Bricolage in the marketing efforts of a social enterprise
Kannampuzha, M. J., & Suoranta, M. (2016). Bricolage in the marketing efforts of a social enterprise. Journal of Research in Marketing and Entrepreneurship, 18(2), 176-196. https://doi.org/10.1108/JRME-07-2015-0039
Date
2016Discipline
Basic or discovery scholarshipStrategia ja yrittäjyysBasic or discovery scholarshipStrategy and EntrepreneurshipCopyright
© Emerald Group Publishing, 2016. Permission has been granted for this version
to appear in the insitutional repository. Emerald does not grant permission for
this article to be further copied/distributed or hosted elsewhere without the express permission
from Emerald Group Publishing Limited.
Purpose
The paper aims to understand how resource constraints are addressed in the development of a marketing strategy by a social enterprise.
Design/methodology/approach
The authors have used an in-depth case study of collaboration between a Finnish university and an Indian social enterprise as the methodology for the research in which the data were collected over a period of two years. The data involve semi-structured interviews, field notes and student reports.
Findings
The authors propose bricolage as a method of marketing ingenuity in resource-constrained social enterprises. Network bricolage and entrepreneurship education bricolage were identified as two mechanisms adopted to address resource constraints in the early stage of the development of a social enterprise. Further studies need to be conducted to test the applicability of network bricolage among a variety of small and medium-sized enterprises and start-ups. Bricolage could be explored in more detail as an alternative to resource leveraging to understand the marketing activities of social businesses in their initial stages.
Research limitations/implications
Network bricolage is a type of bricolage in which an entrepreneur utilizes existing personal and professional networks as a resource at hand. Although networking and resource leveraging imply that the founders of an organization pursue resources from previously unknown people, network bricolage involves already known contacts of the entrepreneur.
Practical implications
Another type of bricolage that observed by the authors was entrepreneurship education bricolage. A combination of students, business mentors and university resources such as faculty members was utilized as an ingenuity mechanism to develop creative solutions for a shortage of marketing resources.
Originality/value
The theoretical framework of entrepreneurial bricolage is applied in the context of the marketing of a social enterprise.
...
Publisher
Emerald Group Publishing LimitedISSN Search the Publication Forum
1471-5201Publication in research information system
https://converis.jyu.fi/converis/portal/detail/Publication/26387842
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