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Investigating the brand equity strategy of halal food in a promising emerging Islamic market in a non-Muslim country
The nexus of digital financial inclusion, digital financial literacy and demographic factors: lesson from Indonesia
Analysing the impact of post-pandemic factors on entrepreneurial intentions: the enduring significance of self-efficacy in student planned behaviour
Remedying Japan’s deficient investment in people
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Enhancement of SME feasibility through the integration of BMC, functional organization, and SCM
The antecedents of bricolage in innovative firms: An empirical study in Tanzania
The International Journal of Entrepreneurship and Innovation, Ahead of Print.
Resource mobilisation is challenging for small- and medium-sized enterprises (SMEs) operating in developing countries characterised by resource constraints and market uncertainties. In response to these challenges, many SMEs rely on bricolage to pursue innovation. This study explores the antecedents of bricolage and examines the relationship between bricolage and innovation. The study employs partial least squares structural equation modelling to analyse data from 229 SMEs in the Tanzanian food and drink industry. The findings reveal that financial and market constraints are important antecedents of bricolage among innovative firms and demonstrate that bricolage is positively associated with innovation. Knowledge and/or regulatory constraints do not appear to be significantly associated with bricolage among the sampled SMEs. Theoretical and practical implications of the findings include the need for support agencies and policymakers to recognise the importance of supporting SMEs to address innovation constraints by optimising bricolage behaviour.
Resource mobilisation is challenging for small- and medium-sized enterprises (SMEs) operating in developing countries characterised by resource constraints and market uncertainties. In response to these challenges, many SMEs rely on bricolage to pursue innovation. This study explores the antecedents of bricolage and examines the relationship between bricolage and innovation. The study employs partial least squares structural equation modelling to analyse data from 229 SMEs in the Tanzanian food and drink industry. The findings reveal that financial and market constraints are important antecedents of bricolage among innovative firms and demonstrate that bricolage is positively associated with innovation. Knowledge and/or regulatory constraints do not appear to be significantly associated with bricolage among the sampled SMEs. Theoretical and practical implications of the findings include the need for support agencies and policymakers to recognise the importance of supporting SMEs to address innovation constraints by optimising bricolage behaviour.
Retraction: “Sustainable stakeholder participation planning on the basis of analysis of competing project interest”
The above article, published online on 30 January 2024 in Wiley Online Library (https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1111/jifm.12198) has been retracted by agreement between the journal's Editors in Chief, Sabri Boubaker and Xiaoqian Zhu, and John Wiley & Sons Ltd.
The retraction has been agreed due to an editorial office error that led to the publication of the article without peer review.
Spillover effects from partisan conflict and trade & immigration policy uncertainty to US travel and leisure stocks: a time-frequency analysis
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How to prevent ruining new product development projects with suppliers? A failure factors’ perspective
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