To read this content please select one of the options below:

Effectual entrepreneurship, ethics and suboptimal service designs

Betina Szkudlarek (The University of Sydney Business School, Sydney, Australia)
Linh Nguyen (The University of Sydney Business School, Sydney, Australia)
Aegean Leung (The University of Sydney Business School, Sydney, Australia)

Journal of Knowledge Management

ISSN: 1367-3270

Article publication date: 18 March 2022

Issue publication date: 1 February 2023

408

Abstract

Purpose

This study aims to respond to repeated calls for more process-focused research on effectual entrepreneurship. It illustrates how effectuation takes place, particularly through gaining the commitment of actors with diverse resources, knowledge and needs in a context characterized by power disparities. It illuminates the ethical concerns faced by effectual entrepreneurs and the impact these concerns could have on the service design.

Design/methodology/approach

The qualitative investigation involved in-depth interviews with 30 intercultural trainers-entrepreneurs delivering repatriation training in the context of international assignments. The authors supplemented primary data with the analysis of training and promotional materials.

Findings

The authors identify four key elements of the effectual process, in which entrepreneurs aim to elicit commitment while reconciling potentially conflicting demands of the actors involved: surfacing needs; value framing; co-creation; and joint affordable loss. The authors show how the acquisition of commitment has a consequential impact on subsequent steps of effectual entrepreneurship. The authors highlight how the interdependence of entrepreneurs, their services, clients and end-users impacts the availability of means and goals. More importantly, the authors also demonstrate how resource dependence, knowledge disparities and power imbalance between actors partaking in effectual entrepreneurship can lead to numerous ethical concerns and result in suboptimal service designs.

Originality/value

This study demonstrates the dark side of effectual entrepreneurship in a resource-constrained environment. The authors show how power disparities and resource-dependence can lead to ethical dilemmas and inferior service designs, where entrepreneurs follow the lead of influential and resource-abundant stakeholders at the expense of the end-users.

Keywords

Acknowledgements

Aegean Leung, was a strong driving force behind the ideas advanced in this manuscript. We are grateful to have had the privilege to have worked with her and hope this manuscript will contribute to Aegean’s ongoing academic legacy. We are indebted to Laurence Romani for her vital contribution and insights that allowed us to advance this manuscript, and to the editorial team and the anonymous reviewers for their constructive and developmental feedback.Since the time of writing this article Aegean Leung regrettably died.

Citation

Szkudlarek, B., Nguyen, L. and Leung, A. (2023), "Effectual entrepreneurship, ethics and suboptimal service designs", Journal of Knowledge Management, Vol. 27 No. 2, pp. 506-526. https://doi.org/10.1108/JKM-08-2021-0627

Publisher

:

Emerald Publishing Limited

Copyright © 2022, Emerald Publishing Limited

Related articles