Discovering Technology Entrepreneurship Opportunities in Nanotechnology
Subject Areas :
Journal of Iranian Social Development Studies
mehrdad navabakhsh
1
,
Mehrdad Navabakhsh
2
,
nosratollah shadnoosh
3
1 - PhD student in Entrepreneurship Management, Islamic Azad University, Tehran Branch
2 - Professor of Sociology, Science and Research Branch, Islamic Azad University, Tehran, Iran
3 - Professor of Islamic Azad University Tehran Branch
Received: 2019-01-20
Accepted : 2020-01-14
Published : 2019-10-23
Keywords:
Technology Entrepreneurship,
nanotechnology,
Discovering Technology Entrepreneurship Opportunities,
Opportunity Discovery,
Knowledge Based Enterprises,
Abstract :
With the discovery of the field of nanotechnology in the last two decades, there has been a tremendous field of entrepreneurship development, including technological entrepreneurship. The existence of very large markets and the interconnection of research and scientific fields has led to a lot of entrepreneurship. Meanwhile, the study of factors affecting the discovery of technological entrepreneurship opportunities can be of great importance. Because these factors can be strengthened, they have expanded the field for entrepreneurship in the field of nanotechnology. A review of studies has shown that such a model has not been studied in internal and external research. Therefore, the present study investigates the phenomenon of discovering technological opportunities for entrepreneurship in the field of nanotechnology. For this purpose, the present paper studies the basic views on the discovery of entrepreneurial opportunities and the evolution of its theories. Then, 11 knowledge based companies in the field of nanotechnology were investigated. The analysis technique in this research is grounded in theory and the data collected from the interviews were taken in three stages and finally the final model was presented.
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Aldrich, H. E., & Kenworthy, A. (1999). The accidental entrepreneur: Campbellian antinomies and organizational foundings. Variations in organization science: In honor of Donald T. Campbell, 19-33.
Alvarez, S. A., & Barney, J. B. (2005). How do entrepreneurs organize firms under conditions of uncertainty?. Journal of management, 31(5), 776-793.
Alvarez, S. A., & Barney, J. B. (2007). Discovery and creation: Alternative theories of entrepreneurial action. Strategic entrepreneurship journal, 1(1‐2), 11-26.
Alvarez, S. A., & Barney, J. B. (2008). Opportunities, organizations, and entrepreneurship. Strategic Entrepreneurship Journal, 2(4), 265.
Alvarez, S. A., & Busenitz, L. W. (2001). The entrepreneurship of resource-based theory. Journal of management, 27(6), 755-775.
Alvarez, S. A., Barney, J. B., & Anderson, P. (2013). Forming and exploiting opportunities: The implications of discovery and creation processes for entrepreneurial and organizational research. Organization Science, 24(1), 301-317.
Alvarez, S. A., Young, S. L., & Woolley, J. L. (2015). Opportunities and institutions: A co-creation story of the king crab industry. Journal of Business Venturing, 30(1), 95-112.
Arthur, W. B. (1989). Competing technologies, increasing returns, and lock-in by historical events. The economic journal, 99(394), 116-131.
Azevedo, J. (2002). Updating organizational epistemology. Companion to organizations, 715-732.
Baker, T., & Nelson, R. E. (2005). Creating something from nothing: Resource construction through entrepreneurial bricolage. Administrative science quarterly, 50(3), 329-366.
Berger, P. L., & Luckmann, T. (1967). The social construction ofreality. New York.
Bhide, A. (1992). Bootstrap finance: the art of start-ups. Harvard business review, 70(6), 109-117.
Blanco, S. (2007). How techno-entrepreneurs build a potentially exciting future. Handbook of Research on Techno-Entrepreneurship, 1, 3-25.
Burgelman, R. A., Christensen, C. M., & Wheelwright, S. C. (2004). Integrating technology and strategy: a general management perspective. Strategic Management of Technology and Innovation, 208.
Campbell, D. T. (1960). Blind variation and selective retentions in creative thought as in other knowledge processes. Psychological review, 67(6), 380.
Campbell, D. T. (1974). Evolutionary epistemology. P. A. Schilpp, ed. The Philosophy of Karl Popper, Vol. 14. Open Court, La Salle, IL, 413–463
Davidsson, P. (2004). Researching entrepreneurship. New York: Springer.
Dimov, D. (2007). Beyond the single‐person, single‐insight attribution in understanding entrepreneurial opportunities. Entrepreneurship Theory and Practice, 31(5), 713-731.
Godfrey, P. C., & Hill, C. W. (1995). The problem of unobservables in strategic management research. Strategic management journal, 16(7), 519-533.
Hitt, M. A., Ireland, R. D., Camp, S. M., & Sexton, D. L. (2001). Strategic entrepreneurship: Entrepreneurial strategies for wealth creation. Strategic management journal, 22(6‐7), 479-491.
Mintzberg, H., & Waters, J. A. (1985). Of strategies, deliberate and emergent. Strategic management journal, 6(3), 257-272.
Nelson Richard, R., & Winter Sidney, G. (1982). An evolutionary theory of economic change. Harvard Business School Press, Cambridge.
Petti, C. (Ed.). (2009). Cases in technological entrepreneurship: Converting ideas into value. Edward Elgar Publishing.
Sarasvathy, S. D. (2001). Causation and effectuation: Toward a theoretical shift from economic inevitability to entrepreneurial contingency. Academy of management Review, 26(2), 243-263.
Sarasvathy, S. D. (2008). Effectuation: Elements of entrepreneurial expertise. Edward Elgar Publishing.
Sarasvathy, S. D., Dew, N., Velamuri, S. R., & Venkataraman, S. (2003). Three views of entrepreneurial opportunity. In Handbook of entrepreneurship research (pp. 141-160). Springer US.
Weick, K. (1979). The social psychology of organisations. Reading, Mass: Addison-Westly.
Weick, K. E. (1977). Enactment processes in organizations. New directions in organizational behavior, 267, 300.
Weick, K. E. (1995). Sensemaking in organizations (Vol. 3). Sage.