scholarly journals Prioritizing Barriers to Circular Business Model Innovation in Iran Renewable Energy Sector: A Multiple Case Study

Author(s):  
Saeedeh Ghoochkanloo
2019 ◽  
Vol 16 (1) ◽  
pp. 17-35 ◽  
Author(s):  
Moema Pereira Nunes ◽  
Ana Paola Russo

Purpose This paper aims to analyze the business model innovation in medium and large Brazilian manufacturing companies located in Rio do Sul State. Design/methodology/approach A holistic multiple case study in five companies was developed. Data were collected through interviews and analyzed according to the content analysis technique. Findings The main motivation to business model innovation was the innovation in products and services, while the difficulties were the factors relating to the cost. The most common practice among cases was innovation in value proposition and the most widely used method was learning-by-searching. While part of the theory was demonstrated in the case studies, new motivations and practices were identified. The investigation of the learning process on business models’ innovation is pioneered in this study. Further studies on this subject are required. Originality/value New business models are likely to provide new opportunities to better address customer needs, generating differentiating itself from its competitors. It is a subject little investigated in the international context, and there are no studies to investigate the experience of Brazilian companies.


2017 ◽  
Vol 5 (2) ◽  
pp. 184-198 ◽  
Author(s):  
Bruno Alencar Pereira ◽  
Mauro Caetano

The business models innovation in airlines can contribute to the creation of value, competitive advantage and profitability with new possibilities of action. The proposed paper aimed to identify the business models adopted by airlines and identify how the innovation occurs at these organizations. The methodology adopted is characterized as empirical, exploratory and descriptive research by multiple case study with three major Brazilian airlines. The results demonstrate that the search for paradigm breaks, related to the dichotomic traditional models of low-cost and full-service, toward hybrid business models occur linearly, as examples highlighted by companies, in which internal changes in business models are considered major organizational innovations.


2021 ◽  
Vol 4 (1) ◽  
pp. p18
Author(s):  
Carmen Alexandra Stoian ◽  
Dragos Tohanean

The opportunity to create a value exchange environment is uniquely offered by the platform businesses. A novel approach of co-creating value is writing the rules in the platform business world. This paper analyzes the platform business models within the technology industry based on a multiple case study. As the main driver of business performance in this environment is technology, companies are using it to develop new products or to provide technology as a service. Thus, the main objective is to debate on the actual business needs in terms of business model innovation and to investigate how platform business models are developed through strategic acquisitions to achieve competitive advantage. The cases analysis suggests that technology acquisitions made around the core business may contribute to business model innovation. In addition, new partnerships with the external environment may facilitate mutual value creation exchanges and the platform may evolve through adding extra features from its external partners. We contribute to the advancement of business model research by putting platform business model study into the competitive context of the technology industry, with findings on how platforms are used in the digital era to innovate the core business model. From a practitioner’s perspective, this study may help companies to understand the importance of investing in other technology companies and to identify the opportunities of business model innovation through strategic partnerships. The limitation of this study is that the main data used for the multiple case study was derived from secondary sources and it provided insights about each company’s platform business model from a macro perspective.


Organizacija ◽  
2016 ◽  
Vol 49 (3) ◽  
pp. 161-171 ◽  
Author(s):  
Marjeta Marolt ◽  
Gregor Lenart ◽  
Damjan Maletič ◽  
Mirjana Kljajić Borštnar ◽  
Andreja Pucihar

Abstract Background and Purpose: Business model innovation (BMI) has become increasingly important, especially in the fast changing business environment. While large enterprises approach these changes systematically, small and medium sized enterprises (SMEs) are left to their own resourcefulness. For the purpose of developing dedicated methods and tools to support different SMEs in addressing these challenges, we have conducted a multiple case study to gain insights into factors that drive SMEs to innovate their BM, how they approach BMI and what changes they made to their BM. Design/Methodology/Approach: First the framework of analysis was developed based on BMI research frameworks identified in literature review. Then the multiple case studies were conducted following the case study protocol developed by Envision project. Results: Based on the proposed framework the results of four Slovene SME cases revealed differences between enterprises regarding the drivers behind BMI and changes in usage of the different BMI elements. Conclusion: Overall, the results suggest all four SMEs, coming from different sectors, are facing BMI challenges without systematically addressing it and without using any dedicated BM ontologies or tools.


2020 ◽  
Author(s):  
◽  
Evgeniya Lupova

This research develops insight into the functioning of self-aware and organised clusters seeing these as ‘context-embedded meta-organisations’. Specifically, it builds a theoretical framework for strategy-making in organised clusters, elaborates on their ‘agentic’ nature and ability to shape their environments. Contrary to a more ‘traditional’, determinist, approach in cluster studies, viewing clusters solely as ‘geographic concentrations’ of organisations, the perspective adopted in this research conceptualises clusters as ‘organisations of organisations’. This suggests a more voluntarist stance where self-aware and organised clusters are perceived as intentional actors within their environments implementing deliberate strategies and pursuing system-level goals. This perspective is rather novel in cluster studies and opens up interesting research directions. This thesis explores two major implications of the ‘meta-organisational’ view of clusters: (1) the deliberate nature of collective strategy-making in these and (2) clusters’ ‘actorhood’ and their interactions with their contexts. First, seeing clusters as ‘organisations of organisations’, suggests that these can be deliberately managed and calls for the application of management studies to the cluster context. However, to date, most strategy tools and frameworks have been developed with an individual firm in mind. As a consequence, these cannot reflect the complexity of the ‘meta-organisational’ setting where a number of interests are at play, and strategy-making is a collective exercise. Thus, the ‘meta-organisational’ perspective on clusters calls for the adaptation of the extant strategy frameworks to account for the specifics of the setting. To answer the need for strategy tools and approaches adapted to the context of clusters seen as meta-organisations, this thesis proposes a novel framework of the ‘cluster business model’. This topic is addressed in Article 1 adopting a design science approach to develop a practical tool for strategy- and decision-making in clusters. The article proposes a model describing value creation in the cluster context, develops a method for its application in practice as well as a visual representation of both. Moreover, as clusters are increasingly seen as drivers of innovations and mechanisms for a transition towards the knowledge economy, this thesis develops a set of interventions for cluster business model design fostering the innovativeness of its members. Article 2 addresses this topic and applies a mixed methodology combining a systematic literature review with a design-oriented synthesis. This allows to uncover the generative mechanisms of cluster innovativeness and formulate a set of interventions aimed at shaping cluster business model elements with a view to fostering its innovativeness. Second, the meta-organisational perspective on clusters raises important questions about their intentionality and ‘actorhood’. Indeed, seeing clusters as ‘organisations of organisations’ implies that these can deliberately act, just as individual organisations. This view, again, has not yet been explored in the cluster studies, still dominated by the ‘traditional’, determinist, approach. Recent research in the field of organisation studies suggests that organisations may display different levels of ‘organisationality’ depending on the extent to which the attributes of formal organisations are present. Applying this knowledge to clusters allows uncovering the yet unexplored mechanisms of cluster ‘actorhood’ and its limitations. Article 3 explores this topic and applies a theory-elaborating multiple case study method to gather insight into the clusters’ ability to shape their environments mediated by their level of ‘organisationality’. The article develops a set of theoretical propositions based on the case studies of two clusters in Australia. It suggests that clusters can deliberately ‘construct’ themselves both as organisations and social actors. However, their ‘organisationality’ design choices influence the locus of their actorhood resulting in more or less collaborative approaches to social action. Finally, and related to the previous point, viewing clusters as intentional actors capable of interaction with their environments, suggests that these can adopt deliberate strategies in response to external pressures. Going further, clusters can be seen as change agents or institutional entrepreneurs in unsupportive institutional settings. Article 4 explores this topic and adopts a theory-elaborating embedded multiple case study method. It studies two clusters in the context of a transition economy (Russia) presenting a range of institutional barriers to innovation. The article uncovers the dual role of clusters as institutional entrepreneurs. It suggests that clusters may both act collectively due to their powerful position grouping a number of players, and, at the same time, these can contribute to creating enabling conditions for the individual acts of institutional entrepreneurship. While this thesis offers a range of implications for research and practice in the cluster field, its most broad and significant contribution lies in the further development of the novel ‘meta-organisational’ perspective on self-aware and organised clusters. This research thus contributes to the consolidation of the ‘meta-organisational’ perspective and coins new language for addressing the topic of ‘managed’ or ‘organised’ clusters. This perspective has not yet drawn wide attention in cluster research and practice but can be valuable for empowering clusters and giving them practical tools to exercise their collective power and shape their environments. In a way, this ‘meta-organisational’ view of clusters might become ‘self-fulfilling’ by contributing to shaping the perception of clusters as deliberate and organised actors, triggering a reflection of cluster practitioners and providing them with adapted conceptual frameworks and practical tools


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