HOI research | Understanding entrepreneurial opportunities through metaphors
Co-authored research from the House of Innovation explores how metaphors provide a way for families involved in entrepreneurship to build a shared understanding of opportunities and challenges. The study examines which metaphors specific entrepreneurial families use when they talk about future opportunities.
According to the research, metaphors provide meaning to entrepreneurial families in three dimensions: a factual one (relating to facts about the world, such as the creation of a new venture), a social one (related to social bonds), and a temporal dimension (related to the ‘before-after’ aspects of opportunity creation). The study supports the conclusion that metaphors are developed and used to nurture entrepreneurship across generations by building bridges of understanding, factually, socially, and temporally.
Further, the research contributes to family entrepreneurship theory by demonstrating how metaphors of entrepreneurial opportunity are shared with and ‘imprinted’ on family members. More practically, this study suggests that through metaphors, family members in business may be able to simplify approaches to entrepreneurial opportunities and make them familiar over generations. Metaphors can evoke the same impact as a fully fleshed out narrative because they are reminders of such stories which are already familiar and embedded in the minds of the entrepreneurial family.
The main contribution of this research is in establishing the link between metaphor and family entrepreneurship and in opening up new possibilities for future studies in the field.
Researchers
Allan Discua Cruz
Department of Entrepreneurship and Strategy, Lancaster University management School
Eleanor Hamilton
Department of Entrepreneurship and Strategy, Lancaster University management School
Sarah Jack
House of Innovation, Stockholm School of Economics