For an Entrepreneurial Ecology

For an Entrepreneurial Ecology. Entrepreneurs are like elephants walking a tightrope! Fabrice Cavarretta, ESSEC Business School, provides a striking metaphor to argue against the survival of the economic fittest and for the diversity of the business species.

Fabrice Cavarretta, ESSEC Business School, provides a striking metaphor to argue against the survival of the economic fittest and for the diversity of the business species.

For an Entrepreneurial Ecology by Fabrice Cavaretta.

The business ecosystem: Pushing it a little too far

Natural ecosystems are made up of innumerable species. But since some are viewed more favorably than others, it might be tempting to want to raze the lot to the ground in the name of optimization. The same temptation exists where it comes to entrepreneurial ecosystems. And in both cases, it is important to remember that all species, like job functions, add to the richness of a healthy ecosystem.

The concept of “ecosystem” is familiar to most of us. It evokes a wealth and variety of actors who participate in the intertwined life of an economic sector, a territory, or a given industry. From Adam Smith to Michael Porter, economists have identified these interactions that help explain a businesses success. In other words, beyond the specific characteristics of a company or its management, economic success depends on the availability of various personnel, infrastructure and skills, which together are referred to as an ecosystem.

But have you really thought about the consequences of this ecological metaphor? Are you really sensitive to entrepreneurial ecology?

Where there’s greens, there’s beans: Sometimes unfortunately

For an Entrepreneurial Ecology. Our generation is the first to really take environmental issues seriously, to question our over-exploitation of natural resources such as forests, our role in the disappearance of species, and our impacts on the climate. Our awareness of these issues has grown over time, and most of us now understand that we can’t selfishly optimize one's small plot of land by ignoring the global impacts that “optimization” might have on the natural ecosystem.

Our generation is the first to really take environmental issues seriously, to question our over-exploitation of natural resources such as forests, our role in the disappearance of species, and our impacts on the climate. Our awareness of these issues has grown over time, and most of us now understand that we can’t selfishly optimize one’s small plot of land by ignoring the global impacts that “optimization” might have on the natural ecosystem.

Imagine a beautiful tropical forest in Brazil, for example, with a rich, varied ecosystem. From a certain perspective, this extraordinary biomass is difficult to exploit. It might be therefore tempting to “optimize” it to produce a certain kind of wealth in the very short term. For example, you could raze a section of forest and replace it with a beautiful GMO soybean field with a maximized output of a standardized product. And when yields drop, you can always turn to chemical fertilizers and insecticides.

Do you find this scenario troubling? Are you not convinced that this standardized productivism is preferable to a rich ecosystem of many species whose commercial profitability is difficult to identify? Congratulations, you are sensitive to biological ecology. But do you have the same sensitivity for entrepreneurial ecology?

Everyone has its place in the family of things

Everyone has its place in the family of things. A healthy economic ecosystem is like a tropical forest. It contains a wide variety of actors, who nourish the ecosystem in different ways. In other words, their apparent productivity is not always obvious. It’s too easy to look at an ecosystem and focus-in on the cockroaches, leeches, careless birds, and snakes. An economic ecosystem is indeed a rich stratification of traders, teachers, artists and craftsmen, civil servants, students, do-it-yourselfers, and a horde of intermediaries who cling to their tiny niche. A myriad productivity is neither obvious nor is it easy to harness.

A healthy economic entrepreneurial ecosystem is like a tropical forest. It contains a wide variety of actors, who nourish the ecosystem in different ways. In other words, their apparent productivity is not always obvious. It’s too easy to look at an ecosystem and focus-in on the cockroaches, leeches, careless birds, and snakes. An economic ecosystem is indeed a rich stratification of traders, teachers, artists and craftsmen, civil servants, students, do-it-yourselfers, and a horde of intermediaries who cling to their tiny niche. A myriad productivity is neither obvious nor is it easy to harness.

Like a virgin forest, an economic ecosystem can be optimized in the very short term by eliminating certain “species”. An ecosystem derives its strength from all of its actors, and disrupting the natural order of things will only be optimal in the short term. Thus, at the macro level, one can dream about optimizing the economy by freeing companies to produce and sell with a minimum or regulations and taxes, boosted by a maximum of capital. To hell the unproductive cockroaches of the economy! On the micro level, one can dream about optimizing the creation of new activities based on magnificent business plans supported by wealthy investors. To the devil with the do-it-yourselfers! These economic optimizations are just as logical our field of GMO soybeans.

The entrepreneurial ecosystem

Obviously, this metaphor is neither proof nor recipe of economic policy. Nevertheless, the next time you feel annoyed by the complexity, heat, humidity, and cacophony of your economic ecosystem, ask yourself if you really should not give it as much respect as a tropical forest whose infinite interactions you may not fully understand.

Our economic entrepreneurial ecosystems are also complex systems, and it requires a great deal of maturity to capture their productivity. Let’s not play the sorcerer’s apprentice and instead learn to respect and appreciate our entrepreneurial ecologies in all their wealth and their apparent inefficiencies.

Learn more about the Council on Business & Society

The Council on Business & Society (The CoBS), visionary in its conception and purpose, was created in 2011, and is dedicated to promoting responsible leadership and tackling issues at the crossroads of business and society including sustainability, diversity, ethical leadership and the place responsible business has to play in contributing to the common good.  

Member schools are all “Triple Crown” accredited AACSB, EQUIS and AMBA and leaders in their respective countries.

The Council on Business & Society member schools:
- Asia-Pacific: Keio Business School, Japan; School of Management Fudan University; China; ESSEC Business School Asia-Pacific, Singapore.
- Europe: ESSEC Business School, France; IE Business School, Spain; Trinity Business School, Ireland; Warwick Business School, United Kingdom.
- Africa: Stellenbosch Business School, South Africa; ESSEC Africa, Morocco. 
- South America: FGV-EAESP, Brazil.

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