4.0 Article

Building business models through simple rules

Journal

MULTINATIONAL BUSINESS REVIEW
Volume 26, Issue 4, Pages 361-378

Publisher

EMERALD GROUP PUBLISHING LTD
DOI: 10.1108/MBR-08-2017-0053

Keywords

Entrepreneurship; Decision-making process; Business model development; Simple rule

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Purpose How do entrepreneurs use simple rules to build their business models? Based on an inductive study of three Chinese Internet and technology firms, the authors find that business models emerge from simple rules that entrepreneurs learn from their experience. Simple rules also guide entrepreneurs to actualize and exploit opportunities in the marketplace, and they can help business models evolve through market feedback, especially in internationalization. This paper aims to delve into the black box of entrepreneurial decision-making and offer a better depiction of the business model development process in uncertain and fast-changing environments and thus provide guidance for future entrepreneurs. Design/methodology/approach Following the case method (Eisenhardt, 1989; Yin, 2003), the authors first present a thick description of characteristics of three companies and the dynamics of their business models. They then code these descriptions into first-order measures. Finally, they aggregate these measures into abstract constructs. They constantly compare the theoretical constructs and the emerging theory with the existing literature on business models. Findings The authors generate three key insights from the findings: business models emerge from simple rules learned from entrepreneurs' experience, simple rules help entrepreneurs exploit and actualize opportunities in the marketplace and simple rules help businesses expand and evolve business models through market feedback, especially in internationalization. Originality/value This paper falls into the intersection of strategy and entrepreneurship - an emerging new field of strategic entrepreneurship - and is concerned with how businesses create and sustain a competitive advantage while simultaneously identifying and exploiting new opportunities. The authors bring people - the individual decision-makers for businesses - back in strategy research and depict a more realistic picture of the behavior of successful entrepreneurs and their business model development process.

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