Researching a startup's legitimacy only makes sense if scholarship treats entrepreneurship as a separate phenomenon distinct from rather than embedded in a market
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| Thoughts, musings, and commentary on entrepreneurship scholarship. Researching a startup's legitimacy only makes sense if scholarship treats entrepreneurship as a separate phenomenon distinct from rather than embedded in a market Few entrepreneurship scholars have heard of consumer sovereignty, a concept originally coined by South African economist W. H. Hutt (e.g., 1940).¹ The concept captures that part of market logic that every entrepreneur knows from experience: that the consumer (customer) ultimately determines the value of what is offered for sale. In both entrepreneurship theory and practice, the term value proposition captures this principle by stressing both that it is the value of what is offered that is important and that the entrepreneur is limited to making a proposition of value. It is then the customer who decides (for themselves) whether the proposition is good enough to pay the asking price. Value, in other words, is subjective and ex post. But value is also more than just the product offered for sale. | |