Business Model Sensemaking in Early Stage Knowledge-Intensive Firms

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Volume Title

School of Business | Master's thesis

Date

2016

Major/Subject

Markkinointi
Marketing

Mcode

Degree programme

Language

en

Pages

61

Series

Abstract

The business model has a notable presence in both academic and popular business literature and consensus is growing with regards to many of its underlying topics. However, a first-hand managerial perspective has the potential to add valuable insights to the ongoing discussion. In particular, there exists a theoretical gap in how managers in general and founders of early-stage knowledge-intensive firms in particular make sense of their ventures' business models. The aim of this thesis is to help close that gap. The presented theoretical framework is derived from an extensive analysis of two prominent literature streams: business models (with a particular focus on the nature on its components & definitions, relationship to other business aspects and business model development of early stage ventures) and sensemaking (including the role of mental models and entrepreneurial sensemaking. A qualitative research methodology was utilized to arrive at an answer to the posed research problem. Data was collected from six semi-structured interviews with founders of global early-stage knowledge intensive ventures in Germany. A deductive content analysis procedure was developed via a synthesis of prominent methodology literature and applied to the study's raw dataset. The study is among the first to apply a content analysis methodology in the study of the sensemaking perspective. Its main theoretical contribution is a six-part model of managerial sensemaking in the context of early stage knowledge-intensive firms. The framework consists of the following sub-components: a customer-centricity schema, a business model schema, confirmation-seeking behaviour, own higher purpose schema, framing through known objects, and stakeholder management. The identified categories of sensemaking build on extant literature and advance the current understanding of the dynamics of sensemaking in the entrepreneurial context. A discussion of the limitations and possible new research avenues with-in sensemaking complements the main findings.

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Keywords

Sensemaking, business model, managerial cognition, schema, entrepreneur

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