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    <title>Moore, S.B.</title>
    <link>http://repub.eur.nl/res/aut/26044/</link>
    <description>List of Publications</description>
    <language>en</language>
    <image>
      <url>http://repub.eur.nl/static-eur/img/logo.png</url>
      <title>RePub, Erasmus University Rotterdam</title>
      <link>http://repub.eur.nl</link>
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      <title>Cultivating Sustainable Small-Enterprise Networks: A Way to Enhance Value, Competitiveness and Resilience (Doctoral Thesis)</title>
      <link>http://repub.eur.nl/res/pub/21179/</link>
      <pubDate>2010-11-02T00:00:00Z</pubDate>
      <description>The author’s experiences and successes in the 1980’s using “green chemistry” as a
leading
strategy in the transformation of a textile chemical company’s financial success,
led to
research on the potential of “sustainability” as a new strategic lens to improve
value
creation in small to medium sized enterprises (SMEs). Sustainability was offered as a
useful strategic lens to aid in transforming SMEs to produce greater value in a world
defined as “hot, flat and crowded”, meaning, a world where population pressures on
resources, global warming, and the development of global trade are fundamentally
changing the nature of enterprise and the consumer’s concept of the role of the
corporate
enterprises.
The dissertation research proceeded along the following steps:
· Pursue background research on sustainable development and the concepts for
creation of sustainable enterprise
· Develop research questions to discover what role “sustainability” might play in
strategy planning and successful business strategies for SMEs
· Examine the role of SMEs in the global economy
· Explore the role and theory of SME network behavior and performance within the
boundaries of sustainable development
· Report the results of three action research cases where a sustainability lens and
transformational framework were inserted as major influences on strategy
development over a fiveplus
year period
· Summarize findings and develop suggestions for ongoing research
The research questions developed were directed at discovering: what were the important
attributes of sustainable enterprise that could lead SMEs to become more successful,
how
could these attributes be inserted into the activities of SMEs, and what were the
impacts of
defining a sustainability lens and inserting it into the strategy of three SMEs?
Furthermore, there are many regions of the world where networks of SMEs have been
found to create markets and unexpected synergies. Exploring these examples exposes the
complexity of network formation and the architecture and behavior of such networks,
but
also produced some new understandings as examples of networking behavior from the
Internet were contrasted with the performance of SME networks. It was found that
networks of SMEs could form and dissolve rapidly; the term “ad hoc” network was
coined
to describe such behaviors. It was also observed that ad hoc networks could be
extremely
detrimental to the global physical and fiscal environments if their behaviors were not
tempered by a realization of the need for sustainability and its associated behaviors.
The globalization of markets seems to have forced SMEs to choose between
hyperefficient
behaviors, which create brittle, monofocused
lowprice
driven networks and have few
environmental or social conscience boundaries, versus more resilient, socially,
environmentally and financiallybounded
networks that tend to be regional or local. The
big questions addressed are whether SME networks can develop a hybrid structure that
allows for adequate efficiency within a broadbased,
“rightly understood” creation of value
for large number of diverse stakeholders, and whether the winlose
war of either “local” or
“global” can be supplanted by multiscale
sustainability?
Samuel B. Moore, Erasmus University
vi
A transformative framework was developed based on the work of leading theorists on
sustainable enterprise to encourage development of hybrid strategies and actions. This
action research framework is outlined and consists of a series of educational and
diagnostic
exercises with the chosen firms, based on extensive dialogues with the
owners/entrepreneurs of the firms. The anticipated results sought to balance the
inputs and
outputs of the corporation through inclusion of heretofore ignored stakeholders that
creates
new customers. The results were analyzed by value mapping of the new sustainable
investments. This framework was used by the author on three SMEs as a lens to help the
owners and managers of these firms to find a path forward out of their failing
incumbent
strategies.
Three action research cases are presented:
· Burlington Chemical Company, Inc. the
author’s textile chemical manufacturing
firm that was failing due to globalization of the textile industry.
· Reedy Fork Dairy Farm – A family farm located in central North Carolina, USA
that was failing due to wide fluctuation and decline of liquid milk prices.
· TS Designs, Inc. A
custom apparel printing company that was also failing due
globalization of the textile market in the southeastern USA.
The overall results of the action research projects were successful. Two of the
three SMEs
were adequately transformed as a result of sustainable lens insertion and new strategy
implementation. They continue to survive and thrive after 5 plus years of strategic
intervention. The textile chemical company did not survive due to inadequate
understanding and actions related to “creative destruction” of the incumbent
business
model, however, even in failure, this case provides support for the idea that
sustainable
strategies can provide unique competitive advantages
The finding of the research indicates that sustainability is a useful foundation for
formal
strategyplanning
processes for SMEs. It forces consideration of internal and external
factors and provides a new communication channel for communication and inclusion with
new stakeholders. A sustainability lens provides for a broader definition of success
that
transcends but is inclusive of economic profitability and provides stability and
control
(resilience) within operations of SMES and networks of SMEs. The key concept of
enterprise creating abundance for as many stakeholders as possible and thus expanding
opportunities for many, rather than limiting value to strictly economic profits for
shareholders, was a key metaphor for the success of these cases.
Opportunities for further work remain in correlation of SME network behavior and other
measureable networks such as the Internet. There also remains a great opportunity to
study
the resilience effects of the sustainability lens on creation of value for adopting
SME firms
and perhaps even the creation of new forms of SME network business structures.</description>
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