M. Hughes, P. Hughes, Ian R. Hodgkinson, Yi‐Ying Chang, Che-Yuan Chang
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Our findings are consistent across both studies. We contribute a\nknowledge-based theory of EO.\nManagerial summary:Why do some firms organize to be entrepreneurial while others do not, and why do some\nentrepreneurially oriented firms profit more financially than others? We find that those firms\nthat organize processes to accumulate, aggregate, activate, store, manage, and distribute\nknowledge become more entrepreneurial oriented as the means to create wealth from this\n‘knowledge production’. In other words, knowledge production can affect perceptions of\nopportunities and resources, leading to choices about organizational arrangements to best use\nknowledge. However, we find that the firm also needs to be adept at knowledge use to profit\nfinancially from its entrepreneurial endeavors, and leading firms utilize stakeholder\nengagement to strengthen the relationship between entrepreneurial behavior and knowledge\nuse on the route to greater profitability.","PeriodicalId":51417,"journal":{"name":"Strategic Entrepreneurship Journal","volume":" ","pages":""},"PeriodicalIF":5.4000,"publicationDate":"2021-08-14","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"https://sci-hub-pdf.com/10.1002/SEJ.1409","citationCount":"29","resultStr":"{\"title\":\"Knowledge‐based theory, entrepreneurial orientation, stakeholder engagement, and firm performance\",\"authors\":\"M. Hughes, P. Hughes, Ian R. 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Knowledge‐based theory, entrepreneurial orientation, stakeholder engagement, and firm performance
Research summary:
Our understanding of entrepreneurial orientation (EO) is limited by the inattention to why a
firm arranges itself to give rise to EO, what sets its strategic intent, and what affects its
contribution to performance. These omissions have led to calls for a causally adjacent theory
of EO. Grounded in knowledge-based theory, we investigated (a) how knowledge production
gives rise to EO, (b) how the relationship between EO and profitability is mediated by
knowledge use, and (c) how this relationship between EO and knowledge use is moderated by
stakeholder engagement. Using multi-respondent, multi-source data from small-and-mid-size
enterprises in two economically distinct East Asian countries, Taiwan and Japan, empirical
evidence supports our theory. Our findings are consistent across both studies. We contribute a
knowledge-based theory of EO.
Managerial summary:Why do some firms organize to be entrepreneurial while others do not, and why do some
entrepreneurially oriented firms profit more financially than others? We find that those firms
that organize processes to accumulate, aggregate, activate, store, manage, and distribute
knowledge become more entrepreneurial oriented as the means to create wealth from this
‘knowledge production’. In other words, knowledge production can affect perceptions of
opportunities and resources, leading to choices about organizational arrangements to best use
knowledge. However, we find that the firm also needs to be adept at knowledge use to profit
financially from its entrepreneurial endeavors, and leading firms utilize stakeholder
engagement to strengthen the relationship between entrepreneurial behavior and knowledge
use on the route to greater profitability.
期刊介绍:
The Strategic Entrepreneurship Journal is a research journal that publishes original work recommended by a developmental, double-blind review process conducted by peer scholars. Strategic entrepreneurship involves innovation and subsequent changes which add value to society and which change societal life in ways which have significant, sustainable, and durable consequences. The SEJ is international in scope and acknowledges theory- and evidence-based research conducted and/or applied in all regions of the world. It is devoted to content and quality standards based on scientific method, relevant theory, tested or testable propositions, and appropriate data and evidence, all replicable by others, and all representing original contributions. The SEJ values contributions which lead to improved practice of managing organizations as they deal with the entrepreneurial process involving imagination, insight, invention, and innovation and the inevitable changes and transformations that result and benefit society.