Entrepreneurship as a field of study in engineering management

In the past decade entrepreneurship has become a fast growing field of study with contributions from several disciplines including psychology, sociology, strategic management, or economics. This paper reviews engineering literature and shows that by number of publications entrepreneurship is a relevant field of study for engineering (management), but it is scattered among multiple journals and lacks visibility and the conceptual integrity of a scholarly discipline and body of knowledge. The paper puts forward that engineering is well positioned to make an original contribution to entrepreneurship as engineers and entrepreneurs both are seen as “creators”. Engineering can contribute a systems perspective to understanding the entrepreneurial phenomenon and can offer a well-developed formal and mathematical apparatus to further the understanding of complex non-linear and dynamic processes in the creation of new ventures. The engineering code of ethics provides a broader basis to understand entrepreneurial motivations including utilitarian and esthetic values than a one-dimensional economic profit maximization assumption alone. The paper discusses elements of a research road map to develop this view.

[1]  R. Daft,et al.  Toward a Model of Organizations as Interpretation Systems , 1984 .

[2]  Henry Mintzberg,et al.  Of strategies, deliberate and emergent , 1985, Strategic Management Journal.

[3]  A. Pettigrew Context and Action in the Transformation of the Firm , 1987 .

[4]  Glen L. Urban,et al.  Lead User Analyses for the Development of New Industrial Products , 1988 .

[5]  W. Arthur,et al.  INCREASING RETURNS AND LOCK-IN BY HISTORICAL EVENTS , 1989 .

[6]  W. Shan An empirical analysis of organizational strategies by entrepreneurial high-technology firms , 1990 .

[7]  K. Eisenhardt,et al.  Speeding Products to Market: Waiting Time to First Product Introduction in New Firms. , 1990 .

[8]  W. Baumol Formal entrepreneurship theory in economics: Existence and bounds , 1993 .

[9]  Howard E. Aldrich,et al.  Fools Rush in? The Institutional Context of Industry Creation , 1994 .

[10]  A. V. D. Ven,et al.  Explaining Development and Change in Organizations , 1995 .

[11]  G. Castrogiovanni Pre-Startup Planning and the Survival of New Small Businesses: Theoretical Linkages: , 1996 .

[12]  W. Mitchell,et al.  SURVIVAL OF BUSINESSES USING COLLABORATIVE RELATIONSHIPS TO COMMERCIALIZE COMPLEX GOODS , 1996 .

[13]  Elaine Mosakowski,et al.  Strategy Making Under Causal Ambiguity: Conceptual Issues and Empirical Evidence , 1997 .

[14]  H. Varian,et al.  The Art of Standards Wars , 1999 .

[15]  Pino G. Audia,et al.  The Social Structure of Entrepreneurial Activity: Geographic Concentration of Footwear Production in the United States, 1940–19891 , 2000, American Journal of Sociology.

[16]  Henry Chesbrough,et al.  Creating New Ventures from Bell Labs Technologies , 2000 .

[17]  S. Shane Prior Knowledge and the Discovery of Entrepreneurial Opportunities , 2000 .

[18]  S. Shane,et al.  The Promise of Entrepreneurship as a Field of Research , 2000 .

[19]  Scott Shane,et al.  Technology Regimes and New Firm Formation , 2001, Manag. Sci..

[20]  T. Fuller,et al.  Small enterprises as complex adaptive systems: a methodological question? , 2001 .

[21]  Suresh Kotha,et al.  Continuous “Morphing”: Competing Through Dynamic Capabilities, Form, and Function , 2001 .

[22]  M. Zimmerman,et al.  Beyond Survival: Achieving New Venture Growth by Building Legitimacy , 2002 .

[23]  W. Sine,et al.  Environmental jolts, institutional change, and the creation of entrepreneurial opportunity in the US electric power industry , 2003 .

[24]  S. Shane A General Theory of Entrepreneurship , 2003 .

[25]  S. Venkataraman,et al.  Three Views of Entrepreneurial Opportunity , 2003 .

[26]  S. Shane,et al.  Does business planning facilitate the development of new ventures , 2003 .

[27]  David G. Sirmon,et al.  A Model of Strategic Entrepreneurship: The Construct and its Dimensions , 2003 .

[28]  Riitta Katila,et al.  Exploiting technological opportunities: the timing of collaborations , 2003 .

[29]  Scott Shane,et al.  Bringing individuals back in: the effects of career experience on new firm founding , 2003 .

[30]  Understanding Innovation as a Complex Adaptive System: Case Studies from Shimadzu and Nec , 2004 .

[31]  B. McKelvey Toward a complexity science of entrepreneurship , 2004 .

[32]  E. A. Locke,et al.  The relationship of entrepreneurial traits, skill, and motivation to subsequent venture growth. , 2004, The Journal of applied psychology.

[33]  Heather A. Haveman,et al.  Risky Business? Entrepreneurship in the New Independent-Power Sector , 2005 .

[34]  K. Weick,et al.  Organizing and the Process of Sensemaking , 2005 .

[35]  T. Baker,et al.  Creating Something from Nothing: Resource Construction through Entrepreneurial Bricolage , 2005 .

[36]  Poh Kam Wong,et al.  Do others think you have a viable business idea? Team diversity and judges' evaluation of ideas in a business plan competition , 2005 .

[37]  Julian Birkinshaw,et al.  Corporate Venturing Units:: Vehicles for Strategic Success in the New Europe , 2005 .

[38]  Donna J. Kelley,et al.  Technology resources, alliances, and sustained growth in new, technology-based firms , 2005, IEEE Transactions on Engineering Management.

[39]  Dean A. Shepherd,et al.  A Hubris Theory of Entrepreneurship , 2006, Manag. Sci..

[40]  Peter G. Klein,et al.  Entrepreneurship, Subjectivism, and the Resource-Based View: Towards a New Synthesis , 2006 .

[41]  Charles C. Snow,et al.  Strategic entrepreneurship, collaborative innovation, and wealth creation , 2007 .

[42]  Dimo Dimov,et al.  From Opportunity Insight to Opportunity Intention: The Importance of Person–Situation Learning Match , 2007 .

[43]  S. Zahra Contextualizing theory building in entrepreneurship research , 2007 .

[44]  Quy Nguyen Huy,et al.  How Entrepreneurs Use Symbolic Management to Acquire Resources , 2007 .

[45]  Jay B. Barney,et al.  Discovery and creation: alternative theories of entrepreneurial action , 2007 .

[46]  Moren Lévesque,et al.  Business Opportunity Assessment With Costly, Imperfect Information , 2008, IEEE Transactions on Engineering Management.

[47]  K. Eisenhardt,et al.  Swimming with Sharks: Technology Ventures, Defense Mechanisms and Corporate Relationships , 2008 .

[48]  Peter G. Klein Opportunity Discovery, Entrepreneurial Action, and Economic Organization , 2008 .

[49]  P. Luksha Niche construction: The process of opportunity creation in the environment , 2008 .

[50]  S. Alvarez Introduction to creativity, imagination, and opportunities , 2008 .

[51]  Michael P. Ciuchta,et al.  Selected variation: the population‐level implications of multistage selection in entrepreneurship , 2008 .

[52]  Teppo Felin,et al.  Entrepreneurs as theorists: on the origins of collective beliefs and novel strategies , 2009 .

[53]  Michael H. Morris,et al.  Advancing Strategic Entrepreneurship Research: The Role of Complexity Science in Shifting the Paradigm , 2009 .

[54]  Matthew S. Wood,et al.  THE PRODUCTION OF ENTREPRENEURIAL OPPORTUNITY: A CONSTRUCTIVIST PERSPECTIVE (SUMMARY) , 2010 .

[55]  K. Eisenhardt,et al.  Constructing Markets and Shaping Boundaries: Entrepreneurial Power in Nascent Fields , 2009 .

[56]  S. Kotha,et al.  Entrepreneur Passion And Preparedness In Business Plan Presentations: A Persuasion Analysis Of Venture Capitalists' Funding Decisions , 2009 .

[57]  Simon C. Parker,et al.  Emerging Firms And The Allocation Of Control Rights: A Bayesian Approach , 2009 .

[58]  J. Barney,et al.  Entrepreneurship and Epistemology: The Philosophical Underpinnings of the Study of Entrepreneurial Opportunities , 2010 .

[59]  Maurizio Zollo,et al.  Dynamic capabilities, deliberate learning and environmental dynamism: a simulation model , 2010 .

[60]  Approaching complexity: a commentary on Keshavarz, Nutbeam, Rowling and Khavarpour. , 2010, Social science & medicine.

[61]  D. Wu,et al.  Modeling technological innovation risks of an entrepreneurial team using system dynamics: An agent-based perspective , 2010 .

[62]  Don Nutbeam,et al.  Social complex adaptive systems: A response to Haggis , 2010 .

[63]  Robert A. Baron,et al.  How entrepreneurs acquire the capacity to excel: insights from research on expert performance , 2010 .

[64]  Jeffrey G. York,et al.  The entrepreneur–environment nexus: Uncertainty, innovation, and allocation , 2010 .

[65]  Friederike Welter,et al.  Contextualizing Entrepreneurship—Conceptual Challenges and Ways Forward , 2011 .

[66]  Seth Hollar,et al.  Engineering and Innovation: An Immersive Start-up Experience , 2011, Computer.

[67]  Vittorio Chiesa,et al.  Commercializing Technological Innovation: Learning from Failures in High-Tech Markets* , 2011 .

[68]  Clyde W. Holsapple,et al.  The Intellectual Influence of Entrepreneurship Journals: A Network Analysis , 2011 .

[69]  Nicholas Dew,et al.  On the entrepreneurial genesis of new markets: effectual transformations versus causal search and selection , 2011 .

[70]  Nicholas Dew,et al.  Reflections on the 2010 AMR Decade Award: Whither the Promise? Moving Forward with Entrepreneurship As a Science of the Artificial , 2012 .

[71]  Johan Wiklund,et al.  Exploring the Heart: Entrepreneurial Emotion is a Hot Topic , 2012 .

[72]  S. Shane Reflections on the 2010 AMR Decade Award: Delivering on the Promise of Entrepreneurship As a Field of Research , 2012 .

[73]  Jeroen P.J. de Jong,et al.  The Decision to Exploit Opportunities for Innovation: A Study of High‐Tech Small‐Business Owners , 2013 .