscar. Are you getting me? I mean, I’ve got numerous innovations, all these organizations, all the 16 organizations I have are all innovations (laughs). That’s how an innovation comes in. Then, I need to commercialize. That’s what it turns out to be.”-[O].” So, at that point, when I gave Mr. Dan the product, he used the product in his farm and, surprisingly, he actually doubled his yields for that season. He was so much excited that he called me for ‘Mbuzi choma’, you know. (Laughs), yeah! So, it was very interesting and from there, now we thought, now we have a product for the farm and that is the way SO Agro was founded. So, now, the following year-2015, we registered SO Agro and incorporated it and started, now definitely, with growth. So, basically, I am the founder and CEO of the company.”-[S]. “So, I did that for a while and as well as i still continue doing my ordinary business of selling windows, doors and gates, and fabricating them. Then I realized that there’s a gap somewhere. When I was doing those Jikos, I realized there is a gap in energy sector. I realized that there was a gap in energy sector, I started venturing into energy. I started looking for the customers and I realized there was so much biomass waste. “-[P]. |
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Founder/Co-Founder | Name of Enterprise | Founding | Business Type | Number of Interviews | Interview Year | Other Data Sources |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Don | BI Energy | 2011 | Innovative renewable energy solutions | 1 | 2018 | Website, brochures, stakeholder interviews, online videos, news articles, participant observation. |
Oscar | Green Con | 2010 | Alternative construction materials from recycled plastic waste | 2 | 2018, 2019 | Website, news articles, online videos, stakeholder interviews, i.e., local incubator, participant observation |
Melvin | EBT Materials | 2017 | Alternative building materials from recycled plastic & glass waste | 2 | 2018 | Website, founder blogs, news articles, online videos, stakeholder interviews i.e., local incubator, participant observations |
Gregory | MB Energy | 2013 | Eco-friendly briquettes from biomass waste | 1 | 2018 | Online videos, stakeholder interviews i.e., local incubator, participant observations |
Sam | SO Agro | 2015 | Organic fertilizers from biomass waste | 2 | 2018, 2019 | Website, founder blogs, news articles, online videos, participant observations |
Jan | QI Engineering | 2016 | 3D printers from e-waste and printing services using plastic waste, automation | 1 | 2018 | Website, stakeholder interviews i.e., local incubator |
Patrick | PB Enterprises | 2013 | Eco-friendly briquettes from biomass waste | 2 | 2018, 2020 | Online videos, stakeholder interviews i.e., local incubator. |
Don | Oscar | Gregory | Jan | Melvin | Patrick | Sam | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Frame of Reference/relevant others | *C/M/D | C/M/D | D/C | D | C/M/D | C/M/D | C/D |
Basic Social Motivation | C/M | C/M | D | D | C/M/D | C/M | C/M |
Basis of Self-evaluation | C | C/M | D | D | C/M | C | C/M |
Salient Role identities | Inventor/Developer | Inventor/Developer/Founder | Developer | Inventor/Developer | Developer | Developer | Inventor/Developer |
Don & Sam | Oscar | Melvin & Patrick | Jan | Gregory | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Communitarian/Missionary | Communitarian/Missionary | Communitarian/Missionary | Darwinian | Darwinian | |
Social identity | -Seeking to support and be supported by a community while advancing a cause. -Follows a community logic and later a missionary logic and derive self-worth from offering a product or service through new and innovative business management approaches aimed at transforming a community and act to pursue a political vision for establishing a better world. -Significant known others-community, significant unknown others-society and competitors as frames of reference | -Pursue private and economic self-interest -Follow traditional business logic and derive self-worth by acting and behaving in ways congruent with traditional business management. -Competition as the primary frame of reference | |||
Role identity | Inventor/Developer | Inventor/Founder/Developer | Developer | Inventor/Developer | Developer |
Entrepreneurial behavior | -Attend to natural and communal environments-to explore a new idea. -Develop new idea focused on advancing community and society objectives. -Adapting new technologies in new context. | -Attend to natural and communal environments-to explore multiple new ideas. -Develop a new idea focused on advancing community and society objectives. | -Attend to natural and communal environments-to explore an idea. | -Attuned to market and information gaps. -Develops new idea focused on advancing personal self-interest. | -Attuned to market and information gaps. -Developing traditional business ideas. |
Opportunity recognition | -Attend to natural and communal environments-to explore a new idea. -Develop new idea focused on advancing community and society objectives. -Adapting new technologies in new context. -Enacting new and innovative business models with a focus on wider community and society level impacts. -Scientific novelty and science-based decision making in new product/service development. -Calculated risk taking -Establishing an enterprise -for more community and societal impacts. -Commercializing and exploiting an opportunity for community and societal value. | -Attend to natural and communal environments-to explore multiple new ideas. -Develop a new idea focused on advancing community and society objectives. -Enacting new and innovative business models with a focus on wider community and society level impacts. -Scientific novelty and science-based decision making in new products/services development. -Establishing multiple enterprises for more community and societal impacts. -Commercializing and exploiting multiple opportunities for community and societal value. | -Attend to natural and communal environments-to explore an idea. -Establishing an enterprise with more environmental and societal impacts. -Commercializing and exploiting an opportunity for community and societal value. -Enacting traditional ‘ready to wear’ business models. | -Attuned to market and information gaps. -Develops new idea focused on advancing personal self-interest. -Commercializing and exploiting an opportunity for private, economic self-interest. -Scientific novelty in new product/service development. -* R & D and market partnerships -Establishing an enterprise -Enacting traditional ‘ready to wear’ business models. | -Attuned to market and information gaps. -Developing traditional business ideas. -Commercializing and exploiting an opportunity for private, economic self-interest -High risk taking -Establishing an enterprise -Enacting traditional ‘ready to wear’ business models. |
Entrepreneurial behavior | |||||
Opportunity development | -Enacting new and innovative business models with a focus on wider community and society level impacts. -Scientific novelty and science-based decision making in new product/service development. -Calculated risk taking -Establishing an enterprise -for more community and societal impacts. -Commercializing and exploiting an opportunity for community and societal value. -Sustaining growth-based on technological and market aspects-e.g., R & D and market partnerships. -R & D based product/service improvements and upgrading. -Product/service diversity and complementarities. -Expanding to new local markets. | -Enacting new and innovative business models with a focus on wider community and society level impacts. -Scientific novelty and science-based decision making in new products/services development. -Establishing multiple enterprises for more community and societal impacts. -Commercializing and exploiting multiple opportunities for community and societal value. -Sustaining growth-based on technological and market aspects-e.g., R & D and market partnerships. -R & D based product/service improvements and upgrading. -Technology (solution) and market driven growth. -Product diversity/service. -Expanding to new local markets. | -Establishing an enterprise with more environmental and societal impacts. -Commercializing and exploiting an opportunity for community and societal value. -Enacting traditional ‘ready to wear’ business models. -Expanding to new local markets -Sustaining growth based on market aspects for more environmental and societal impacts (business as a means for positive environmental impacts)-e.g., market partnerships. | -Commercializing and exploiting an opportunity for private, economic self-interest. -Scientific novelty in new product/service development. -* R & D and market partnerships -Establishing an enterprise -Enacting traditional ‘ready to wear’ business models. -R & D based product/service development. -Sustaining growth based on technology and market aspects-R & D and market partnerships. -Expanding to new local and international markets. | -Commercializing and exploiting an opportunity for private, economic self-interest -High risk taking -Establishing an enterprise -Enacting traditional ‘ready to wear’ business models. -Market driven growth -Expanding to new local markets |
Entrepreneurial behavior | |||||
Opportunity scaling | -Sustaining growth-based on technological and market aspects-e.g., R & D and market partnerships. -R & D based product/service improvements and upgrading. -Product/service diversity and complementarities. -Expanding to new local markets. | -Sustaining growth-based on technological and market aspects-e.g., R & D and market partnerships. -R & D based product/service improvements and upgrading. -Technology (solution) and market driven growth. -Product diversity/service. -Expanding to new local markets. | -Expanding to new local markets -Sustaining growth based on market aspects for more environmental and societal impacts (business as a means for positive environmental impacts)-e.g., market partnerships. | -R & D based product/service development. -Sustaining growth based on technology and market aspects-R & D and market partnerships. -Expanding to new local and international markets. | -Market driven growth -Expanding to new local markets |
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Musona, J.; Puumalainen, K.; Sjögrén, H.; Vuorio, A. Sustainable Entrepreneurship at the Bottom of the Pyramid: An Identity-Based Perspective. Sustainability 2021, 13, 812. https://doi.org/10.3390/su13020812
Musona J, Puumalainen K, Sjögrén H, Vuorio A. Sustainable Entrepreneurship at the Bottom of the Pyramid: An Identity-Based Perspective. Sustainability. 2021; 13(2):812. https://doi.org/10.3390/su13020812
Chicago/Turabian StyleMusona, Jackson, Kaisu Puumalainen, Helena Sjögrén, and Anna Vuorio. 2021. "Sustainable Entrepreneurship at the Bottom of the Pyramid: An Identity-Based Perspective" Sustainability 13, no. 2: 812. https://doi.org/10.3390/su13020812
APA StyleMusona, J., Puumalainen, K., Sjögrén, H., & Vuorio, A. (2021). Sustainable Entrepreneurship at the Bottom of the Pyramid: An Identity-Based Perspective. Sustainability, 13(2), 812. https://doi.org/10.3390/su13020812