Business and Management INK

Competent Partner, Champion of Sustainability–Can Entrepreneurs Play Out Both Cards at the Same Time?

January 21, 2022 2190
Food waste tossed out as greenwaste
(Photo: Ben_Kerckx/Pixabay)

Author Anders Broström discusses the ways in which sustainability plays a part in publishing partnerships based on the article “Legitimation work in sustainable entrepreneurship: Sustainability ventures’ journey towards the establishment of major partnerships,” published in The International Small Business Journal.

The impulse for this research came from conversations with food industry firms about how their efforts to tackle the issue of food waste involved different types of partnerships with small entrepreneurial firms. While investigating this phenomenon, we were unsure about how to think about it. On the one hand, efforts to reduce food waste can be thought of as an efficiency problem. On the other hand, food waste is a sustainability concern. There are a number of interesting studies suggesting that in environments where more than one logic co-exists, organizations face difficult trade-offs in legitimizing themselves. Yet these types of problems were not very evident in our initial data. This observation made us want to dig deeper into exactly how entrepreneurial firms in this setting did manage to convince large industry incumbents to enter into partnerships with them.

Andra Riandita, Anders Broström, Raffaella Cagliano, and Andreas Feldmann
Academic paper authors, clockwise from top left: Andra RianditaAnders BroströmRaffaella Cagliano, and Andreas Feldmann

Our research shows that the entrepreneurial firms present themselves as either a competent business partner, much like any knowledge-intensive service firm markets itself, or as champions of sustainable development. We argue that this finding reflects significant logic incompatibility, in combination with differences in the founding logic of the entrepreneurial firms.

On the surface, it may seem as if entrepreneurs offering incumbents support in reducing food waste could benefit from drawing on a combination of arguments relating to commercial and environmental/social logics. After all, don’t all entrepreneurs today have an argument up their sleeve about how their venture will contribute to sustainable development? Our analysis, however, suggests that the entreprenur may be better off anchoring her sales pitch firmly in either one of those logics.

But our study draws on experiences from the formation of the first major partnership of a new venture. We believe it is highly interesting to ask what may happen over time. Perhaps sustainability entrepreneurs can and will engage in a more complex type of legitimation work, where commercial arguments and sustainability arguments are combined and intertwined in new ways. This is something that needs to be addressed in further research, in order to further promote our understanding of this type of entrepreneurial activity.

Anders Broström has since 2003 worked with policy-related research and consulting activities in the economics and management of knowledge; its production, dissemination and use. Furthermore, Anders engages in research concerning entrepreneurship and labour market dynamics, in particular concerning the individual returns to entrepreneurship, venture legitimation, and career patters of highly skilled workers.

View all posts by Anders Broström

Related Articles

The Case of Leftist Governments in Chile and Uruguay
Business and Management INK
July 15, 2024

The Case of Leftist Governments in Chile and Uruguay

Read Now
Exploring Public-Private Partnerships in the National Capital Region of the United States
Business and Management INK
July 12, 2024

Exploring Public-Private Partnerships in the National Capital Region of the United States

Read Now
With or Without You: Career Capital Development as Experienced by MBA Alumni
Business and Management INK
July 11, 2024

With or Without You: Career Capital Development as Experienced by MBA Alumni

Read Now
Understanding HR Managers’ Role in Shaping Fair Organizational Policies and Practice
Business and Management INK
July 9, 2024

Understanding HR Managers’ Role in Shaping Fair Organizational Policies and Practice

Read Now
Corporate Health Policy: Pioneering a Fresh Avenue of Research

Corporate Health Policy: Pioneering a Fresh Avenue of Research

In this article, Lilia Raquel Rojas-Cruz, Irene Henriques, Bryan Husted reflect on the inspiration behind their research article, “Exploring Public Health Research for Corporate Health Policy: Insights for Business and Society Scholars,” in Business & Society.

Read Now
Responsible Management Education Week 2024: Sage Asks ‘What Does It Mean to You?’

Responsible Management Education Week 2024: Sage Asks ‘What Does It Mean to You?’

Sage used the opportunity of Responsible Business Management week 2024 to ask its authors, editors, and contacts what responsible management education means to them.

Read Now
‘Push, Pull, Dance’: Public Health Procurement – Saving Lives and Preventing Harm

‘Push, Pull, Dance’: Public Health Procurement – Saving Lives and Preventing Harm

‘Push, Pull, Dance’ seeks to reimagine ethical supply chains in public health procurement. In this article, Olga Martin-Ortega, Martina Trusgnach, and Cindy Berman offer a new theoretical framework for tackling human and labor rights violations, including modern slavery, through public procurement.

Read Now
0 0 votes
Article Rating
Subscribe
Notify of
guest

This site uses Akismet to reduce spam. Learn how your comment data is processed.

0 Comments
Inline Feedbacks
View all comments