3 research outputs found
ENTREPRENEURIAL FAILURE AND RESILIENCE: A CONTINUOUS INTERPLAY BETWEEN RIGIDITY AND FLEXIBILITY
Resilience studies are increasingly relevant to understand business processes. This study aimed to explore how entrepreneurs in Mexico recovered from situations of business failure. Which key factors did move entrepreneurs to move forward with their ventures rather than desisting after a failure event? Through a qualitative study that utilized focus groups with entrepreneurs that had faced entrepreneurial failure, discourses, and representations around the failure experience were analyzed. Findings suggested that entrepreneurs lied in a continuum between resilience and resistance, depending on their access assets such as entrepreneurial networks, ecosystems, and pool of knowledge as antecedents of resistance and resilience. The study shed light in the understanding of the role communities surrounding entrepreneurs played in their trajectory, failure, and eventual recovery
THE INTERPLAY OF NOSTALGIA AND MEMORABLE EXPERIENCES: A STUDY ON APPAREL
This study analyzed the relationship between nostalgia and memorable experiences on consumer purchase intention. While nostalgia was well-researched for Generation X and Y, there was a lack of understanding of how nostalgia influenced Generation Z brands and consumption preferences. Nostalgia marketing has been popular for several years, and there was literature on product and service categories, such as movie remakes, band reunions, candy, and brands that have completed their life cycle and could be re-released to the market by appealing to consumers nostalgia. It used a sample of 135 observations and sneakers stimuli advertising with nostalgic components. Results showed that nostalgia affected purchase intention directly and the retrieval of memorable experiences of using the apparel product. However, it did not translate to purchase intention. The results helped marketers identify courses of action to create effective communication that triggers consumers' purchase intention who did not require product development