From emerging opportunities to successful business networks – evidence from bioenergy
Kokkonen, Kirsi (2014-12-09)
Väitöskirja
Kokkonen, Kirsi
09.12.2014
Lappeenranta University of Technology
Acta Universitatis Lappeenrantaensis
Julkaisun pysyvä osoite on
https://urn.fi/URN:ISBN:978-952-265-705-3
https://urn.fi/URN:ISBN:978-952-265-705-3
Tiivistelmä
Increasing renewable energy utilization is a challenge that is tried to be solved in different ways.
One of the most promising options for renewable energy is different biomasses, and the
bioenergy field offers numerous emerging business opportunities. The actors in the field have
rarely all the needed know-how and resources for exploiting these opportunities, and thus it is
reasonable to seize them in cooperation. Networking is not an easy task to carry out, however,
and in addition to its advantages for the firms engaged, it sets numerous challenges as well.
The development of a network is a result of several steps firms need to take. In order to gain
optimal advantage of their networks, firms need to weigh out with whom, why and how they
should cooperate. In addition, everything does not depend on the firms themselves, as several
factors in the external environment set their own enablers and barriers for cooperation. The
formation of a network around a business opportunity is thus a multiphase process. The objective
of this thesis is to depict this process via a step-by-step analysis and thus increase understanding
on the whole development path from an entrepreneurial opportunity to a successful business
network. The empirical evidence has been gathered by discussing the opportunities of animal
manure refinement to biogas and forest biomass utilization for heating in Finland.
The thesis comprises two parts. The first part provides an overview of the study, and the second
part includes five research publications. The results reveal that it is essential to identify and
analyze all the steps in the development process of a network, and several frameworks are used
in the thesis to analyze these steps. The frameworks combine the views of theory and practical
experiences of empirical study, and thus give new multifaceted views for the discussion on SME
networking. The results indicate that the ground for cooperation should be investigated adequately by taking
account of the preconditions in all the three contexts in which the actors operate: the social
context, the region and the institutional environment. In case the project advances to exploitation,
the assets and objectives of the actors should be paired off, which sets a need for relationships
and sub-networks differing in breadth and depth.
Different relationships and networks require different kinds of maintenance and management.
Moreover, the actors should have the capability to change the formality or strategy of the
relationships if needed. The drivers for these changes come along with the changing
environment, which causes changes in the objectives of the actors and this way in the whole
network. Bioenergy as the empirical field of the study represents well an industrial field with
many emerging opportunities, a motley group of actors, and sensitivity for fast changes.
One of the most promising options for renewable energy is different biomasses, and the
bioenergy field offers numerous emerging business opportunities. The actors in the field have
rarely all the needed know-how and resources for exploiting these opportunities, and thus it is
reasonable to seize them in cooperation. Networking is not an easy task to carry out, however,
and in addition to its advantages for the firms engaged, it sets numerous challenges as well.
The development of a network is a result of several steps firms need to take. In order to gain
optimal advantage of their networks, firms need to weigh out with whom, why and how they
should cooperate. In addition, everything does not depend on the firms themselves, as several
factors in the external environment set their own enablers and barriers for cooperation. The
formation of a network around a business opportunity is thus a multiphase process. The objective
of this thesis is to depict this process via a step-by-step analysis and thus increase understanding
on the whole development path from an entrepreneurial opportunity to a successful business
network. The empirical evidence has been gathered by discussing the opportunities of animal
manure refinement to biogas and forest biomass utilization for heating in Finland.
The thesis comprises two parts. The first part provides an overview of the study, and the second
part includes five research publications. The results reveal that it is essential to identify and
analyze all the steps in the development process of a network, and several frameworks are used
in the thesis to analyze these steps. The frameworks combine the views of theory and practical
experiences of empirical study, and thus give new multifaceted views for the discussion on SME
networking. The results indicate that the ground for cooperation should be investigated adequately by taking
account of the preconditions in all the three contexts in which the actors operate: the social
context, the region and the institutional environment. In case the project advances to exploitation,
the assets and objectives of the actors should be paired off, which sets a need for relationships
and sub-networks differing in breadth and depth.
Different relationships and networks require different kinds of maintenance and management.
Moreover, the actors should have the capability to change the formality or strategy of the
relationships if needed. The drivers for these changes come along with the changing
environment, which causes changes in the objectives of the actors and this way in the whole
network. Bioenergy as the empirical field of the study represents well an industrial field with
many emerging opportunities, a motley group of actors, and sensitivity for fast changes.
Kokoelmat
- Väitöskirjat [1102]