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Il presente capitolo è incentrato su uno dei nuovi paradigmi di produzione e consumo, l’economia circolare – i.e., “un’economia in cui gli scarti e l’inquinamento sono minimizzati grazie al design consapevole di prodotti, processi e servizi, il valore delle risorse è mantenuto il più a lungo possibile e i sistemi naturali vengono rigenerati” (Gusmerotti et al., 2020, p. 9). L’elaborato si focalizza in particolare su uno dei modelli di business considerati “circolari” (CBM) (Linder e Williander, 2017), il product-as-a-service (PaaS da qui in poi) (Lacy et al., 2016). Alla base di questo modello di business vi è l’idea che i clienti non acquisiscono la proprietà dei beni, bensì li utilizzano al pari dei servizi, a fronte di un pagamento, come riporta la letteratura concernente i product-service systems (PSS) (Lacy et al., 2016; Mont, 2002; Tukker e Tischner, 2006; Tukker, 2015). Questo approccio al consumo rientra nel più complesso fenomeno della servitizzazione, la quale comporta “l’innovazione nelle capacità e nei processi di un’impresa, in modo che essa possa meglio creare valore – per il cliente e l’impresa stessa – passando dalla vendita di prodotti alla vendita di sistemi di prodotto-servizio” (Neely, 2009, p. 10).
Purpose – The purpose of this study is to explore the exogenous and endogenous drivers of the high-growth of Unicorn start-ups along their life cycle, with a particular focus on Unicorns in the fintech industry.
Design/methodology/approach – The study employs an explorative longitudinal analysis with a matched pair of two cases of Unicorns start-ups with similar antecedent features to understand holistically drivers over the longer term.
Findings – High-growth patterns over the longer term are the result of a combined industry- and company-life cycle perspective. Drivers and growth patterns vary significantly according to the time of entry in the industry and
its development status. The findings are systematised within a set of propositions to be tested in future research.
Research limitations/implications – The limitations lie in empirical evidence, as the analysis is limited to one matched-pair. The revealed Unicorns’ drivers for long-term growth might encourage future research to further investigate these drivers on a larger scale.
Practical implications – The study offers practical recommendations for start-ups with high-growth ambitions and advice to policy makers regarding the development of tailor-made support programs.
Originality/value – The study significantly extends extant work on growth and high-growth by examining endogenous and exogenous triggers over time and by linking the Unicorn-life cycle to the industry life cycle, an approach which has, to the best of the authors’ knowledge, not yet been applied.
International Entrepreneurship explains the opportunities and challenges facing internationalizing entrepreneurial ventures. The book inlcudes a thorough discussion of fundamentals as well as contemporary research findings. Numerous cases, featuring diverse contexts, illustrate theory and help classroom use.