Parallel Play: Startups, Nascent Markets, and Effective Business-model Design

Prior research has advanced several explanations for entrepreneurial success in nascent markets but leaves a key imperative unexplored: the business model. By studying five ventures in a nascent financial-technology market, we develop a novel theoretical framework for understanding how entrepreneurs effectively design business models: parallel play. Similar to parallel play by preschoolers, entrepreneurs engaged in parallel play interweave action, cognition, and timing to accelerate learning about a novel world. Specifically, they (1) borrow from peers and focus on established substitutes for their services or products, (2) test assumptions, then commit to a broad business-model template, and (3) pause before elaborating the activity system. The insights from our framework contribute to research on optimal distinctiveness and to the learning and evolutionary-adjustment literatures. More broadly, we blend organization theory with a fresh theoretical lens—business-model processes—to highlight how organizations actually work and create value.

[1]  M. Parten Social participation among pre-school children. , 1932 .

[2]  Peter K. Smith A longitudinal study of social participation in preschool children: Solitary and parallel play reexamined. , 1978 .

[3]  T. Jick Mixing Qualitative and Quantitative Methods: Triangulation in Action. , 1979 .

[4]  Roger Bakeman,et al.  The Strategic Use of Parallel Play: A Sequential Analysis. , 1980 .

[5]  R. Yin Case Study Research: Design and Methods , 1984 .

[6]  George P. Huber,et al.  Temporal Stability and Response-Order Biases in Participant Descriptions of Organizational Decisions , 1985 .

[7]  G. Huber,et al.  Retrospective reports of strategic‐level managers: Guidelines for increasing their accuracy , 1985 .

[8]  Kathleen M. Eisenhardt,et al.  Making Fast Strategic Decisions In High-Velocity Environments , 1989 .

[9]  K. Eisenhardt Building theories from case study research , 1989, STUDI ORGANIZZATIVI.

[10]  M. Tushman,et al.  Technological Discontinuities and Dominant Designs: A Cyclical Model of Technological Change , 1990 .

[11]  L. Stern,et al.  Conducting Interorganizational Research Using Key Informants , 1993 .

[12]  G. Pisano Knowledge Integration and the Locus of Learning: An Empirical Analysis , 1994 .

[13]  H. Rao The Social Construction of Reputation: Certification Contests, Legitimation, and the Survival of Organizations in the American Automobile Industry: 1895–1912 , 1994 .

[14]  K. Eisenhardt,et al.  Accelerating Adaptive Processes: Product Innovation in the Global Computer Industry , 1995 .

[15]  Henry Mintzberg Musings on management. Ten ideas designed to rile everyone who cares about management. , 1996, Harvard business review.

[16]  K. Eisenhardt,et al.  The Art of Continuous Change : Linking Complexity Theory and Time-Paced Evolution in Relentlessly Shifting Organizations , 1997 .

[17]  Stefan H. Thomke,et al.  Managing Experimentation in the Design of New Products , 1998 .

[18]  S. Thomke,et al.  Agile Product Development: Managing Development Flexibility in Uncertain Environments , 1998 .

[19]  David L. Deephouse To Be Different or to Be the Same? It's a Question (and a Theory) of Strategic Balance , 1998 .

[20]  A. Langley Strategies for Theorizing from Process Data , 1999 .

[21]  Giovanni Gavetti,et al.  Capabilities, cognition, and inertia: evidence from digital imaging , 2000 .

[22]  Anne S. Miner,et al.  Organizational Improvisation and Learning: A Field Study , 2001 .

[23]  Andrew Hargadon,et al.  When Innovations Meet Institutions: Edison and the Design of the Electric Light , 2001 .

[24]  M. Lounsbury Cultural Entrepreneurship: Stories, Legitimacy and the Acquisition of Resources , 2001 .

[25]  Thomas R. Eisenmann,et al.  Internet Business Models: Texts and Cases , 2001 .

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

[27]  H. Chesbrough,et al.  The Role of the Business Model in Capturing Value from Innovation: Evidence from Xerox Corporation's Technology Spin-Off Companies , 2002 .

[28]  Christopher L. Tucci,et al.  Internet Business Models and Strategies: Text and Cases , 2002 .

[29]  E. Hippel,et al.  Customers As Innovators: A New Way to Create Value , 2002 .

[30]  Hayagreeva Rao,et al.  Sources of Durability and Change in Market Classifications: A Study of the Reconstitution of Product Categories in the American Mutual Fund Industry, 1944-1985 , 2004 .

[31]  Mary Tripsas,et al.  THE EXPLORATORY PROCESSES OF ENTREPRENEURIAL FIRMS: THE ROLE OF PURPOSEFUL EXPERIMENTATION , 2004 .

[32]  Daniel A. Levinthal,et al.  Strategy making in novel and complex worlds: the power of analogy , 2005 .

[33]  Royston Greenwood,et al.  The Strategic Positioning of Professional Service Firm Start-Ups: Balance Beguiles but Purism Pays , 2005 .

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

[35]  Rosemary O'Leary,et al.  Conclusion: Parallel Play, Not Collaboration: Missing Questions, Missing Connections , 2006 .

[36]  Kathleen M. Eisenhardt,et al.  Theory Building From Cases: Opportunities And Challenges , 2007 .

[37]  Raphael Amit,et al.  Business Model Design and the Performance of Entrepreneurial Firms , 2007, Organ. Sci..

[38]  Kenneth H. Rubin,et al.  Peer Interactions, Relationships, and Groups , 2007 .

[39]  Giovanni Gavetti,et al.  On the Origin of Strategy: Action and Cognition over Time , 2007, Organ. Sci..

[40]  Matthew S. Olson,et al.  Cuando el crecimiento se estanca , 2008 .

[41]  Clayton M. Christensen,et al.  Reinventing Your Business Model , 2008 .

[42]  R. Katila,et al.  Effects of Search Timing on Innovation: The Value of Not Being in Sync with Rivals , 2008 .

[43]  Kathryn L. Heinze,et al.  Forage for Thought: Mobilizing Codes in the Movement for Grass-fed Meat and Dairy Products , 2008 .

[44]  Riitta Katila,et al.  Life in the Fast Lane: Origins of Competitive Interaction in New vs. Established Markets , 2009 .

[45]  K. Eisenhardt,et al.  Origin of Alliance Portfolios: Entrepreneurs, Network Strategies, and Firm Performance , 2009 .

[46]  B. Leca,et al.  How actors change institutions: Towards a theory of institutional entrepreneurship , 2009 .

[47]  Kathleen M. Eisenhardt,et al.  Optimal Structure, Market Dynamism, and the Strategy of Simple Rules , 2009 .

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

[49]  M. Glynn,et al.  How New Market Categories Emerge: Temporal Dynamics of Legitimacy, Identity, and Entrepreneurship in Satellite Radio, 1990–2005 , 2010 .

[50]  Mary Ann Glynn,et al.  Legitimate Distinctiveness and The Entrepreneurial Identity: Influence on Investor Judgments of New Venture Plausibility , 2011 .

[51]  Eric Ries The lean startup : how today's entrepreneurs use continuous innovation to create radically successful businesses , 2011 .

[52]  Christopher B. Bingham,et al.  Rational heuristics: the ‘simple rules’ that strategists learn from process experience , 2011 .

[53]  R. Amit,et al.  The Business Model: Recent Developments and Future Research , 2011 .

[54]  Wayne F. Cascio,et al.  What is Strategy , 2012 .

[55]  Mary J. Benner,et al.  The Influence of Prior Industry Affiliation on Framing in Nascent Industries: The Evolution of Digital Cameras , 2012 .

[56]  Thomas R. Eisenmann,et al.  Hypothesis-Driven Entrepreneurship: The Lean Startup , 2012 .

[57]  Ingrid Neteland [Where are you?]. , 2013, Tidsskrift for den Norske laegeforening : tidsskrift for praktisk medicin, ny raekke.

[58]  P. Jennings,et al.  Hybrid Vigor: Securing Venture Capital by Spanning Categories in Nanotechnology , 2013 .

[59]  Oliver Baumann,et al.  Dealing with Complexity: Integrated vs. Chunky Search Processes , 2011, Organ. Sci..

[60]  R. Casadesus-Masanell,et al.  Business Model Innovation and Competitive Imitation: The Case of Sponsor-Based Business Models , 2013 .

[61]  Steve Blank Why the Lean Start-Up Changes Everything , 2013 .

[62]  Netflix in 2011 , 2014 .

[63]  Linus Dahlander,et al.  Distant Search, Narrow Attention: How Crowding Alters Organizations’ Filtering of Suggestions in Crowdsourcing , 2014 .

[64]  Ramana Nanda,et al.  Entrepreneurship as Experimentation , 2014 .

[65]  Dan Wang,et al.  Exposed: Venture Capital, Competitor Ties, and Entrepreneurial Innovation , 2014 .

[66]  Linus Dahlander,et al.  "Distant Search, Narrow Attention: How Crowding Alters Organizations' Filtering of User Suggestions" , 2014 .

[67]  Antoinette Schoar,et al.  The Consequences of Entrepreneurial Finance: Evidence from Angel Financings , 2014 .

[68]  Business Model Innovation , 2015 .

[69]  R. Amit,et al.  Crafting Business Architecture: the Antecedents of Business Model Design , 2015 .

[70]  David H. Hsu,et al.  Strategic switchbacks: Dynamic commercialization strategies for technology entrepreneurs , 2015 .

[71]  Luis L. Martins,et al.  Unlocking the Hidden Value of Concepts: A Cognitive Approach to Business Model Innovation , 2015 .

[72]  Benoît Demil,et al.  Introduction to the SEJ Special Issue on Business Models: Business Models within the Domain of Strategic Entrepreneurship , 2015 .

[73]  G. Ahuja,et al.  Incumbent Responses to an Entrant with a New Business Model: Resource Co-Deployment and Resource Re-Deployment Strategies , 2016 .

[74]  Violina P. Rindova,et al.  Combining Logics to Transform Organizational Agency , 2016 .

[75]  Mary Tripsas,et al.  “Who Are You?…I Really Wanna Know”: Product Meaning and Competitive Positioning in the Nascent Synthesizer Industry , 2016 .

[76]  Melissa E. Graebner,et al.  Grand Challenges and Inductive Methods: Rigor without Rigor Mortis , 2016 .

[77]  Ron Adner,et al.  Innovation ecosystems and the pace of substitution: Re‐examining technology S‐curves , 2016 .

[78]  Christopher B. Bingham,et al.  Superior Strategy in Entrepreneurial Settings: Thinking, Doing, and the Logic of Opportunity , 2017 .

[79]  Ranjay Gulati,et al.  Scaling: Organizing and Growth in Entrepreneurial Ventures , 2017 .

[80]  Benjamin L. Hallen,et al.  Entrepreneurial beacons: The Yale endowment, run‐ups, and the growth of venture capital , 2017 .

[81]  A. Edmondson,et al.  The Advocacy Trap: When Legitimacy Building Inhibits Organizational Learning , 2017 .

[82]  T. Khanna,et al.  Overcoming Institutional Voids: A Reputation-Based View of Long Run Survival , 2017 .

[83]  Danny Miller,et al.  Optimal distinctiveness: Broadening the interface between institutional theory and strategic management , 2017 .

[84]  Kathleen M. Eisenhardt,et al.  Strategy Formation in Entrepreneurial Settings: Past Insights and Future Directions , 2017 .

[85]  Christopher L. Tucci,et al.  A Critical Assessment of Business Model Research , 2017 .

[86]  Michael Lounsbury,et al.  Optimal Distinctiveness in the Console Video Game Industry: An Exemplar-Based Model of Proto-Category Evolution , 2018, Organ. Sci..

[87]  Kimberly D. Elsbach,et al.  Design Thinking and Organizational Culture: A Review and Framework for Future Research , 2018 .

[88]  How firms navigate cooperation and competition in nascent ecosystems , 2018 .

[89]  The Genesis and Metamorphosis of Imprints: How Business Model Innovation Evolves in Young Firms , 2018, Academy of Management Proceedings.

[90]  Daniel A. Levinthal,et al.  Situating the Construct of Lean Startup: Adjacent 'Conversations' and Possible Future Directions , 2018 .

[91]  Shon R. Hiatt,et al.  From farms to fuel tanks: Stakeholder framing contests and entrepreneurship in the emergent U.S. biodiesel market , 2019, Strategic Management Journal.

[92]  Raphael Amit,et al.  Business Model Innovation: Toward a Process Perspective Business Model Innovation: Toward a Process Perspective Business Model Innovation: Toward a Process Perspective Business Model Innovation: Toward a Process Perspective Business Model Innovation: Toward a Process Perspective Oxford Handbooks Onl , 2018 .

[93]  Mary Tripsas,et al.  Start-up Inertia versus Flexibility: The Role of Founder Identity in a Nascent Industry , 2020, Administrative Science Quarterly.

[94]  R. Raffaelli Technology Reemergence: Creating New Value for Old Technologies in Swiss Mechanical Watchmaking, 1970–2008 , 2019 .

[95]  Rory M. McDonald,et al.  Pivoting Isn’t Enough? Managing Strategic Reorientation in New Ventures , 2019, Organization Science.

[96]  M. Tushman,et al.  Frame Flexibility: The Role of Cognitive and Emotional Framing in Innovation Adoption by Incumbent Firms , 2018, Strategic Management Journal.

[97]  Rory M. McDonald,et al.  Shaping Nascent Industries: Innovation Strategy and Regulatory Uncertainty in Personal Genomics , 2020, Administrative Science Quarterly.