探索混合性的微观基础:基于判断的方法

IF 7.7 1区 管理学 Q1 BUSINESS Journal of Business Venturing Pub Date : 2024-05-02 DOI:10.1016/j.jbusvent.2024.106406
Carmen-Elena Dorobat , Matthew McCaffrey , Mihai Vladimir Topan
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引用次数: 0

摘要

我们从基于判断的创业方法(JBA)的角度探讨了组织混合性的概念。基于判断的创业方法为混合性提供了亟需的微观基础,其形式是对塑造企业的市场机制提出一种更加细致入微、基于行动的观点。与其说混合性是组织层面的逻辑冲突问题,不如说它被重新定义为个人层面的企业家对金钱和精神利润组合的判断。从这个角度看,混合性是现实世界中企业的普遍特征,而不是其中某个特定子集的决定性特征。因此,这种方法最终重塑了我们对混合性的理解,并提出了另一种观点,即减少冲突性和孤立性,增加和解性和整合性。它还揭示了这类企业所面临的各种问题,包括战略制定、实践智慧、规范压力、使命漂移、创业团体和公共政策。这些逻辑通常被描述为经济逻辑或社会逻辑,而且通常被认为存在着内在的紧张关系;因此,混合企业既不是传统的追求金钱利润的企业,也不是纯粹的社会或慈善组织,而是两者的某种尴尬的、可能是自相矛盾的结合。关于混合企业的文献正在迅速增长,但迄今为止,人们对其基本概念和框架的看法还不尽一致,关于混合企业的起源、意义和发展的关键问题依然存在。关于混合体的不同 "逻辑 "是否必然存在紧张或冲突,还是作为互补而和谐存在,争论尤为激烈。混合体是否只是另一种形式的追求利润的市场组织?作为组织,它们是需要解决的难题,还是需要面对的悖论?回答这些问题对于理解混合企业是什么、它们如何运作以及它们对经济和社会的广泛影响至关重要。我们认为,当前的争议通常是仅从组织层面研究混合的结果。对此,我们探讨了混合的微观基础,表明所谓的混合组织只是反映了企业家对如何追求货币利润和精神利润的选择。借鉴基于判断的创业方法(JBA),我们展示了创业决策如何不断协商货币计算和追求利润的界限,以及提供社会效益等替代性非货币目标。理解了货币利润与精神利润之间的相互作用,我们就能对混合性的因果基础做出更现实、更细致的解释,同时也能消除文献中出现的一些困惑。归根结底,所谓组织层面的混合性,不过是个人层面关于利润组合的创业行动的结果。首先,它强调所有企业在某种程度上都是社会性的,都包含所谓混合性的要素。其次,微观基础挑战了混合性作为一个关键结构的重要性。所谓的混合性并不是某些组织的决定性特征,而是存在于所有企业中,是企业家决定如何组织和重组企业的一个持久方面。第三,微观层面的方法消除了企业中不同逻辑之间的紧张关系,促进了一种少冲突、少孤立,多调和、多融合的观点。第四,微观基础有助于将中观和宏观层面的研究联系起来,从而鼓励开展包括各种规模和形态的企业在内的更全面的研究计划。第五,微观基础还能揭示各类企业面临的各种问题,包括战略形成、实践智慧、规范压力、使命漂移、企业家群体和公共政策。
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Exploring the microfoundations of hybridity: A judgment-based approach

We explore the concept of organizational hybridity from the perspective of the Judgment-Based Approach to entrepreneurship (JBA). The JBA provides much-needed microfoundations for hybridity in the form of a more nuanced, action-based view of the market mechanism in shaping enterprises. Rather than a problem of conflicting logics at the organizational level, hybridity is redefined as entrepreneurial judgment at the individual level about combinations of monetary and psychic profit. Viewed this way, hybridity is a universal characteristic of real-world enterprises rather than a defining feature of a specific subset of them. This approach thus ultimately reshapes our understanding of hybridity and suggests an alternative view that is less conflictual and insular, and more conciliatory and integrated. It also sheds light on various problems facing such enterprises, including strategy formation, practical wisdom, normative pressures, mission drift, entrepreneurial groups, and public policy.

Executive summary

Hybrid enterprises are said to combine different logics or orientations within an organization. These logics are typically described as either economic or social, and are usually conceived as existing in inherent tension with each other; hence, hybrid enterprises are neither conventional monetary profit-seeking businesses nor purely social or charitable organizations, but some awkward, possibly paradoxical combination of both. The best-known and most frequently studied types of hybrids are social enterprises, which straddle the line between monetary profit-seeking and the pursuit of broader social goals or social value.

The literature on hybrids is growing rapidly, but to date there has been little agreement over its fundamental concepts and frameworks, and key questions remain about the origins, meaning, and development of hybrids. There is particular debate about whether the different “logics” of hybrids are necessarily in tension or conflict, or whether they exist harmoniously, as complements. Are hybrids just another form of profit-seeking market organization? As organizations, are they puzzles to solve, or perhaps paradoxes to confront? Answering these questions is crucial for understanding of what hybrids are, how they work, and what their broader implications are for economy and society.

We address to these debates by developing a new conceptual basis for studying hybrid enterprises. We argue that current controversies are usually the result of studying hybridity only at the organizational level. In response, we explore the microfoundations of hybridity, showing that what is called hybrid organizing simply reflects entrepreneurs' choices about how to pursue monetary profits and psychic profits. Drawing on the Judgment-Based Approach to entrepreneurship (JBA), we show how entrepreneurial decision-making constantly negotiates the boundaries of monetary calculation and profit-seeking and alternative, non-monetary goals such as providing social benefits. Understanding the interplay between the monetary and psychic profit leads to a more realistic and nuanced account of the causal foundations of hybridity, while also dispelling some confusions that have arisen in the literature. Ultimately, what is called hybridity at the organizational level is simply the result of entrepreneurial action at the individual level about combinations of profit.

This approach leads to several notable results. First, it emphasizes that all enterprises are to some extent social and contain elements of what is called hybridity. Second, as a result, microfoundations challenge the importance of hybridity as such as a key construct. What is called hybridity is not a defining characteristic of certain organizations, but exists in all enterprises, and is a persistent aspect of entrepreneurial decisions regarding how to organize and restructure firms. Third, a micro-level approach dissolves the perceived tension between different logics in the enterprise, promoting a view that is less conflictual and insular, and more conciliatory and integrated. Fourth, microfoundations can help connect meso- and macro- level research as a way of encouraging a more comprehensive research program that includes all sizes and shapes of enterprise. Fifth, they also shed light on various problems facing enterprises of all types, including strategy formation, practical wisdom, normative pressures, mission drift, entrepreneurial groups, and public policy.

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来源期刊
CiteScore
16.70
自引率
6.90%
发文量
59
审稿时长
77 days
期刊介绍: The Journal of Business Venturing: Entrepreneurship, Entrepreneurial Finance, Innovation and Regional Development serves as a scholarly platform for the exchange of valuable insights, theories, narratives, and interpretations related to entrepreneurship and its implications. With a focus on enriching the understanding of entrepreneurship in its various manifestations, the journal seeks to publish papers that (1) draw from the experiences of entrepreneurs, innovators, and their ecosystem; and (2) tackle issues relevant to scholars, educators, facilitators, and practitioners involved in entrepreneurship. Embracing diversity in approach, methodology, and disciplinary perspective, the journal encourages contributions that contribute to the advancement of knowledge in entrepreneurship and its associated domains.
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