Strategizing in Micro and Small Enterprises: A Practice-Based Perspective
Abstract
This study explores how micro and small enterprises (MSEs) strategize through everyday
business practices. Unlike traditional models that focus on formal planning and predictive
control, MSEs work under unpredictable conditions and severe resource constraints. As a
result, they need more flexible and context-sensitive approaches. Using the
Strategy-as-Practice (SaP) and effectuation theory as the main theoretical frameworks, this
study shows that strategy is not a static plan but a set of socially and materially embedded
practices that are implemented through everyday activities. Based on 25 semi-structured
interviews with MSEs’ decision-makers, this qualitative study employs a theory-informed
thematic analysis to explore how strategic actions in MSEs are formed, adjusted and enacted
in practice. The findings indicate that MSEs navigate among multiple strategic logics in
response to evolving circumstances, using planning where possible, adapting in response to
feedback and uncertainty, and improvising under time pressure. Rather than treating these
logics as mutually exclusive, MSEs pragmatically combine them in context-specific ways.
This hybrid strategy is not a theoretically contradictory combination, but rather a practical
approach developed in specific contexts and rooted in the firm’s environmental judgments,
routine practices and experiential knowledge. This study thus shows how MSEs can deal with
the complexity of strategic decision-making in a pragmatic way, and provides practical
implications into strategic resilience under real-world constraints.
Degree
Master 2-years
Other description
MSc in Management
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Date
2025-06-24Author
Cheng, Jing
Xia, Kang
Keywords
Strategy-as-Practice (SaP)
micro and small enterprises (MSEs)
strategic practices
hybrid strategy
deliberate strategy
emergent strategy
improvisation
effectuation
Series/Report no.
Master Degree Project 2025:10
Language
eng