ABSTRACT
Over the last three decades, organizations worldwide have used corporate entrepreneurship (CE) as a means of building new competencies, revitalizing operations, achieving renewal, and/or creating value for stakeholders. However, little is understood about factors triggering corporate entrepreneurship strategy (CES) within organizations not driven by profit motives. The purpose of this article is to conceptualize CES in the public sector in order to synthesize, integrate, and link the key concepts within the CE domain, thereby creating new public value and generating new economic activity for the benefit of multiple stakeholders. The public sector CES model includes (1) the antecedents of public sector CES (external environmental conditions that generate entrepreneurial activity); (2) the key components of CES (entrepreneurial strategic vision, organizational conditions that support entrepreneurial processes and behavior, entrepreneurial orientation (EO) that reflects the overall level of such processes and behavior, and individual levels of entrepreneurial behavior); and (3) outcomes of CES within the public sector (organizational outcomes resulting from entrepreneurial actions, including the development of venturing and renewal that, in turn, leads to enhanced public value). We discuss how our model contributes to the CE literature, followed by implications for scholars and practice and future research directions.
Additional information
Notes on contributors
Claudine Kearney
Dr. Claudine Kearney ([email protected]) is a lecturer at the UCD Quinn School of Business and UCD School of Biomolecular and Biomedical Science. Claudine's research interests focus on corporate entrepreneurship, entrepreneurial orientation and the emergence of entrepreneurial ventures. Claudine has published in leading international journals, as well as books and book chapters, and has presented numerous papers at major international conferences.
Timo Meynhardt
Dr. Timo Meynhardt ([email protected]) is Professor of Business Psychology and Leadership at HHL Leipzig Graduate School of Management, Germany, and at the University of St. Gallen, Switzerland. His fields of research include public value management and competency management.