e-Extinction: an illusion of knowledge, the presence of ignorance, or evolutionary fate?


Autoria(s): Jones, Colin; Hecker, Rob
Data(s)

2003

Resumo

At present, the rate of small firm adoption of the Internet's ubiquitous World Wide Web (the web) far exceeds the actual exploitation its commercial potential. An inability to strategically acquire, comprehend and use external knowledge is proposed as a major barrier to optimal exploitation of the Internet. This paper discusses the limitations of applying market orientation theory to explain and guide small firm exploitation of the web. Absorptive capacity is introduced as an alternative theory that when viewed from an evolutionary perspective provides potentially more insightful discussion. An inability to detect emerging business model dominant designs is suggested to be a mixture of the nature of the technology that supports the Internet and underdeveloped small firm knowledge processing capabilities. We conclude with consideration of the practical and theoretical implications that arise from the paper.

Identificador

http://eprints.qut.edu.au/92863/

Publicador

World Scientific Publishing Co. Pty Ltd

Relação

DOI:10.1142/S0218495803000123

Jones, Colin & Hecker, Rob (2003) e-Extinction: an illusion of knowledge, the presence of ignorance, or evolutionary fate? Journal of Enterprising Culture, 11(4), pp. 359-378.

Fonte

QUT Business School; School of Management

Palavras-Chave #150314 Small Business Management #Small Firms #Market Orientation #Absorptive Capacity #Evolutionary Theory #The Internet
Tipo

Journal Article