Abstract

In times of increasing concerns and extensive political debates about social and environmental problems, incumbent firms are obliged to reduce their negative environmental impact by implementing sustainable business model innovation. Yet, realizing more sustainable business model variants entails several complexities and associated challenges that need to be overcome. To support this task, this article takes an entrepreneurship perspective on sustainable business model innovation and combines literature of business models and entrepreneurial lean thinking (ELT). In doing so, it derives a workshop design grounded in contemporary theory with state-of-the-art tools and methods. The workshop is framed as a stage-gate process facilitating the notions of ELT with iterative cycles of ‘create, test, and improve’ and spans the phases of opportunity identification, opportunity evaluation, opportunity development through sustainable business model design, and decision of opportunity exploitation. The article shows that ELT is an appropriate yet underutilized approach for sustainable business modeling. Further, it discusses how the workshop supports opportunities and mitigate pitfalls of ELT for sustainable business modeling. As such, the findings have theoretical implications for the intersection of sustainability and lean approaches in innovation research as well as implications for practitioners by providing a comprehensive framework to support sustainable business model innovation.

Highlights

  • Humanity is confronted with substantial social and environmental challenges such as social inequality, poverty, climate change, or deforestation that play a pivotal role in the present scientific and political discourse (Sneddon et al 2006; Dangelico and Pontrandolfo 2015; Joyce and Paquin 2016; Gast et al 2017)

  • We developed the framework for the workshop design in several steps: First, we conducted an analysis of literature on sustainable business models gaining in-depth insights of the current state of the field

  • We identified entrepreneurial lean thinking (ELT) as a potential approach for business model experimentation (Baldassarre et al 2017) and derived the overall aim of this article to design a workshop that facilitates sustainable business modeling through ELT

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Summary

Introduction

Humanity is confronted with substantial social and environmental challenges such as social inequality, poverty, climate change, or deforestation that play a pivotal role in the present scientific and political discourse (Sneddon et al 2006; Dangelico and Pontrandolfo 2015; Joyce and Paquin 2016; Gast et al 2017). A majority of established enterprises refrain from innovating their business models towards more sustainable variants, have slow progress towards sustainability, and are less ambitious regarding their social and environmental goals than new ventures (Hockerts and Wüstenhagen 2010; Sommer 2012; Baumgartner and Rauter 2017; Ritala et al 2018). This inertia is potentially related to the complexities, uncertainties, and challenges associated with developing and implementing coherent sustainable business models (Palzkill and Augenstein 2017; Evans et al 2017). Firms are often confronted with a deadlocked mindset, a reluctance to commit resources to sustainable innovation, and are overwhelmed by the complex integration of internal and external stakeholder in the innovation process (Stubbs and Cocklin 2008; Chesbrough 2010; Boons and Lüdeke-Freund 2013; Evans et al 2017; Lüdeke-Freund and Dembek 2017)

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