4.5 Article

Entrepreneurial ecosystems: a dynamic lifecycle model

Journal

SMALL BUSINESS ECONOMICS
Volume 57, Issue 1, Pages 407-423

Publisher

SPRINGER
DOI: 10.1007/s11187-020-00316-0

Keywords

Entrepreneurial ecosystems; Entrepreneurship; Intrapreneurship; Lifecycles; Dynamism; Transition

Funding

  1. Projekt DEAL

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The paper introduces a dynamic entrepreneurial ecosystem lifecycle model that addresses the lack of theoretical foundation in existing literature regarding the development and change of entrepreneurial ecosystems. The model discusses the transition of ecosystems from entrepreneurial to business focus and captures the oscillation between entrepreneurs and intrapreneurs in different phases.
The concept of entrepreneurial ecosystems has been used as a framework to explain entrepreneurial activities within regions and industrial sectors. Despite the usefulness of this approach, the concept is under-theorized, especially with regard to the evolution of entrepreneurial ecosystems. The current literature is lacking a theoretical foundation that addresses the development and change of entrepreneurial ecosystems over time and does not consider the inherent dynamics of entrepreneurial ecosystems that lead to their birth, growth, maturity, decline, and re-emergence. Taking an industry lifecycle perspective, this paper addresses this research gap by elaborating a dynamic entrepreneurial ecosystem lifecycle model. We propose that an ecosystem transitions from an entrepreneurial ecosystem, with a focus on new firm creation, towards a business ecosystem, with a core focus on the internal commercialization of knowledge, i.e., intrapreneurial activities, and vice versa. Our dynamic model thus captures the oscillation that occurs among entrepreneurs and intrapreneurs through the different phases of an ecosystem's lifecycle. Our dynamic lifecycle model may thus serve as a starting point for future empirical studies focusing on ecosystems and provide the basis for a further understanding of the interrelatedness between and co-existence of new and incumbent firms.

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