"Yes and. . ., but wait. . ., heck no!": A socially situated cognitive approach towards understanding how startup entrepreneurs process critical feedback
Publication date
2021-09-03
Editors
Advisors
Supervisors
Document Type
Article
Metadata
Show full item recordCollections
License
cc_by_nc_nd
Abstract
We examine sensebreaking, a meaning void, that entrepreneurs experience due to critical feedback from early stakeholders using the socially situated cognition perspective. We show that sensebreaking aids novel sensemaking via three mechanisms—redirecting, reframing, and questioning—through longitudinal analysis of weekly diary reports that we collected from 30 entrepreneurs for one year. We describe the cognitive changes due to novel sensemaking. We derive a process model that illustrates how sensebreaking-sensemaking iterations over time effect changes to the shared cognition between entrepreneurs and their stakeholders while driving opportunity development. We advance the opportunity coconstruction literature by adding microlevel understanding of stakeholder interactions and explicating their effects on entrepreneurial cognition.
Keywords
Sensemaking, negative feedback, opportunity development, socially situated cognition, time, General Business,Management and Accounting, Strategy and Management, Management of Technology and Innovation
Citation
Kaffka, G A, Singaram, R, Kraaijenbrink, J & Groen, A J 2021, '"Yes and. . ., but wait. . ., heck no!": A socially situated cognitive approach towards understanding how startup entrepreneurs process critical feedback', Journal of small business management, vol. 59, no. 5, pp. 1050-1080. https://doi.org/10.1080/00472778.2020.1866186