4.7 Article

Building competitive advantage with sustainable products e A case study perspective of stakeholders

Journal

JOURNAL OF CLEANER PRODUCTION
Volume 289, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

ELSEVIER SCI LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.jclepro.2020.125699

Keywords

Barriers; Disruptive innovation; Circular economy; Competitive advantage; Sustainable entrepreneurship

Funding

  1. Rochester Institute of Technology's Golisano Institute for Sustainability and Saunders College of Business

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The study found that investors are skeptical about sustainable innovations, while customers are more accepting and willing to get involved; Sustainable entrepreneurs are advised to ensure that the underlying business case of their firm is as well developed as the product itself; The main barrier hindering the success of some sustainable innovations is not their cost, but the tendency of human nature to delay change until problems become critical; Currently, investing in sustainable innovations is more attractive in regions with positive sustainability regulations such as California and some European countries.
Sustainability has gained momentum in literature as government and non-governmental policymakers identify measures to fight climate change. While sustainability principles can be good for business and the economy, businesses have been slow to replace non-sustainable products with sustainable ones. One reason for this, we argue, is because businesses have a harder time seeing how to build a stronger competitive advantage with sustainable products than they have with the products they already offer. This study thus addresses the question of how sustainable innovators can build competitive advantage around sustainable products. Stakeholder theory advises business owners to build products around the interests of all stakeholders. This paper thus uses a grounded theory approach based on a series of interviews with 15 key business from stakeholders these categories: entrepreneurs, investors, customers, and academics/NGO representatives. Our study identifies four major and interconnected findings, viz: (1) investors are the most doubtful concerning sustainable innovations, while customers are receptive and keen to be involved; (2) sustainable entrepreneurs are subsequently advised to make sure that the underlying business case of their firm is well developed as much as the product; (3) the overall barrier hindering the success of some sustainable innovations is not their cost, but the human nature to put off change until problems become critical; and (4) at the moment, investing in sustainable innovations is more attractive in regions with positive sustainability regulations such as California and some European countries. (c) 2020 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.

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