The Resilience of a Small Company and the Grounds of Capitalism: Thriving on Non-Knowledgeable Ground
Abstract
:1. Introduction
“How does open innovation achieved through agile partnerships provide the resources and synergies necessary for the continued adaptation of small businesses to high uncertainty environments?”
2. Insecurity, Likelihood of Disruption, Risk and Uncertainty
2.1. Challenges for Resilient Organizations
“Unlimited greed for gain is not in the least identical with capitalism, and is still less its spirit. Capitalism may even be identical with the restraint, or at least a rational tempering, of this irrational impulse. But capitalism is identical with the pursuit of profit, and forever renewed profit, by means of continuous, rational, capitalistic enterprise.”[18]
- (1)
- The ability to respond adaptively to a unsettling event in order to avoid losses (related to resistance);
- (2)
- The ability to recover rapidly and within acceptable costs (recovery);
- (3)
- The ability to self-organize, learn and adapt to ensure the continuity of operation, achieving the system’s objectives and retaining control over its structure and overall functioning (control over vulnerability, as in Limnios et al. [28]).
“Society is more and more conscious of the generalized lack of knowledge and proceeds not to be more knowledgeable, but to increase its capacity of managing the various manifestations of non-knowledge: insecurity, likelihood of disruption, risk, uncertainty.”[15]
- (1)
- Organizing for action, security and business continuity, implying a “strategically integrated view of business continuity” [26]: A resilient organization is realistic about the dangers it can face and is prepared to react; it understands that the consequences of a shock can be reduced and that the recovery time can be fast.
- (2)
- Vulnerability assessment: All vulnerabilities must be assessed and all possible events that can take advantage of them must be determined—sensitivity [22]—as well as their severity and probability—exposure [22]. Measures must be taken to prevent that most threatening vulnerabilities are exploited, and, in case that happens, measures must be taken to reduce the potential impact—capacity of response [22]. The continuous effort to identify and reduce most critical vulnerabilities becomes the measure of resilience of an organization [22,31].
- (3)
- Reducing the likelihood of disruptions: Early detection of disruptions to the normal business operation can allow implementing adequate corrective actions and reduce impact time. Continuous effort to reduce the likelihood of disruptions can be worked out through innovation. Or, as Teixeira and Werther call it, “serial” innovation [21]. Crisis anticipation has a direct impact on reputation because, as Koronis and Ponis state, “a crisis constitutes a disruption with potential asymmetrical results on reputation” [26], originating the need to compensate trust on stakeholders or customers.
- (4)
- Collaboration for safety: People who make up the organization form its sensory system. Employees who are aware of potential threats and share that information in the right channels of communication and decision can ensure more time to implement measures and reduce the impact of disturbing events. Collaboration enables the “mix of expertise, opportunism, creativity and decisiveness” [24].
- (5)
- Building redundancy: Duplication of resources, taking into account a decreasing order of their importance for maintaining normal business operation, may prove crucial to cope with unexpected events.
- (6)
- Creating resilient supply chains: Resiliency is created by (i) developing and maintaining effective and efficient relationships with suppliers during normal operations so that the organization is prepared for disturbances; and (ii) maintaining relationships with multiple vendors or store critical components so a reserve of materials is ensured to deal with a potential interruption of the supply chain [28,32].
- (7)
- Investing in training: Training employees is essential to the proper functioning of the organization [24]. The organization must train its employees so that they understand the risks and their adequate management. Employees should be encouraged to make suggestions about how best to manage the risks and to report what is wrong with the activities they perform. Adequate training increases “the ability to provide an acceptable level of service during disruptions” [33].
2.2. Access to Knowledge
“(…) distributed innovation process(es) based on purposively managed knowledge flows across organizational boundaries, using pecuniary and non-pecuniary mechanisms in line with the organization business model”.[44]
“(…) the use of purposive inflows and outflows of knowledge to accelerate internal innovation and to expand the markets for external use of innovation, respectively. Open innovation is a paradigm that assumes that companies can and should use external ideas as well as internal ideas, and internal and external paths to market, as they look to advance their technology.”[45]
3. The Study of Resilient Small and Micro Businesses: Research Methodology
4. Implementation of Open Innovation to Enhance Resilience: Insights from a Small Company
- (1)
- Ethics and reputation: “We have this very own choice of ours, based on ethics, social responsibility, something we do not give away… so a part of our path must be followed based on those principles, and this facilitates some opportunities that I would not classify as mere luck, but are not exactly planned either” (DU22). Weber quotes Benjamin Franklin expressively on this matter: “After industry and frugality, nothing contributes more to the raising of a young man in the world than punctuality and justice in all his dealings (…)” [18]. Trust is a critical issue that has been a driver since the first exploratory case of this work, Rvolta [50]. In this case, trust works as a mediator for business, ensuring the visibility of products, customer visibility and EBZ promotion “the second customer had to see it working to trust us… You know, sometimes the Angolan market is like this, sales are made, but the business commitment is not accomplished up to its very end, so customers had to see if what they were buying was what they would be getting (…), and we have to be grateful for the first customers that allowed us to show EBZ working…” (DU124). Koronis and Ponis [26] address organizational reputation as key to support resilience against crisis, particularly reputation continuity—very much an expression of the Weberian principle, as it were, joining business continuity and corporate reputation. It seems in any case that reputation becomes a rather incontrollable issue, as it is based on stakeholder’s perceptions, relations and interests; frequently targeted as a manipulation strategy when it corresponds to the convenience of a given agenda, often related to issues such as risk, fear, or other critical elements. Reputation is “built within stakeholder groups, which observe a number of organizational action dimensions, including quality, employment, innovation and leadership” [26], and this is the reason why authors argue for the need to keep trust links with stakeholders to keep social capital (in this case reputational capital);
- (2)
- Integrating challenges into strategy and business. “(…) About building automation, when we started our company, our business was more about consulting, energy management on buildings and industry, and we started developing the complete pack, meaning automation, programming and so on, as an answer to a challenge from my former employer” (DU23). Successfully addressing challenges requires cognitive, strategic and technological abilities associated with business resilience and agility [24]. Additionally, successfully responding to a policy challenge may require that the organization is capable of reconverting its resources to new processes and demands [19];
- (3)
- Openness as a strategic choice to face competitors. GTM chose to make use of BACnet, a “data communication protocol for building automation and control networks”. They explain the purpose: “(Companies) work and make their (automation) equipment available in specific protocols… We have the BACnet protocol, which was produced in ASHRAE, an American (public utility) association related to energy and air conditioned” (DU42). This becomes a resource to face competitors and also a marketing resource: “There are always manufacturers trying to prevent access somehow … but working with BACnet became a relevant marketing strategy, too” (DU52); in fact, openness goes further including technology integration through standard protocols, making the partnership viable: “For example, the (automation control company) we also work with is Canadian; they are totally transparent about what they send, the products they manufacture, for the BACnet…” (DU58); in any case, standard protocols enable common grounds for competition: “(If other) protocols were successful, other manufacturers could adhere, and its use would grow, yet there was never anything like the BACnet (…)”. They decided “No, we are going to develop this protocol from scratch, as if it was a ‘road’, and then invite manufacturers to drive their ‘cars’ on this road (…)” (DU50). Besides product or process innovation [41], standards do enable the expression of an openness mind-set;
- (4)
- Furthermore, this enables the company’s performance as innovative bricoleurs, those that “when situations unravel, (…) muddle through, imagining possibilities where others are confounded” [55]. Some factors can influence openness, such as technology availability, strategy and deliberate choices made by companies, the organization’s core—and not even that core—business and competencies (meaning those which, for some reason, become available to third parties) [56]: “We also integrate other protocols in BACnet... because it is possible, of course... For example, an energy meter or a water meter, can be bought in the market with BACnet support, but it is quite expensive... so more common and cheaper meters have other protocols we then make interoperable within a network… It is not possible to buy very expensive meters—only if it is one or two, but not more—yet if we need 200… we can connect meters in a given network, there is one protocol for it, the m-bus, the meter bus which was developed for counting, so (afterwards) we integrate everything” (DU68). This approach includes data and information sharing through openness (interoperable and standard systems), and also shows tinformation flows resulting from energy flows; innovativeness and interoperability become elements of an openness strategy. It also implies, integrated in the sheer definition of a bricoleur [55], resourcefulness and efficiency, as well as the capacity to adapt and control vulnerability [28];
- (5)
- Social and cultural adaptation as a groundwork for possible business. “Cultural aspects, from a social perspective, are something we care about. When we go to a different market, a different country, the first thing we do is to develop cultural activities and sensitiveness as much as we can…” (DU151). This can be antecedent, or rather, frame a given business development process, an inside-out process—as with the Angolan market where the company has been working: “(On the motorbike travel done by the interviewee with a business partner, crossing the Angolan territory, North to South)… I can tell you these motorbike journeys (giving out goods collected in Portugal, on a voluntary basis)… They all happened before my first work assignment there… When I got to Angola to work, I was already used to the country, (because) in a journey you have to talk to everybody (…) These journeys through Africa were rather important for me… at least the Angolan journeys helped a lot to make us more at ease afterwards” (DU153). External conditions and their internal appropriation are significant [34], and can ease the understanding of mental models [17];
- (6)
- Critical flows and redundancy. In a context of uncertainty, specific infrastructure and flows must be strategically secured, and information flows are on top: “Information is a rather important asset for us, I mean… our IT must be very disseminated, if one of our employees is in Angola, and depending on the level of connectivity (which nowadays is better)… well, he must have access to all information” (DU187). Client’s data support critical flows: “our systems are hyper redundant; we can keep our client data quite safe” (DU191);
- (7)
- Markets as challenges. Angola was first of all a strategic choice: “One choice which was much planned was our entry in Angola, something we planned in a very structured manner” (DU9). Angola became the main market for the company: “Our main external market is the Angolan… We decided to go there because here (in Portugal) the big projects became scarce years ago, and this type of (automation) system, say, is appropriate for big buildings; the bigger the building, the more consuming, more effective these systems are…” (DU81). As Weick and Sutcliffe state, “reliable systems spend time improving their capacity to (…) imagine detailed next steps and to recombine fragments of potentially relevant past experience” [35]. The biggest challenge found in the Angolan market was to “measure to manage (…) When we are about to interfere in a building or an industry, we usually have scarce measurement information that can be manageable and that can enable an action plan.” (DU97). As in other cases, this is a question of lack of “information available in a rather flexible and objective way, suitable to each customer’s requisites (…)” (DU99), meaning customized or customizable, and this is part of the EBZ solution. Factors that make adaptation easier are very different from Angola to Germany or Europe in general: In fact, in Angola, previous socialization and adventure seem to make market and cultural knowledge easier to develop; in Germany, the relationship is established considering a shared structural approach, not related to efficiency and measurement but instead to openness, transparency and quality; both markets demand high quality and creativity: “On Germany.... we also have a very good impression, our DC partners, the company we work with in Germany, are different, but say (…) we like that frame of rigor, excellence, competence, the best we can do… and German customers and partners like that too; when we arrive in Germany, we change our attitude accordingly, we have to adapt…” (DU161);
- (8)
- As for constrains affecting strategy, two are classical but still reveal some difficulties to be controlled: “time and availability to start other projects… We have been developing new solutions framed by our business needs, so when we have resources, either financial or human resources, to dedicate to a certain project… We have much more ideas than things we can really develop, you know…. so sometimes we just have to wait for the right time… This has not been happening, fortunately, (but it might happen that) the precise moment when we have time to develop a certain project (is) just too late” (DU146). Another constrain seems to relate to the open nature of business, including the acceptance of projects which were not defined at GTM: “For us, finishing a job well done is a strict obligation (…) delivering exactly what the client asked for… because often we are hired to undertake projects which were not exactly well defined, missing details and so… and the final output of the project could be influenced by that” (DU165). This ambiguity also shows when the client does not know exactly what he/she wants: “What does it mean, to finish a project? Well, in the face of some ambiguity from the client’s wishes, we just have to get what he wants and deliver accordingly, and afterwards we have to be by the client’s side to help with the solution we delivered.” (DU166). Risks, on the other hand are diffuse and less clear, except for investment, which shows from the very begining: “I took some (financial) risks and immediately started some big projects (…) in Lisbon or Algarve” (DU4).
5. Conclusions
Acknowledgments
Author Contributions
Conflicts of Interest
Appendix
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Cardoso, M.; Ramos, I. The Resilience of a Small Company and the Grounds of Capitalism: Thriving on Non-Knowledgeable Ground. Sustainability 2016, 8, 74. https://doi.org/10.3390/su8010074
Cardoso M, Ramos I. The Resilience of a Small Company and the Grounds of Capitalism: Thriving on Non-Knowledgeable Ground. Sustainability. 2016; 8(1):74. https://doi.org/10.3390/su8010074
Chicago/Turabian StyleCardoso, Margarida, and Isabel Ramos. 2016. "The Resilience of a Small Company and the Grounds of Capitalism: Thriving on Non-Knowledgeable Ground" Sustainability 8, no. 1: 74. https://doi.org/10.3390/su8010074
APA StyleCardoso, M., & Ramos, I. (2016). The Resilience of a Small Company and the Grounds of Capitalism: Thriving on Non-Knowledgeable Ground. Sustainability, 8(1), 74. https://doi.org/10.3390/su8010074