Entrepreneurial micro-ecosystem development: the communality of craft breweries

L. Perry, Nathan A. Woolard
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Abstract

PurposeLeveraging the boom of a craft beer renaissance, this paper explores social capital theory through the impact of the craft brewing industry. The exploration addresses entrepreneurial micro-ecosystems that share one commonality – the need for community development and revitalization. North Carolina's deregulation of craft brewing (Pop-the-Cap Initiative, 2005) led to a boom of brewery startups, from 54 in 2010 to more than 380 in 2022.Design/methodology/approachThis qualitative study focuses on 15 brewery founders who have launched ventures within a few years of the Pop-the-Cap Initiative. This included 15% of those breweries launched between 2012 and 2017. Naturalistic Inquiry methodology was utilized, and semi-structured interviews, observations, and artifact analyses were applied to each participant via content analysis and NVivo.FindingsFramed by two contributing entrepreneurial mindset factors (anti-establishment mindset and business-person's burden mindset) and three external entrepreneurial micro-ecosystems conditions (community conditions, doom and boom conditions, and economic conditions), these emergent themes represent the ecosystem contributors (mindsets/conditions) associated with startup success and social value creation in rural and downtrodden urban areas.Research limitations/implicationsThis study facilitated a deep dive into two evolving entrepreneurial micro-ecosystems (rural/urban) through the perspective of brewery startups. It illuminated the actors, conditions, and domains in play. Conceptualizations of “nestedness” (Spigel, 2022) with “microfoundations” (Wurth et al., 2022) integrated to see a specific sector (craft brewing) developing within a sub-ecosystem's capacity to help frame and “understand the co-evolution of agents with entrepreneurial ecosystems” (Cho et al., 2022). Additionally, antecedents to the birth of local economies suggest the value of agents involved in evolution of nascent local economies (Cho et al., 2022). These findings reinforce developing literature while presenting opportunities for future studies.Social implicationsCraft breweries in rural and urban environments represent third places within communities. Third places can be recognized as conduits for developing social capital among individuals, groups, and firms. High levels of social capital positively impact communities. These conditions helped anchor tenants thrive and did not occur accidently. They are intentional value propositions of entrepreneurs and ecosystem conditions.Originality/valueBrewery entrepreneurs were aware of their contribution to social capital value, economic impact (e.g., tax revenue, jobs, space, attraction/destination, etc.), and how these facets interplay as revitalizing anchor tenants (i.e., craft breweries). Insight into how entrepreneurs come to understand and recognize their impact on community through social capital development and the economy can aid in further support ecosystems at the community level.
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创业微生态系统发展:精酿啤酒厂的社区性
目的利用精酿啤酒复兴的热潮,通过精酿行业的影响来探索社会资本理论。该探索涉及具有一个共同点的创业微观生态系统——社区发展和振兴的必要性。北卡罗来纳州对精酿啤酒的放松管制(Pop the Cap Initiative,2005)导致了啤酒初创企业的繁荣,从2010年的54家增加到2020年的380多家。其中包括在2012年至2017年间成立的15%的啤酒厂。采用自然主义调查方法,并通过内容分析和NVivo.Findings将人工制品分析应用于每个参与者。在两个有贡献的创业心态因素(反建制心态和商人的负担心态)和三个外部创业微生态系统条件(社区条件、厄运和繁荣条件以及经济条件)的框架下,这些新兴主题代表了与农村和受压迫城市地区创业成功和社会价值创造相关的生态系统贡献者(心态/条件)。研究局限性/含义本研究通过啤酒初创公司的视角,促进了对两个不断发展的创业微生态系统(农村/城市)的深入研究。它阐明了剧中的演员、条件和领域。将“嵌套”(Spigel,2022)与“微基础”(Wurth et al.,2022)相结合,以看到特定部门(工艺酿造)在子生态系统的能力范围内发展,从而帮助构建和“理解代理人与创业生态系统的共同进化”(Cho et al.,2021)。此外,地方经济诞生的前因表明了参与新生地方经济发展的代理人的价值(Cho et al.,2022)。这些发现加强了文献的发展,同时为未来的研究提供了机会。社会影响农村和城市环境中的精酿啤酒厂代表着社区中的第三位。第三方可以被认为是在个人、团体和公司之间发展社会资本的渠道。高水平的社会资本对社区产生积极影响。这些条件有助于稳定租户的发展,并不是偶然发生的。它们是企业家和生态系统条件的有意价值主张。创意/价值啤酒厂企业家意识到他们对社会资本价值的贡献、经济影响(例如税收、就业、空间、吸引力/目的地等),以及这些方面如何作为振兴主要租户(即精酿啤酒厂)而相互作用。深入了解企业家如何通过社会资本发展和经济来理解和认识他们对社区的影响,有助于进一步支持社区层面的生态系统。
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来源期刊
CiteScore
6.40
自引率
6.50%
发文量
40
期刊介绍: ■Research in SMEs, entrepreneurship and family-run businesses ■Case studies on real-life small business experiences ■Small Business growth and successful enterprises ■Practical advice from small business advisors ■Recruitment, training and development for SMEs ■Performance measurement and business improvement ■Government initiatives and enterprise policy ■SME financing and venture capital. By encouraging debate on the key issues facing SMEs, the journal offers detailed analysis and critical assessment of current best practice, discusses the implications of latest research findings and explores opportunities to break down the barriers that restrict the growth of SMEs.
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