TY - JOUR
T1 - Stakeholder engagement and business model innovation value
AU - Hollebeek, Linda D.
AU - Urbonavicius, Sigitas
AU - Sigurdsson, Valdimar
AU - Clark, Moira K.
AU - Parts, Oliver
AU - Rather, Raouf Ahmad
N1 - Funding Information: The authors thank The Icelandic Centre for Research (RANNIS) for partially funding this study (grant number 218235-051). We thank Professor Jan Hendrik Schumann and Associate Professor Tina Saebi for a discussion and/or exchange of ideas, and Brodie et al. (2016) for a discussion on Engagement and related issues. Publisher Copyright: © 2022 Informa UK Limited, trading as Taylor & Francis Group.
PY - 2022/1/14
Y1 - 2022/1/14
N2 - Despite important strides made in the business model literature, substantially less is known regarding its constituent sub-concept of business model innovation (BMI). In particular, the role and dynamics of different stakeholders’ BMI-related engagement remain nebulous, as therefore explored in this paper. Moreover, though business models are recognized to house firm-based value propositions, the nature and extent of stakeholders’ actual perceived BMI-related value (BMIV) remains tenuous, exposing a second research gap. Addressing these issues, we first develop the BMIV concept, defined as a stakeholder’s perceived value created through some nontrivial new aspect in a firm’s value creation,–communication, -delivery, and -capture mechanisms and activities. Using interdependence theory’s outcome transformation, we then develop a conceptual model that recognizes the role of different BMI stakeholders’ interdependent engagement in creating BMIV. Specifically, BMI stakeholders are predicted to consider the goals/interests of focal others, alongside their own, in their BMI-related engagement, in turn affecting all these stakeholders’ BMIV. We predict BMIV-based stakeholder engagement to differ based on whether stakeholders’ goals/interests converge or diverge: While converging stakeholder goals tend to yield cooperative/equality-based SE, diverging goals trigger altruistic/aggressive SE, as formalized in a set of propositions. We conclude by deriving important implications from our analyses.
AB - Despite important strides made in the business model literature, substantially less is known regarding its constituent sub-concept of business model innovation (BMI). In particular, the role and dynamics of different stakeholders’ BMI-related engagement remain nebulous, as therefore explored in this paper. Moreover, though business models are recognized to house firm-based value propositions, the nature and extent of stakeholders’ actual perceived BMI-related value (BMIV) remains tenuous, exposing a second research gap. Addressing these issues, we first develop the BMIV concept, defined as a stakeholder’s perceived value created through some nontrivial new aspect in a firm’s value creation,–communication, -delivery, and -capture mechanisms and activities. Using interdependence theory’s outcome transformation, we then develop a conceptual model that recognizes the role of different BMI stakeholders’ interdependent engagement in creating BMIV. Specifically, BMI stakeholders are predicted to consider the goals/interests of focal others, alongside their own, in their BMI-related engagement, in turn affecting all these stakeholders’ BMIV. We predict BMIV-based stakeholder engagement to differ based on whether stakeholders’ goals/interests converge or diverge: While converging stakeholder goals tend to yield cooperative/equality-based SE, diverging goals trigger altruistic/aggressive SE, as formalized in a set of propositions. We conclude by deriving important implications from our analyses.
KW - Business model innovation
KW - interdependence theory
KW - outcome transformation
KW - stakeholder engagement
KW - value
UR - https://www.scopus.com/pages/publications/85122861322
U2 - 10.1080/02642069.2022.2026334
DO - 10.1080/02642069.2022.2026334
M3 - Article
SN - 0264-2069
VL - 42
SP - 42
EP - 58
JO - Service Industries Journal
JF - Service Industries Journal
IS - 1-2
ER -