Description
Description talk about a corporate entrepreneurship approach to organizational renewal.
Can an old ?rm learn new tricks?
A corporate entrepreneurship approach to
organizational renewal
Soili Peltola
Department of Social Research, University of Helsinki, Unioninkatu 37, P.O. Box 54,
00014 University of Helsinki, Finland
1. Business does not always go as
planned
This article presents a case study of a real, and fairly
typical, managing director faced with a crisis situa-
tion. The managing director, Mr. Virtanen, worked
for AdChance, a Finnish business-to-business
marketing services ?rm with a long history in the
domain. The recent recession signi?cantly weak-
ened the ?nancial position of Finnish ?rms in this
particular ?eld; from 2008 to 2009, overall turnover
decreased by 11% and operating pro?ts by 45%,
resulting in negative net pro?ts–—especially in larger
?rms (Statistics Finland, 2011). Not surprisingly,
AdChance suffered from this downswing. The crisis
began when a major client decided to leave the
company, which demanded quick, short-term ac-
tions to compensate for acute ?nancial losses. This
led to a profound strategic renewal to safeguard
AdChance’s longer-range future in the market.
Business Horizons (2012) 55, 43—51
Available online at www.sciencedirect.com
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KEYWORDS
Corporate
entrepreneurship
strategy;
Organizational
renewal;
Competitive
advantage;
Finnish case study
Abstract Corporate entrepreneurship (CE) strategies are widely recommended for
established ?rms to solve growth- and economic performance-related problems that
they encounter in highly competitive business environments. However, relatively
little empirical light has been shed on practical CE strategy processes and how they
function in the everyday lives of organizations. The case study presented herein
addresses this underexplored issue by describing how one long-established ?rm in dire
economic circumstances renewed its strategy, as related by an interview with the
company’s managing director. The analysis draws on the theoretical ideas of corpo-
rate entrepreneurship models and focuses on practical activities within the strategic
renewal process: What did the case ?rm actually do to compensate for decreasing
turnover and to improve its longer-term position in the market? The ?ndings under-
score the progressive, proactive, and impermanent nature of CE strategies; further,
they suggest that ?rms need clients and other external partners with equally ambi-
tious business objectives in order to successfully implement their CE strategies.
# 2011 Kelley School of Business, Indiana University. All rights reserved.
E-mail address: soili.peltola@helsinki.?
0007-6813/$ — see front matter # 2011 Kelley School of Business, Indiana University. All rights reserved.
doi:10.1016/j.bushor.2011.09.002
Our research task begins with an illustration of
the practical actions AdChance took to improve its
dire situation, as told by the managing director in his
interview story. This narrative, or storytelling ap-
proach (Murray, 2008), creates a local understand-
ing of the case ?rm’s renewal process and how this
process progressed over the course of time
(Steyaert, 1998). The analysis draws on the theo-
retical ideas of the corporate entrepreneurship
strategy of Ireland, Covin, and Kuratko (2009). Spe-
ci?cally, the study aims to shed light on the intrigu-
ing issue of how and why CE strategies yield desired
outcomes in the concrete, everyday lives of orga-
nizations (Lindgren & Packendorff, 2009).
When arguing for the entrepreneurial imperative
of the 21
st
century, Kuratko (2009, pp. 421-422)
claimed that ‘‘a lack of entrepreneurial action in
today’s global economy could be a recipe for fail-
ure . . . . Entrepreneurial attitudes and behaviors
are necessary for ?rms of all sizes to prosper and
?ourish in competitive environments.’’ The detailed
description of the case ?rm’s strategy renewal pro-
cess hopefully underscores the imperative nature of
CE so that it becomes a less abstract and more
accessible tool for practitioners. To this end, this
study offers concrete action recommendations for
?rms interested in renewing their business strategy
or coming to grips with demanding circumstances.
2. Corporate entrepreneurship: What
does renewal entail?
Corporate entrepreneurship (CE) is a potential sur-
vival strategy for ?rms that operate in highly com-
petitive business environments. It is especially
recommended for established ?rms that face de-
clining business performance and turnaround situa-
tions. In order to regain competitive superiority, CE
strategies require ?rms to fundamentally renew
themselves (Covin & Miles, 1999). Firms should
change their extant strategic direction and signi?-
cantly modify their operational practices. This ma-
jor shift is often outlined in relation to a ?rm’s
external environment by radically differentiating
the ?rm from its competitors through an inimitable
competitive advantage (Barney, 1991). Even though
CE strategies may resolve ?rms’ economic dilem-
mas, they cannot automatically guarantee positive
outcomes or quick pay-offs for ?rms that adopt them
(Covin & Miles, 1999). Their effective implementa-
tion may also be dif?cult to accomplish (Ireland
et al., 2009).
Entrepreneurial behavior is at the core of CE
strategies. In the CE strategy model of Ireland
et al. (2009), entrepreneurial behavior refers to
the recognition and exploitation of entrepreneurial
opportunities across the entire organization. Ireland
and Webb (2007) specify the role of opportunities in
CE strategies by articulating that ?rms should bal-
ance the exploitation of existing opportunities for
present success with the exploration of new oppor-
tunities for future competitive purposes. In other
words, ?rms should engage in taking full advantage
of their established business opportunities whilst
concurrently searching for new avenues of revenues
and pro?ts. If ?rms emphasize one of these elements
at the expense of the other, they could eventually
end up in continued decline or paying overwhelming
costs–—or worse.
In the Ireland et al. (2009) model, two elements
support the pursuit of entrepreneurial opportunity:
an entrepreneurial strategic vision and a pro-
entrepreneurship organizational architecture. The
entrepreneurial strategic vision is the image top-
level managers have created for the organization
they hope to lead in the future, whereas the
pro-entrepreneurship organizational architecture
translates this vision into speci?c entrepreneurial
behaviors–—especially opportunity-focused, innova-
tive, and self-renewing behaviors. Both the vision
and architecture encourage and justify the system-
atic and continuous pursuit of opportunity through-
out the ?rm. They help organizational members
commit to entrepreneurial behavior without the
direct involvement of top executives. The outcomes
of implementing the CE strategy most often deal
with more effective current or future performance.
Performance can be de?ned in terms of any out-
comes the ?rm is interested in; for instance, better
economic indicators or enhanced competitive
capability.
The current models–—including that of Ireland
et al. (2009)–—prescribe ideal combinations of ap-
propriate cultural, structural, and behavioral vari-
ables for ?rms and predict success if ?rms conform
to these prescriptions. Unfortunately, they fail to
explain how actual CE processes emerge and are
implemented within ?rms. For its part, this article
aims to contribute to this underexplored topic in the
CE research by analyzing the implementation of a CE
strategy in one Finnish case ?rm.
3. The case ?rm
The case ?rm, AdChance (a pseudonym), is one of
the leading business-to-business marketing agencies
in Finland. Innovativeness and creativity are inher-
ent and essential elements of the normal everyday
business of this middle-sized agency, which has
operated in the marketplace for several decades.
44 S. Peltola
The interesting combination of market leadership
and long-standing history was considered particu-
larly suitable for studying CE strategies in an estab-
lished ?rm.
The analysis is based on one open thematic inter-
view with the managing director of AdChance, Mr.
Virtanen (also a pseudonym). He was a hired direc-
tor who had been appointed to the position approx-
imately 3 years before the interview took place.
This study employs a managing-director perspective
in order to obtain an encompassing organization-
wide view of ?rm activities, speci?cally those relat-
ed to CE (Lyon, Lumpkin, & Dess, 2000). Although a
senior-most perspective is considered essential to
this particular study, it is not necessarily the only
viewrelevant to CE in ?rms. Ireland et al. (2009), for
instance, consider the middle and lower levels
of a ?rm to play important roles in CE strategy
implementation.
The interview topic focused on those speci?c
past, present, and future events that Mr. Virtanen,
as managing director, considered important when
describing AdChance’s activities (see Murray, 2008).
The topic was communicated via email 2 weeks prior
to the interview. Mr. Virtanen was asked to re?ect on
what had occurred in the agency since his appoint-
ment, what the agency’s situation was like at the
moment of the interview, and what he expected to
occur in the near future. In short, he was asked to
recount the story of his ?rm as he knew it and to
make a prediction of its short-term future.
The interview was held in English in December
2009, and lasted approximately 1 hour. It was re-
corded for later transcription, with Mr. Virtanen’s
writtenpermission. At the beginningof the interview,
the topic was repeated in the same manner as in the
email communication. Beyond this, the interviewer’s
role was minimal: to serve as an interested audience
for Mr. Virtanen’s story and to refrain from asking for
clari?cations, if necessary, until the close of the
interview (Murray, 2008). During the interview, it
became apparent that strategic issues formed an
integral part of Mr. Virtanen’s story. The analysis
concentrates on this strategy-related talk that com-
prisedapproximately the ?rst half of the interview. In
his story, Mr. Virtanen explained how dire circum-
stances occurred for AdChance, and how he and his
management team set out to cope with them.
4. Tackling the renewal problem in
practice
This section describes how Mr. Virtanen, as manag-
ing director of AdChance, attended to the crisis
situation with the help of his management team.
His story is organized in terms of the CE strategy
model of Ireland et al. (2009), which entails
an entrepreneurial strategic vision, a pro-
entrepreneurship organizational architecture,
and entrepreneurial behavior. The analysis also
illustrates what type of results AdChance obtained
by implementing its renewed strategy. Finally, the
analysis presents the agency’s potential future as
Mr. Virtanen forecast it.
4.1. Formulating an entrepreneurial
strategic vision
Mr. Virtanen began his story by noting that, soon
after his appointment, an external shock resulted in
an urgent need to rede?ne strategic choices. Even
though he had already thought about the agency’s
strategy, the need to revamp it had not been a
pressing consideration until this point. The begin-
ning of Mr. Virtanen’s story, and thus the departure
point for our analysis, lies in his comment regarding
this occurrence:
Almost immediately after I was appointed man-
aging director–—and hopefully not because
of it–—we lost, or our network lost, a big client
account. It was a huge account and we had to
start cutting the number of our personnel. Un-
fortunately, one of my ?rst real main jobs was
then to tell everybody about this and run the
entire process.
After an important client that represented a
considerable share of AdChance’s income decided
to drop the ?rm, AdChance had to initiate downsiz-
ing negotiations to reduce the number of its person-
nel. The client apparently left not for reasons
related to the agency itself, but rather because a
network to which it belonged had been unable to
retain the account. Thus, a major change in the
affairs of the network resulted in a signi?cant loss
for the agency. It is worth noting that this change
seems to have occurred outside AdChance’s scope of
in?uence. Interestingly, Mr. Virtanen jokingly re-
ferred to his arrival as a potential reason for the
client loss. That seems to have had no effect,
however, because he was charged with solving the
pressing problem and managing the necessary pro-
cesses. After acknowledging the loss, he and
the management team began to contemplate the
future:
Then I had to think about what the company
should be like in 2 or 5 years’ time: what kind of
people and what kind of skills we would need.
That was quite interesting. The management
team was trying to ?gure out how the business
Can an old ?rm learn new tricks? A corporate entrepreneurship approach to organizational renewal 45
was changing and what the main trends were.
Even though it wasn’t the most pleasant time,
laying off friends and all, I learned quite a lot
because one usually doesn’t have time to think
about the future; typically, you’re just thinking
about maybe the next 6 months or the next
client meeting. You are not thinking about long-
term things, so when people’s jobs are at stake
you take it seriously and you have to think
further . . . . When the reality hits you and
you see that payroll exceeds the amount you
have coming in, you have to start doing some-
thing. It forces you to take a serious long-term
view of how things are going.
The everyday practices of AdChance did not nor-
mally involve deliberations or discussions about
the future. The most wide ranging future horizon
seldom extended beyond 6 months, but in the face
of serious problems–—including reduction of staff–—
the agency had to anticipate several years into the
future. Acute cash problems further justi?ed, in
indisputable economic terms, the decision to ini-
tiate downsizing negotiations: the reduced income
?ow did not cover staff salaries. Mr. Virtanen,
however, considered these contemplations an in-
teresting and even inspiring learning experience in
the midst of an otherwise unpleasant process.
Both of his arguments can be interpreted as rep-
resenting objective facts on which, for example,
downsizing decisions would be based; rather than
more subjective decision making grounded on, for
instance, close friendships. Next, the manage-
ment team analyzed AdChance’s position in the
market:
For years and years–—for decades, really–—
AdChance had been an agency mainly in the
business of ful?lling briefs. Clients gave us
briefs and then we worked according to those.
So, if the briefs became smaller, we would
become smaller as well. We realized that prob-
ably wasn’t the way to add value. Instead, we
envisioned going to the client with ideas of our
own; for example, saying ‘‘these are the things
you should be doing if you want to become more
successful.’’ We decided the truly successful
marketing agency of the future would not wait
for briefs. It would create its own.
Mr. Virtanen characterized AdChance as being
mostly reactive to its clients’ needs. If the agency
continued to wait for ever-smaller briefs, howev-
er, it would not grow or even maintain its current
position. Instead of limiting the ?rm to waiting,
AdChance decided to involve itself in creating
briefs and taking the initiative to convince clients
of what they should do to become more successful
in the future. Mr. Virtanen’s story highlights the
importance of the future: proactive measures will
produce value for both AdChance and its clients.
After describing this vision for the future, the
management group recognized that AdChance
needed to add a speci?c type of value for its
clients:
I discovered that people were really looking for
reasons, like a philosophy or values: What do we
really stand for? What do we believe in? Because
I knew AdChance needed to become more of a
value-added company, which meant we needed
to be more valuable to our clients, our entire
management team was talking about producing
results for our clients. If we could produce
results–—say, if our client allocated s100,000
to marketing and earned much more through
increased sales or margins, like s300,000–—
they would be more willing to use our services
in the future, too. So, we shifted our focus from
simply doing creative things that would be
interesting to doing things that actually pro-
duced results. We very much focused on looking
at how things work.
The speci?c value that AdChance decided to offer its
clients was formulated as ‘producing results for the
clients.’ This value can be interpreted as a new
competitive advantage of the agency, and was based
on the comprehensive need of employees to under-
stand what AdChance stands for and what kind of
values it represents. To redeem the competitive
advantage, the agency should appreciate–—in a de-
tailed manner–—the kind of process that adds value
and how that process functions in practice. It is
worth noting that creativity in itself no longer
seemed to suf?ce as the desired outcome of a
marketing agency’s services. Creativity was relegat-
ed to a more subordinate position as a vital means
toward clients’ business targets. Concrete ?nancial
indicators, such as sales growth and return on mar-
keting investment, should then measure the effec-
tiveness of AdChance’s value-adding services. When
these indicators evolve positively, they enhance
client retention.
4.2. Creating a pro-entrepreneurship
organizational architecture
Next, in order to align itself with its new competi-
tive advantage, AdChance created an organizational
structure that better suited its new strategic vision.
In practice, the management group decided to re-
organize employee roles on the grounds of this new
focus in activities:
46 S. Peltola
We knew that we needed to reorganize and
make the traditional roles disappear. We re-
thought all the roles in the company. Since
AdChance would be focusing not so much on
producing things but rather on designing them,
we needed employees who could plan and de-
sign. In the end, we sketched out three roles:
the key account role that would create jobs for
us, the creative people who would create ideas
for those jobs, and the producer who would get
things done. We’re now at something like half
our original head count, but are working pretty
comfortably in these three roles.
The management team considered it essential to
understand what kinds of people would be needed to
cope and survive in the future they imagined for the
agency. Reorganizing involved new employee roles,
the de?nitions of which were based on a focus
change from production to planning and design.
The old idea of merely ful?lling client briefs was
thus linked to production, and the new competitive
advantage to the creative designing of activities
that promise results. The key account directors
create job opportunities for AdChance, the creative
people conceive of more concrete ideas to realize
these opportunities, and the producers ensure that
client projects are eventually completed. The agen-
cy based its downsizing decisions, which reduced
staff by approximately 50%, on who would perform
best in these rede?ned roles.
From the CE strategy perspective, the new roles
translated the strategic vision into speci?c work
tasks that differed considerably from old/tradition-
al ones. The shift from production to planning and
design required an architecture that systematized
throughout the agency the search for and execution
of work opportunities. In their simplicity, the new
roles explicitly assigned particular responsibilities
to organizational members, who were expected to
behave according to these responsibilities without
executives’ involvement and control. As Mr. Virta-
nen noted, the implementation of new responsibili-
ties succeeded.
4.3. Acquiring the ?rst new client
entrepreneurially
After formulating its vision and reorganizing em-
ployee roles, AdChance set out to acquire new
clients that would suit the ?rm’s new competitive
advantage and help leverage it:
We had to get new clients. We were very good
at keeping our existing clients, or maybe just
very lucky; nevertheless, we were keeping our
clients happy. We had really long-term client
relations. Whenever a client had a problem, we
?xed it and were able to save the account. But
it’s not easy, getting famous by doing work for
the same clients, year in and year out. As such,
we needed new clients to whom we could show
the kinds of things we now created. We sought
out clients that we knew were tough, that
really demanded results, because we wanted
to work for those kinds of people. We were lucky
to pick up a results-oriented client just after the
huge loss and at the time of all the lay-offs. We
started working for this company, which was not
a famous brand–—especially not when we
started. It was the kind of company that most
top agencies wouldn’t even work with.
AdChance was very successful in retaining its long-
term clients, even after occasional friction and
dissatisfaction. However, it needed new clients af-
ter the loss of its major client. The ?rm was espe-
cially interested in tough and demanding clients
that would elicit practice of the ?rm’s new compet-
itive advantage. The management team considered
existing clients unsuitable for this purpose because
of their conventional marketing practices and their
probable reluctance to change them. So, they chose
to pursue new clients that demanded extremely
high results. The agency demonstrated innova-
tiveness in selecting and acquiring its ?rst new
client. AdChance identi?ed a ?rm that was suf?-
ciently undesirable or unknown to competitors, but
which possessed potential because it was extremely
results-oriented and thus well-suited to the new
competitive advantage of AdChance.
In CE strategy terms, AdChance illustrated
opportunity-focused, entrepreneurial behavior in
selecting and acquiring its ?rst new client. It began
to compete outside the typical zone of marketing
agencies when it innovatively sought clients that
suited its new strategy, instead of competing for
clients in which most other agencies were already
interested. The agency was thus able to recognize a
new, unexplored opportunity outside its traditional
competitive arena.
4.4. Enjoying the results
Mr. Virtanen’s story had a happy ending. The results
part of his narrative describes the outcomes obtained
and his outlook for the coming year. AdChance’s new
strategy, with its clear focus on measurable results
and its implementation, generated positive out-
comes for both the client and the ?rm itself:
The management group of AdChance quickly
learned how to sell more, and ended up attain-
ing very good results. For example, the ?rm was
Can an old ?rm learn new tricks? A corporate entrepreneurship approach to organizational renewal 47
able to multiply the new client’s return on its
marketing investment with a lot of its services.
The client was really happy. We also managed to
do new, creatively interesting stuff that other
big clients noticed. About a year ago, we even
managed to woo another new client that was
one of our main competitor’s crown jewels.
I think these clients, and the fact that we have
been able to win awards for marketing effec-
tiveness, have helped to create a better image
for us as a more results-oriented agency that
uses creative ideas to generate sales.
AdChance was a rapid study regarding how to design
creatively interesting activities that generated de-
sired, measurable outcomes. This resulted in sever-
al esteemed public marketing awards and a better
image for the agency, which attracted other new
clients–—especially their major competitor’s most
valuable client. From the perspective of CE strategy,
the performance outcomes AdChance was interest-
ed in dealt not only with short-term economic per-
formance in the form of downsizing, but also
outcomes that would enhance its longer-term suc-
cess. A high-grade reputation and a myriad of
awards can be understood as means toward a con-
tinuously upward economic trend.
The new clients taken on by AdChance were, for
their part, extremely satis?ed with the results the
agency helped them obtain. Existing clients, how-
ever, were occasionally confused with the ?rm’s
increased initiative-taking, even though they gen-
erally appreciated these efforts:
We’re now employing, with our existing clients,
some of the new methods we’ve learned.
They’re happy to receive this new energy,
but sometimes are puzzled by our becoming
so active, trying to lead, and creating briefs
instead of just ful?lling them.
The main challenge here seems to entail the leading
role AdChance took, compared to its formerly-
conventional method of operation: ful?lling briefs.
Existing customers were accustomed to the latter.
Mr. Virtanen strongly emphasized that AdChance
will continue into the future, working according
to the ?rm’s new strategic direction:
We won’t be looking back. We will be looking
toward the future; at things that haven’t even
been created yet. Instead of the traditional
model practiced for some time, I believe we’ll
take a leap into becoming a really modern,
forward-looking company.
According to Mr. Virtanen, it is vital that
AdChance breaks away from the past and continues
forging a new future that is full of unexplored
opportunities. Most importantly, modern creativity
should overtake conservativeness and traditional
ways of doing business.
4.5. Forecasting the future: Surviving or
struggling
Even though Mr. Virtanen–—as managing director–—
had witnessed the success of his ?rm and was deter-
mined to continue along its chosen path, he recog-
nized the longer-term future of AdChance as
uncertain. Firstly, he felt the agency had undertak-
en its own new client acquisition activities on the
basis of overly-narrow reasoning:
As a market leading company, we can’t just
focus on taking market share from our compet-
itors, though that’s permissible. We also need
to think about the future of the entire industry,
and we’re trying to consider the future of
the marketing communications/marketing
industry.
Stealing market share and clients from competitors,
though acceptable, seems to have taken place at
the expense of increasing the entire market for
marketing communications. Although the short-
term success of AdChance might well depend on
this type of aggressive competition, it represents a
somewhat short-sighted view of the future. Rather,
a market leader organization should invest in devel-
oping the business area in which it operates. Mr.
Virtanen assigned this responsibility to his agency as
one of the most prominent actors in the market.
However, he presented one clear obstacle to ad-
vancing the marketing industry:
The next big challenge of Finnish leaders/com-
panies is to learn how to market and brand. I’ve
been thinking about this an awful lot because
it’s an obstacle to our success. It is the bottle-
neck of whether my company has clients and we
are successful, or whether we are struggling
and laying off more people. It depends on
whether we can succeed in this . . . . We feel
that in global competition, Finnish brands and
companies are an endangered species. If we fail
to do all we can to produce more results for
them, they will disappear and we’ll be out of a
job; of course, we don’t want that. As such, we
are trying very hard to create these opportu-
nities. We also want companies to use market-
ing or brand building as a more active tool. You
could, perhaps, call it the engine of growth.
Mr. Virtanen claimed that marketing is an active
engine of growth that most Finnish ?rms have failed
to exploit to their full advantage. Instead, global
48 S. Peltola
organizations have aptly utilized marketing activi-
ties to the detriment of Finnish ?rms. He felt that
the longer-term survival of the agency depends on
how well its clients fare in the marketplace. Global
competition has entered the Finnish market and
complicated the position of local ?rms that, in turn,
are the clients of AdChance. Insofar as Finnish ?rms
fail to begin exploiting branding and marketing,
they will disappear from the marketplace and from
the agency’s client list. So, the agency cannot rely
solely on its own actions, but rather must also
depend on clients that might not perceive marketing
as the primary or even a suitable means to compete
against global brands. Obviously, organizations have
many opportunities to solve their growth problems,
and marketing represents just one of these. Mr.
Virtanen’s point was that traditional methods of
competition have been ineffective, and a change
is needed in favor of marketing services that have
proven successful elsewhere. In the longer term,
then, AdChance would survive if marketing were to
attract more client ?rms than before, but would
continue to struggle if this turned out not to be the
case.
In conclusion, AdChance succeeded in changing
its strategic direction, an accomplishment that the
CE literature considers very dif?cult for most orga-
nizations (Ireland et al., 2009). Success resulted
fromunderstanding how the agency can add speci?c
value by producing measurable results for its cli-
ents. This ability also aligned AdChance more close-
ly with the environment because it submitted its
work for evaluation against its clients’ concrete
business indicators. However, even though this
long-standing market leader agency was indeed able
to learn new tricks that led to success, this seems to
have been a one-time event.
5. Lessons learned and
recommendations for action
There are three important lessons to draw from the
renewal process of AdChance. These lessons relate
to the progressive, proactive, and impermanent
nature of CE strategies.
First, a successful CE strategy is progressive.
Gergen and Gergen (1986) have depicted three
prototypical forms for stories: progressive, regres-
sive, and stable. These forms establish a valued goal
and describe preceding events so that the storytell-
er either approaches, moves away from, or main-
tains this goal. Stories also anticipate future events;
that is, evaluate how the goal-related events will
evolve in the future. AdChance’s story is a typical
progressive story in which the desired goal was
attained. The strategic renewal process proceeded
in systematic stages that grouped individual events
together, established a particular order to the
process, and justi?ed ongoing and forthcoming
actions. For instance, successful implementation of
AdChance’s new competitive advantage via its ?rst
new client won industry awards for the agency, as
well as a heightened reputation. One could ask,
however, whether the departure point for progres-
sive CE strategies is always a major external shock or
whether a new strategy can be implemented differ-
ently by, for instance, not laying off employees or
retaining existing clients instead of procuring new
ones. Further studies are required to establish the
wide variety of practical measures ?rms could take to
implement progressive CE strategies.
Second, ?rms must be proactive in formulating an
entrepreneurial strategic vision for themselves.
They should anticipate events, trends, and changes
in the market and forecast their own future in
relation to this understanding. A proactive outlook
on ?rm activities can be based on profoundly ana-
lyzing those past and present business practices a
?rm has been known for among its clients, business
partners, and competitors. It can thereafter turn
these observations into a concrete competitive ad-
vantage that speci?es in practice how the anticipat-
ed vision of the ?rm becomes a reality. Also, the
less-distant future requires proactive measures. In-
stead of merely reacting to market changes and
demands, the ?rm should create its own business
opportunities by offering proactive suggestions that
produce value for both the ?rm and its business
partners. Some previous studies (e.g., Tang, Kreiser,
Marino, Dickson, & Weaver, 2008) have already
suggested that proactiveness occupies a primary
position in encouraging and enabling entrepreneur-
ial behavior. This study adds to this ?nding by
emphasizing proactiveness as thefundamental deter-
minant of a successful CE strategy. Consequently,
because proactiveness is seldom explicitly discussed
in theoretical CE strategy models, this study recom-
mends a pronounced role for proactiveness in these
models.
Third, the success of CE strategies tends to be
impermanent. AdChance’s progressive story had
two alternative continuations, either stable or re-
gressive in nature. In the stable version, the agency
is able to increase the use of its services among its
clients and therefore survives; in the regressive
scenario, it merely struggles as a result of the
decreasing use of its services. The future story of
AdChance will, therefore, either end as a happily-
ever-after saga or an unfortunate tragedy (Gergen &
Gergen, 1986). This ?nding can be linked to the idea
of entrepreneurship as a short-lived line of events
Can an old ?rm learn new tricks? A corporate entrepreneurship approach to organizational renewal 49
(Steyaert, 1998) and suggests that the effects of
strategic renewal do not necessarily reach beyond a
limitedperiod of time or, for instance, a limited group
of clients. As such, CE strategies may require con-
stant renewal and maintenance within ?rms that wish
to uphold their position in demanding markets. These
consecutive renewal processes must address each
?rm’s unique, changing context and emphasize the
fact that successful CE strategies do not emerge
without insightful planning, meticulous implementa-
tion, and careful attention to external partners’
needs.
The above-described lessons learned also offer
some practical recommendations for ?rms interest-
ed in adopting CE strategies (see Table 1). These
recommendations address speci?c problems that
might arise when ?rms de?ne a CE-based future
vision and an organizational architecture to support
concrete entrepreneurial behaviors.
6. How does the external
environment in?uence the success of
strategic renewal?
The ?ndings of this study underscore the role of the
external environment in leveraging CE strategies. In
particular, the role of clients seems to be essential.
As strategic renewal stories can be progressive,
regressive, or stable, clients can also be categorized
in the same manner (see Gergen & Gergen, 1986).
AdChance needed demanding new clients with
high targets in order for a progressive strategy
process to emerge. A compatible level of ambition
between the agency and its ?rst new client posi-
tively affected the performance of both ?rms. On
the other hand, existing clients represented sta-
ble, or even regressive, performance develop-
ment. Progressive new clients enhanced the
effectiveness of CE because they better suited
the agency’s future, whereas stable or regressive
existing clients slowed CE implementation by
clinging to the agency’s past ways of doing busi-
ness. In terms of competitive advantage (see
Ireland & Webb, 2007), new clients represented
opportunity exploration where the proactive sug-
gestions of the agency expand its current and
future business boundaries. In contrast, the in-
coming briefs of existing clients represented op-
portunity exploitation that did guarantee a
certain turnover level, but seemed nonetheless
to forestall the agency’s growth.
The difference between new and existing clients
may be attributable to the fact that old clients
noticed a clear departure in AdChance’s new busi-
ness practice from its previous practice of working
together; the agency’s clients may have interpreted
this difference as a shift in the established power
balance too far in favor of the agency. The clients
felt they lost control in the relationship, and thus
resisted the agency’s proposals or how it offered
these proposals to them. This ?nding is consistent
50 S. Peltola
Table 1. CE-based recommendations for action
PROBLEM RECOMMENDATIONS FOR ACTION
Outdated or irrelevant
competitive advantage
Rethink your competitive advantage in terms of value-adding measurable
results (e.g., concrete ?nancial indicators)
Learn in detail how your value-adding process functions in practice
De?ne the targets (e.g., clients) of your competitive advantage outside
conventional interest domains
Choose clients that match your competitive advantage, and equal
or exceed your own ambition level
Short-term business focus Analyze your ?rm’s history and your current way of doing business
Extend your normal future horizon by anticipating how your business
will change over the longer term
Make sure your employees understand what your ?rm stands for,
now and in the future
Reorganize and rede?ne employee roles to meet longer-term business
demands
Reactive business practices Create business opportunities for your ?rm by taking the initiative
with proactive suggestions
Stable or regressive clients,
or other external partners
Keep them happy by meeting their current needs
Persuade them to explore underutilized but promising competitive
tactics and other business practices
Uncertain long-term
market growth
Co-operate with your competitors to expand the entire market
with that of Lappalainen (2009), who reported that
a high entrepreneurial level of clients affected the
seller’s ability to strategically renew itself within
existing supply chains and networks. However, this
study does not presume that long-established
clients invariably fall into stable or regressive cate-
gories. Progressive new clients could eventually
become more stable, and existing clients could offer
unexpected exploration opportunities for seller
?rms. Consequently, longer-term success may well
hinge on a ?rm’s ability to cater to its clients in
innovative ways and with matching levels of ambi-
tion, irrespective of whether the relationship is an
existing or a new one. More generally, this ?nding
can be broadened to include all the other external
partners of a ?rm, too.
On the basis of this study, a ?rm’s external envi-
ronment seems to impact the ?rm through its clients
and other external partners, and thereby the success
of its CE strategy. As Covin and Slevin (1991, p. 11)
claim, ‘‘the external environment has a strong, if not
deterministic, in?uence on the existence and effec-
tiveness of entrepreneurial activity.’’ They further
note that environmental conditions are likelier to
have a stronger impact on entrepreneurial activity
than vice versa. Therefore, a ?rm’s own entrepre-
neurial actions seem to stretch to a certain limit
beyond which the ?rm may depend heavily on the
actions of its external collaborators (e.g., how they
react to and survive in global economic turns) and
what other options they prefer. Nowadays, ?rms also
compete for the same client and partner budgets
with rivals outside their own business ?eld.
Whether the empirical analysis described in this
article eventually matches the CE strategy model of
Ireland et al. (2009) is obviously an interpretation.
As Ireland et al. themselves assert, ‘‘the strength of
the evidence needed to claim the presence of a
corporate entrepreneurship strategy is inherently a
judgment call on the observer’s part’’ (p. 38). In the
end, what counts is how ?rms can convert theoreti-
cal ideas into practical solutions in the pursuit of
success. If abstractness has thus far prevented ?rms
from exploring the opportunities of CE strategies,
then they might want to reconsider. As this study has
illustrated, innovative planning and careful execu-
tion of a CE strategy seems to pay off in the everyday
lives of ?rms.
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Can an old ?rm learn new tricks? A corporate entrepreneurship approach to organizational renewal 51
doc_640570995.pdf
Description talk about a corporate entrepreneurship approach to organizational renewal.
Can an old ?rm learn new tricks?
A corporate entrepreneurship approach to
organizational renewal
Soili Peltola
Department of Social Research, University of Helsinki, Unioninkatu 37, P.O. Box 54,
00014 University of Helsinki, Finland
1. Business does not always go as
planned
This article presents a case study of a real, and fairly
typical, managing director faced with a crisis situa-
tion. The managing director, Mr. Virtanen, worked
for AdChance, a Finnish business-to-business
marketing services ?rm with a long history in the
domain. The recent recession signi?cantly weak-
ened the ?nancial position of Finnish ?rms in this
particular ?eld; from 2008 to 2009, overall turnover
decreased by 11% and operating pro?ts by 45%,
resulting in negative net pro?ts–—especially in larger
?rms (Statistics Finland, 2011). Not surprisingly,
AdChance suffered from this downswing. The crisis
began when a major client decided to leave the
company, which demanded quick, short-term ac-
tions to compensate for acute ?nancial losses. This
led to a profound strategic renewal to safeguard
AdChance’s longer-range future in the market.
Business Horizons (2012) 55, 43—51
Available online at www.sciencedirect.com
www.elsevier.com/locate/bushor
KEYWORDS
Corporate
entrepreneurship
strategy;
Organizational
renewal;
Competitive
advantage;
Finnish case study
Abstract Corporate entrepreneurship (CE) strategies are widely recommended for
established ?rms to solve growth- and economic performance-related problems that
they encounter in highly competitive business environments. However, relatively
little empirical light has been shed on practical CE strategy processes and how they
function in the everyday lives of organizations. The case study presented herein
addresses this underexplored issue by describing how one long-established ?rm in dire
economic circumstances renewed its strategy, as related by an interview with the
company’s managing director. The analysis draws on the theoretical ideas of corpo-
rate entrepreneurship models and focuses on practical activities within the strategic
renewal process: What did the case ?rm actually do to compensate for decreasing
turnover and to improve its longer-term position in the market? The ?ndings under-
score the progressive, proactive, and impermanent nature of CE strategies; further,
they suggest that ?rms need clients and other external partners with equally ambi-
tious business objectives in order to successfully implement their CE strategies.
# 2011 Kelley School of Business, Indiana University. All rights reserved.
E-mail address: soili.peltola@helsinki.?
0007-6813/$ — see front matter # 2011 Kelley School of Business, Indiana University. All rights reserved.
doi:10.1016/j.bushor.2011.09.002
Our research task begins with an illustration of
the practical actions AdChance took to improve its
dire situation, as told by the managing director in his
interview story. This narrative, or storytelling ap-
proach (Murray, 2008), creates a local understand-
ing of the case ?rm’s renewal process and how this
process progressed over the course of time
(Steyaert, 1998). The analysis draws on the theo-
retical ideas of the corporate entrepreneurship
strategy of Ireland, Covin, and Kuratko (2009). Spe-
ci?cally, the study aims to shed light on the intrigu-
ing issue of how and why CE strategies yield desired
outcomes in the concrete, everyday lives of orga-
nizations (Lindgren & Packendorff, 2009).
When arguing for the entrepreneurial imperative
of the 21
st
century, Kuratko (2009, pp. 421-422)
claimed that ‘‘a lack of entrepreneurial action in
today’s global economy could be a recipe for fail-
ure . . . . Entrepreneurial attitudes and behaviors
are necessary for ?rms of all sizes to prosper and
?ourish in competitive environments.’’ The detailed
description of the case ?rm’s strategy renewal pro-
cess hopefully underscores the imperative nature of
CE so that it becomes a less abstract and more
accessible tool for practitioners. To this end, this
study offers concrete action recommendations for
?rms interested in renewing their business strategy
or coming to grips with demanding circumstances.
2. Corporate entrepreneurship: What
does renewal entail?
Corporate entrepreneurship (CE) is a potential sur-
vival strategy for ?rms that operate in highly com-
petitive business environments. It is especially
recommended for established ?rms that face de-
clining business performance and turnaround situa-
tions. In order to regain competitive superiority, CE
strategies require ?rms to fundamentally renew
themselves (Covin & Miles, 1999). Firms should
change their extant strategic direction and signi?-
cantly modify their operational practices. This ma-
jor shift is often outlined in relation to a ?rm’s
external environment by radically differentiating
the ?rm from its competitors through an inimitable
competitive advantage (Barney, 1991). Even though
CE strategies may resolve ?rms’ economic dilem-
mas, they cannot automatically guarantee positive
outcomes or quick pay-offs for ?rms that adopt them
(Covin & Miles, 1999). Their effective implementa-
tion may also be dif?cult to accomplish (Ireland
et al., 2009).
Entrepreneurial behavior is at the core of CE
strategies. In the CE strategy model of Ireland
et al. (2009), entrepreneurial behavior refers to
the recognition and exploitation of entrepreneurial
opportunities across the entire organization. Ireland
and Webb (2007) specify the role of opportunities in
CE strategies by articulating that ?rms should bal-
ance the exploitation of existing opportunities for
present success with the exploration of new oppor-
tunities for future competitive purposes. In other
words, ?rms should engage in taking full advantage
of their established business opportunities whilst
concurrently searching for new avenues of revenues
and pro?ts. If ?rms emphasize one of these elements
at the expense of the other, they could eventually
end up in continued decline or paying overwhelming
costs–—or worse.
In the Ireland et al. (2009) model, two elements
support the pursuit of entrepreneurial opportunity:
an entrepreneurial strategic vision and a pro-
entrepreneurship organizational architecture. The
entrepreneurial strategic vision is the image top-
level managers have created for the organization
they hope to lead in the future, whereas the
pro-entrepreneurship organizational architecture
translates this vision into speci?c entrepreneurial
behaviors–—especially opportunity-focused, innova-
tive, and self-renewing behaviors. Both the vision
and architecture encourage and justify the system-
atic and continuous pursuit of opportunity through-
out the ?rm. They help organizational members
commit to entrepreneurial behavior without the
direct involvement of top executives. The outcomes
of implementing the CE strategy most often deal
with more effective current or future performance.
Performance can be de?ned in terms of any out-
comes the ?rm is interested in; for instance, better
economic indicators or enhanced competitive
capability.
The current models–—including that of Ireland
et al. (2009)–—prescribe ideal combinations of ap-
propriate cultural, structural, and behavioral vari-
ables for ?rms and predict success if ?rms conform
to these prescriptions. Unfortunately, they fail to
explain how actual CE processes emerge and are
implemented within ?rms. For its part, this article
aims to contribute to this underexplored topic in the
CE research by analyzing the implementation of a CE
strategy in one Finnish case ?rm.
3. The case ?rm
The case ?rm, AdChance (a pseudonym), is one of
the leading business-to-business marketing agencies
in Finland. Innovativeness and creativity are inher-
ent and essential elements of the normal everyday
business of this middle-sized agency, which has
operated in the marketplace for several decades.
44 S. Peltola
The interesting combination of market leadership
and long-standing history was considered particu-
larly suitable for studying CE strategies in an estab-
lished ?rm.
The analysis is based on one open thematic inter-
view with the managing director of AdChance, Mr.
Virtanen (also a pseudonym). He was a hired direc-
tor who had been appointed to the position approx-
imately 3 years before the interview took place.
This study employs a managing-director perspective
in order to obtain an encompassing organization-
wide view of ?rm activities, speci?cally those relat-
ed to CE (Lyon, Lumpkin, & Dess, 2000). Although a
senior-most perspective is considered essential to
this particular study, it is not necessarily the only
viewrelevant to CE in ?rms. Ireland et al. (2009), for
instance, consider the middle and lower levels
of a ?rm to play important roles in CE strategy
implementation.
The interview topic focused on those speci?c
past, present, and future events that Mr. Virtanen,
as managing director, considered important when
describing AdChance’s activities (see Murray, 2008).
The topic was communicated via email 2 weeks prior
to the interview. Mr. Virtanen was asked to re?ect on
what had occurred in the agency since his appoint-
ment, what the agency’s situation was like at the
moment of the interview, and what he expected to
occur in the near future. In short, he was asked to
recount the story of his ?rm as he knew it and to
make a prediction of its short-term future.
The interview was held in English in December
2009, and lasted approximately 1 hour. It was re-
corded for later transcription, with Mr. Virtanen’s
writtenpermission. At the beginningof the interview,
the topic was repeated in the same manner as in the
email communication. Beyond this, the interviewer’s
role was minimal: to serve as an interested audience
for Mr. Virtanen’s story and to refrain from asking for
clari?cations, if necessary, until the close of the
interview (Murray, 2008). During the interview, it
became apparent that strategic issues formed an
integral part of Mr. Virtanen’s story. The analysis
concentrates on this strategy-related talk that com-
prisedapproximately the ?rst half of the interview. In
his story, Mr. Virtanen explained how dire circum-
stances occurred for AdChance, and how he and his
management team set out to cope with them.
4. Tackling the renewal problem in
practice
This section describes how Mr. Virtanen, as manag-
ing director of AdChance, attended to the crisis
situation with the help of his management team.
His story is organized in terms of the CE strategy
model of Ireland et al. (2009), which entails
an entrepreneurial strategic vision, a pro-
entrepreneurship organizational architecture,
and entrepreneurial behavior. The analysis also
illustrates what type of results AdChance obtained
by implementing its renewed strategy. Finally, the
analysis presents the agency’s potential future as
Mr. Virtanen forecast it.
4.1. Formulating an entrepreneurial
strategic vision
Mr. Virtanen began his story by noting that, soon
after his appointment, an external shock resulted in
an urgent need to rede?ne strategic choices. Even
though he had already thought about the agency’s
strategy, the need to revamp it had not been a
pressing consideration until this point. The begin-
ning of Mr. Virtanen’s story, and thus the departure
point for our analysis, lies in his comment regarding
this occurrence:
Almost immediately after I was appointed man-
aging director–—and hopefully not because
of it–—we lost, or our network lost, a big client
account. It was a huge account and we had to
start cutting the number of our personnel. Un-
fortunately, one of my ?rst real main jobs was
then to tell everybody about this and run the
entire process.
After an important client that represented a
considerable share of AdChance’s income decided
to drop the ?rm, AdChance had to initiate downsiz-
ing negotiations to reduce the number of its person-
nel. The client apparently left not for reasons
related to the agency itself, but rather because a
network to which it belonged had been unable to
retain the account. Thus, a major change in the
affairs of the network resulted in a signi?cant loss
for the agency. It is worth noting that this change
seems to have occurred outside AdChance’s scope of
in?uence. Interestingly, Mr. Virtanen jokingly re-
ferred to his arrival as a potential reason for the
client loss. That seems to have had no effect,
however, because he was charged with solving the
pressing problem and managing the necessary pro-
cesses. After acknowledging the loss, he and
the management team began to contemplate the
future:
Then I had to think about what the company
should be like in 2 or 5 years’ time: what kind of
people and what kind of skills we would need.
That was quite interesting. The management
team was trying to ?gure out how the business
Can an old ?rm learn new tricks? A corporate entrepreneurship approach to organizational renewal 45
was changing and what the main trends were.
Even though it wasn’t the most pleasant time,
laying off friends and all, I learned quite a lot
because one usually doesn’t have time to think
about the future; typically, you’re just thinking
about maybe the next 6 months or the next
client meeting. You are not thinking about long-
term things, so when people’s jobs are at stake
you take it seriously and you have to think
further . . . . When the reality hits you and
you see that payroll exceeds the amount you
have coming in, you have to start doing some-
thing. It forces you to take a serious long-term
view of how things are going.
The everyday practices of AdChance did not nor-
mally involve deliberations or discussions about
the future. The most wide ranging future horizon
seldom extended beyond 6 months, but in the face
of serious problems–—including reduction of staff–—
the agency had to anticipate several years into the
future. Acute cash problems further justi?ed, in
indisputable economic terms, the decision to ini-
tiate downsizing negotiations: the reduced income
?ow did not cover staff salaries. Mr. Virtanen,
however, considered these contemplations an in-
teresting and even inspiring learning experience in
the midst of an otherwise unpleasant process.
Both of his arguments can be interpreted as rep-
resenting objective facts on which, for example,
downsizing decisions would be based; rather than
more subjective decision making grounded on, for
instance, close friendships. Next, the manage-
ment team analyzed AdChance’s position in the
market:
For years and years–—for decades, really–—
AdChance had been an agency mainly in the
business of ful?lling briefs. Clients gave us
briefs and then we worked according to those.
So, if the briefs became smaller, we would
become smaller as well. We realized that prob-
ably wasn’t the way to add value. Instead, we
envisioned going to the client with ideas of our
own; for example, saying ‘‘these are the things
you should be doing if you want to become more
successful.’’ We decided the truly successful
marketing agency of the future would not wait
for briefs. It would create its own.
Mr. Virtanen characterized AdChance as being
mostly reactive to its clients’ needs. If the agency
continued to wait for ever-smaller briefs, howev-
er, it would not grow or even maintain its current
position. Instead of limiting the ?rm to waiting,
AdChance decided to involve itself in creating
briefs and taking the initiative to convince clients
of what they should do to become more successful
in the future. Mr. Virtanen’s story highlights the
importance of the future: proactive measures will
produce value for both AdChance and its clients.
After describing this vision for the future, the
management group recognized that AdChance
needed to add a speci?c type of value for its
clients:
I discovered that people were really looking for
reasons, like a philosophy or values: What do we
really stand for? What do we believe in? Because
I knew AdChance needed to become more of a
value-added company, which meant we needed
to be more valuable to our clients, our entire
management team was talking about producing
results for our clients. If we could produce
results–—say, if our client allocated s100,000
to marketing and earned much more through
increased sales or margins, like s300,000–—
they would be more willing to use our services
in the future, too. So, we shifted our focus from
simply doing creative things that would be
interesting to doing things that actually pro-
duced results. We very much focused on looking
at how things work.
The speci?c value that AdChance decided to offer its
clients was formulated as ‘producing results for the
clients.’ This value can be interpreted as a new
competitive advantage of the agency, and was based
on the comprehensive need of employees to under-
stand what AdChance stands for and what kind of
values it represents. To redeem the competitive
advantage, the agency should appreciate–—in a de-
tailed manner–—the kind of process that adds value
and how that process functions in practice. It is
worth noting that creativity in itself no longer
seemed to suf?ce as the desired outcome of a
marketing agency’s services. Creativity was relegat-
ed to a more subordinate position as a vital means
toward clients’ business targets. Concrete ?nancial
indicators, such as sales growth and return on mar-
keting investment, should then measure the effec-
tiveness of AdChance’s value-adding services. When
these indicators evolve positively, they enhance
client retention.
4.2. Creating a pro-entrepreneurship
organizational architecture
Next, in order to align itself with its new competi-
tive advantage, AdChance created an organizational
structure that better suited its new strategic vision.
In practice, the management group decided to re-
organize employee roles on the grounds of this new
focus in activities:
46 S. Peltola
We knew that we needed to reorganize and
make the traditional roles disappear. We re-
thought all the roles in the company. Since
AdChance would be focusing not so much on
producing things but rather on designing them,
we needed employees who could plan and de-
sign. In the end, we sketched out three roles:
the key account role that would create jobs for
us, the creative people who would create ideas
for those jobs, and the producer who would get
things done. We’re now at something like half
our original head count, but are working pretty
comfortably in these three roles.
The management team considered it essential to
understand what kinds of people would be needed to
cope and survive in the future they imagined for the
agency. Reorganizing involved new employee roles,
the de?nitions of which were based on a focus
change from production to planning and design.
The old idea of merely ful?lling client briefs was
thus linked to production, and the new competitive
advantage to the creative designing of activities
that promise results. The key account directors
create job opportunities for AdChance, the creative
people conceive of more concrete ideas to realize
these opportunities, and the producers ensure that
client projects are eventually completed. The agen-
cy based its downsizing decisions, which reduced
staff by approximately 50%, on who would perform
best in these rede?ned roles.
From the CE strategy perspective, the new roles
translated the strategic vision into speci?c work
tasks that differed considerably from old/tradition-
al ones. The shift from production to planning and
design required an architecture that systematized
throughout the agency the search for and execution
of work opportunities. In their simplicity, the new
roles explicitly assigned particular responsibilities
to organizational members, who were expected to
behave according to these responsibilities without
executives’ involvement and control. As Mr. Virta-
nen noted, the implementation of new responsibili-
ties succeeded.
4.3. Acquiring the ?rst new client
entrepreneurially
After formulating its vision and reorganizing em-
ployee roles, AdChance set out to acquire new
clients that would suit the ?rm’s new competitive
advantage and help leverage it:
We had to get new clients. We were very good
at keeping our existing clients, or maybe just
very lucky; nevertheless, we were keeping our
clients happy. We had really long-term client
relations. Whenever a client had a problem, we
?xed it and were able to save the account. But
it’s not easy, getting famous by doing work for
the same clients, year in and year out. As such,
we needed new clients to whom we could show
the kinds of things we now created. We sought
out clients that we knew were tough, that
really demanded results, because we wanted
to work for those kinds of people. We were lucky
to pick up a results-oriented client just after the
huge loss and at the time of all the lay-offs. We
started working for this company, which was not
a famous brand–—especially not when we
started. It was the kind of company that most
top agencies wouldn’t even work with.
AdChance was very successful in retaining its long-
term clients, even after occasional friction and
dissatisfaction. However, it needed new clients af-
ter the loss of its major client. The ?rm was espe-
cially interested in tough and demanding clients
that would elicit practice of the ?rm’s new compet-
itive advantage. The management team considered
existing clients unsuitable for this purpose because
of their conventional marketing practices and their
probable reluctance to change them. So, they chose
to pursue new clients that demanded extremely
high results. The agency demonstrated innova-
tiveness in selecting and acquiring its ?rst new
client. AdChance identi?ed a ?rm that was suf?-
ciently undesirable or unknown to competitors, but
which possessed potential because it was extremely
results-oriented and thus well-suited to the new
competitive advantage of AdChance.
In CE strategy terms, AdChance illustrated
opportunity-focused, entrepreneurial behavior in
selecting and acquiring its ?rst new client. It began
to compete outside the typical zone of marketing
agencies when it innovatively sought clients that
suited its new strategy, instead of competing for
clients in which most other agencies were already
interested. The agency was thus able to recognize a
new, unexplored opportunity outside its traditional
competitive arena.
4.4. Enjoying the results
Mr. Virtanen’s story had a happy ending. The results
part of his narrative describes the outcomes obtained
and his outlook for the coming year. AdChance’s new
strategy, with its clear focus on measurable results
and its implementation, generated positive out-
comes for both the client and the ?rm itself:
The management group of AdChance quickly
learned how to sell more, and ended up attain-
ing very good results. For example, the ?rm was
Can an old ?rm learn new tricks? A corporate entrepreneurship approach to organizational renewal 47
able to multiply the new client’s return on its
marketing investment with a lot of its services.
The client was really happy. We also managed to
do new, creatively interesting stuff that other
big clients noticed. About a year ago, we even
managed to woo another new client that was
one of our main competitor’s crown jewels.
I think these clients, and the fact that we have
been able to win awards for marketing effec-
tiveness, have helped to create a better image
for us as a more results-oriented agency that
uses creative ideas to generate sales.
AdChance was a rapid study regarding how to design
creatively interesting activities that generated de-
sired, measurable outcomes. This resulted in sever-
al esteemed public marketing awards and a better
image for the agency, which attracted other new
clients–—especially their major competitor’s most
valuable client. From the perspective of CE strategy,
the performance outcomes AdChance was interest-
ed in dealt not only with short-term economic per-
formance in the form of downsizing, but also
outcomes that would enhance its longer-term suc-
cess. A high-grade reputation and a myriad of
awards can be understood as means toward a con-
tinuously upward economic trend.
The new clients taken on by AdChance were, for
their part, extremely satis?ed with the results the
agency helped them obtain. Existing clients, how-
ever, were occasionally confused with the ?rm’s
increased initiative-taking, even though they gen-
erally appreciated these efforts:
We’re now employing, with our existing clients,
some of the new methods we’ve learned.
They’re happy to receive this new energy,
but sometimes are puzzled by our becoming
so active, trying to lead, and creating briefs
instead of just ful?lling them.
The main challenge here seems to entail the leading
role AdChance took, compared to its formerly-
conventional method of operation: ful?lling briefs.
Existing customers were accustomed to the latter.
Mr. Virtanen strongly emphasized that AdChance
will continue into the future, working according
to the ?rm’s new strategic direction:
We won’t be looking back. We will be looking
toward the future; at things that haven’t even
been created yet. Instead of the traditional
model practiced for some time, I believe we’ll
take a leap into becoming a really modern,
forward-looking company.
According to Mr. Virtanen, it is vital that
AdChance breaks away from the past and continues
forging a new future that is full of unexplored
opportunities. Most importantly, modern creativity
should overtake conservativeness and traditional
ways of doing business.
4.5. Forecasting the future: Surviving or
struggling
Even though Mr. Virtanen–—as managing director–—
had witnessed the success of his ?rm and was deter-
mined to continue along its chosen path, he recog-
nized the longer-term future of AdChance as
uncertain. Firstly, he felt the agency had undertak-
en its own new client acquisition activities on the
basis of overly-narrow reasoning:
As a market leading company, we can’t just
focus on taking market share from our compet-
itors, though that’s permissible. We also need
to think about the future of the entire industry,
and we’re trying to consider the future of
the marketing communications/marketing
industry.
Stealing market share and clients from competitors,
though acceptable, seems to have taken place at
the expense of increasing the entire market for
marketing communications. Although the short-
term success of AdChance might well depend on
this type of aggressive competition, it represents a
somewhat short-sighted view of the future. Rather,
a market leader organization should invest in devel-
oping the business area in which it operates. Mr.
Virtanen assigned this responsibility to his agency as
one of the most prominent actors in the market.
However, he presented one clear obstacle to ad-
vancing the marketing industry:
The next big challenge of Finnish leaders/com-
panies is to learn how to market and brand. I’ve
been thinking about this an awful lot because
it’s an obstacle to our success. It is the bottle-
neck of whether my company has clients and we
are successful, or whether we are struggling
and laying off more people. It depends on
whether we can succeed in this . . . . We feel
that in global competition, Finnish brands and
companies are an endangered species. If we fail
to do all we can to produce more results for
them, they will disappear and we’ll be out of a
job; of course, we don’t want that. As such, we
are trying very hard to create these opportu-
nities. We also want companies to use market-
ing or brand building as a more active tool. You
could, perhaps, call it the engine of growth.
Mr. Virtanen claimed that marketing is an active
engine of growth that most Finnish ?rms have failed
to exploit to their full advantage. Instead, global
48 S. Peltola
organizations have aptly utilized marketing activi-
ties to the detriment of Finnish ?rms. He felt that
the longer-term survival of the agency depends on
how well its clients fare in the marketplace. Global
competition has entered the Finnish market and
complicated the position of local ?rms that, in turn,
are the clients of AdChance. Insofar as Finnish ?rms
fail to begin exploiting branding and marketing,
they will disappear from the marketplace and from
the agency’s client list. So, the agency cannot rely
solely on its own actions, but rather must also
depend on clients that might not perceive marketing
as the primary or even a suitable means to compete
against global brands. Obviously, organizations have
many opportunities to solve their growth problems,
and marketing represents just one of these. Mr.
Virtanen’s point was that traditional methods of
competition have been ineffective, and a change
is needed in favor of marketing services that have
proven successful elsewhere. In the longer term,
then, AdChance would survive if marketing were to
attract more client ?rms than before, but would
continue to struggle if this turned out not to be the
case.
In conclusion, AdChance succeeded in changing
its strategic direction, an accomplishment that the
CE literature considers very dif?cult for most orga-
nizations (Ireland et al., 2009). Success resulted
fromunderstanding how the agency can add speci?c
value by producing measurable results for its cli-
ents. This ability also aligned AdChance more close-
ly with the environment because it submitted its
work for evaluation against its clients’ concrete
business indicators. However, even though this
long-standing market leader agency was indeed able
to learn new tricks that led to success, this seems to
have been a one-time event.
5. Lessons learned and
recommendations for action
There are three important lessons to draw from the
renewal process of AdChance. These lessons relate
to the progressive, proactive, and impermanent
nature of CE strategies.
First, a successful CE strategy is progressive.
Gergen and Gergen (1986) have depicted three
prototypical forms for stories: progressive, regres-
sive, and stable. These forms establish a valued goal
and describe preceding events so that the storytell-
er either approaches, moves away from, or main-
tains this goal. Stories also anticipate future events;
that is, evaluate how the goal-related events will
evolve in the future. AdChance’s story is a typical
progressive story in which the desired goal was
attained. The strategic renewal process proceeded
in systematic stages that grouped individual events
together, established a particular order to the
process, and justi?ed ongoing and forthcoming
actions. For instance, successful implementation of
AdChance’s new competitive advantage via its ?rst
new client won industry awards for the agency, as
well as a heightened reputation. One could ask,
however, whether the departure point for progres-
sive CE strategies is always a major external shock or
whether a new strategy can be implemented differ-
ently by, for instance, not laying off employees or
retaining existing clients instead of procuring new
ones. Further studies are required to establish the
wide variety of practical measures ?rms could take to
implement progressive CE strategies.
Second, ?rms must be proactive in formulating an
entrepreneurial strategic vision for themselves.
They should anticipate events, trends, and changes
in the market and forecast their own future in
relation to this understanding. A proactive outlook
on ?rm activities can be based on profoundly ana-
lyzing those past and present business practices a
?rm has been known for among its clients, business
partners, and competitors. It can thereafter turn
these observations into a concrete competitive ad-
vantage that speci?es in practice how the anticipat-
ed vision of the ?rm becomes a reality. Also, the
less-distant future requires proactive measures. In-
stead of merely reacting to market changes and
demands, the ?rm should create its own business
opportunities by offering proactive suggestions that
produce value for both the ?rm and its business
partners. Some previous studies (e.g., Tang, Kreiser,
Marino, Dickson, & Weaver, 2008) have already
suggested that proactiveness occupies a primary
position in encouraging and enabling entrepreneur-
ial behavior. This study adds to this ?nding by
emphasizing proactiveness as thefundamental deter-
minant of a successful CE strategy. Consequently,
because proactiveness is seldom explicitly discussed
in theoretical CE strategy models, this study recom-
mends a pronounced role for proactiveness in these
models.
Third, the success of CE strategies tends to be
impermanent. AdChance’s progressive story had
two alternative continuations, either stable or re-
gressive in nature. In the stable version, the agency
is able to increase the use of its services among its
clients and therefore survives; in the regressive
scenario, it merely struggles as a result of the
decreasing use of its services. The future story of
AdChance will, therefore, either end as a happily-
ever-after saga or an unfortunate tragedy (Gergen &
Gergen, 1986). This ?nding can be linked to the idea
of entrepreneurship as a short-lived line of events
Can an old ?rm learn new tricks? A corporate entrepreneurship approach to organizational renewal 49
(Steyaert, 1998) and suggests that the effects of
strategic renewal do not necessarily reach beyond a
limitedperiod of time or, for instance, a limited group
of clients. As such, CE strategies may require con-
stant renewal and maintenance within ?rms that wish
to uphold their position in demanding markets. These
consecutive renewal processes must address each
?rm’s unique, changing context and emphasize the
fact that successful CE strategies do not emerge
without insightful planning, meticulous implementa-
tion, and careful attention to external partners’
needs.
The above-described lessons learned also offer
some practical recommendations for ?rms interest-
ed in adopting CE strategies (see Table 1). These
recommendations address speci?c problems that
might arise when ?rms de?ne a CE-based future
vision and an organizational architecture to support
concrete entrepreneurial behaviors.
6. How does the external
environment in?uence the success of
strategic renewal?
The ?ndings of this study underscore the role of the
external environment in leveraging CE strategies. In
particular, the role of clients seems to be essential.
As strategic renewal stories can be progressive,
regressive, or stable, clients can also be categorized
in the same manner (see Gergen & Gergen, 1986).
AdChance needed demanding new clients with
high targets in order for a progressive strategy
process to emerge. A compatible level of ambition
between the agency and its ?rst new client posi-
tively affected the performance of both ?rms. On
the other hand, existing clients represented sta-
ble, or even regressive, performance develop-
ment. Progressive new clients enhanced the
effectiveness of CE because they better suited
the agency’s future, whereas stable or regressive
existing clients slowed CE implementation by
clinging to the agency’s past ways of doing busi-
ness. In terms of competitive advantage (see
Ireland & Webb, 2007), new clients represented
opportunity exploration where the proactive sug-
gestions of the agency expand its current and
future business boundaries. In contrast, the in-
coming briefs of existing clients represented op-
portunity exploitation that did guarantee a
certain turnover level, but seemed nonetheless
to forestall the agency’s growth.
The difference between new and existing clients
may be attributable to the fact that old clients
noticed a clear departure in AdChance’s new busi-
ness practice from its previous practice of working
together; the agency’s clients may have interpreted
this difference as a shift in the established power
balance too far in favor of the agency. The clients
felt they lost control in the relationship, and thus
resisted the agency’s proposals or how it offered
these proposals to them. This ?nding is consistent
50 S. Peltola
Table 1. CE-based recommendations for action
PROBLEM RECOMMENDATIONS FOR ACTION
Outdated or irrelevant
competitive advantage
Rethink your competitive advantage in terms of value-adding measurable
results (e.g., concrete ?nancial indicators)
Learn in detail how your value-adding process functions in practice
De?ne the targets (e.g., clients) of your competitive advantage outside
conventional interest domains
Choose clients that match your competitive advantage, and equal
or exceed your own ambition level
Short-term business focus Analyze your ?rm’s history and your current way of doing business
Extend your normal future horizon by anticipating how your business
will change over the longer term
Make sure your employees understand what your ?rm stands for,
now and in the future
Reorganize and rede?ne employee roles to meet longer-term business
demands
Reactive business practices Create business opportunities for your ?rm by taking the initiative
with proactive suggestions
Stable or regressive clients,
or other external partners
Keep them happy by meeting their current needs
Persuade them to explore underutilized but promising competitive
tactics and other business practices
Uncertain long-term
market growth
Co-operate with your competitors to expand the entire market
with that of Lappalainen (2009), who reported that
a high entrepreneurial level of clients affected the
seller’s ability to strategically renew itself within
existing supply chains and networks. However, this
study does not presume that long-established
clients invariably fall into stable or regressive cate-
gories. Progressive new clients could eventually
become more stable, and existing clients could offer
unexpected exploration opportunities for seller
?rms. Consequently, longer-term success may well
hinge on a ?rm’s ability to cater to its clients in
innovative ways and with matching levels of ambi-
tion, irrespective of whether the relationship is an
existing or a new one. More generally, this ?nding
can be broadened to include all the other external
partners of a ?rm, too.
On the basis of this study, a ?rm’s external envi-
ronment seems to impact the ?rm through its clients
and other external partners, and thereby the success
of its CE strategy. As Covin and Slevin (1991, p. 11)
claim, ‘‘the external environment has a strong, if not
deterministic, in?uence on the existence and effec-
tiveness of entrepreneurial activity.’’ They further
note that environmental conditions are likelier to
have a stronger impact on entrepreneurial activity
than vice versa. Therefore, a ?rm’s own entrepre-
neurial actions seem to stretch to a certain limit
beyond which the ?rm may depend heavily on the
actions of its external collaborators (e.g., how they
react to and survive in global economic turns) and
what other options they prefer. Nowadays, ?rms also
compete for the same client and partner budgets
with rivals outside their own business ?eld.
Whether the empirical analysis described in this
article eventually matches the CE strategy model of
Ireland et al. (2009) is obviously an interpretation.
As Ireland et al. themselves assert, ‘‘the strength of
the evidence needed to claim the presence of a
corporate entrepreneurship strategy is inherently a
judgment call on the observer’s part’’ (p. 38). In the
end, what counts is how ?rms can convert theoreti-
cal ideas into practical solutions in the pursuit of
success. If abstractness has thus far prevented ?rms
from exploring the opportunities of CE strategies,
then they might want to reconsider. As this study has
illustrated, innovative planning and careful execu-
tion of a CE strategy seems to pay off in the everyday
lives of ?rms.
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