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Resilience as an entrepreneurial capability: integrating insights from a cross-disciplinary comparison

Russell Charles Manfield (University of Queensland Business School, Brisbane, Australia)
Lance Richard Newey (University of Queensland Business School, Brisbane, Australia)

International Journal of Entrepreneurial Behavior & Research

ISSN: 1355-2554

Article publication date: 31 October 2017

Issue publication date: 5 November 2018

1925

Abstract

Purpose

The purpose of this paper is to examine competing assumptions about the nature of resilience and selects those most appropriate for an entrepreneurial context. Assumptions are integrated into a theoretical framework highlighting how different threats require different resilience responses. Overall organizational resilience results from a portfolio of resilience capabilities.

Design/methodology/approach

Akin to theoretical sampling, the authors identify various theoretical insights about resilience across three disciplines of psychology, ecology and engineering. The authors use these insights to distill competing assumptions about what resilience is and evaluate those most appropriate for entrepreneurial contexts. Existing resilience literature in organization science is critiqued in terms of underlying assumptions and an alternative theoretical framework proposed based on more robust assumptions.

Findings

Other disciplines point to resilience being a process that differs for different threats and as either bouncing back, absorbing shocks or bouncing forward. When imported into entrepreneurship these characteristics lead to a conceptualization of resilience as being enacted through a capability portfolio. A routine-based capability response is preferred when threats are familiar, simple, not severe and frequent, following minimal disorganization and where resource slack is available. In contrast, heuristics-based capabilities are preferred when threats are unfamiliar, complex, severe and infrequent, following serious disorganization and where resource slack is unavailable. An absorption threshold point identifies when organizations need to switch from routine-based to heuristics-based resilience capabilities.

Practical implications

Building resilience across a range of adverse situations requires firms to develop a portfolio of resilience capabilities. Firms must learn to match the capability required for the specific threat profile faced. This includes a mix of routinized responses for returning to stability but also more flexible, heuristics-based responses for strategic reconfiguration.

Originality/value

The paper undertakes a first of its kind cross-disciplinary conceptual analysis at the level of identifying competing assumptions about the nature of resilience. These assumptions are found to be somewhat unconscious among organization researchers, limiting the conceptual development of resilience in entrepreneurship. The authors contribute a theoretical framework based on explicit and robust assumptions, enabling the field to advance conceptually.

Keywords

Citation

Manfield, R.C. and Newey, L.R. (2018), "Resilience as an entrepreneurial capability: integrating insights from a cross-disciplinary comparison", International Journal of Entrepreneurial Behavior & Research, Vol. 24 No. 7, pp. 1155-1180. https://doi.org/10.1108/IJEBR-11-2016-0368

Publisher

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Emerald Publishing Limited

Copyright © 2018, Emerald Publishing Limited

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