COMPLEXITY THEORY
The collective organization, such as the Hull Digital Economy Cluster, are often better positioned than individuals to influence the feedback that “brings about the emergence of new organizational collectives”, such as the entrepreneurship networks within the Hull Digital Economy ecosystem. According to Chilles and Meyer (2001 and 2004) these new organizational collectives “play an integral role in the management of self-organizing processes, with implications for collective entrepreneurship in new industry formation” (Chiles et al., 2004:515). Many other scholars hold the view that complexity theory may fulfill the needs to understand the entrepreneurial practice at an organizational level (Eisenhardt, 2002; Chiles et al., 2004; McKelvey, 2004). McKelvey stated that “as actors in a disequilibrium market process,(...) entrepreneurs continually generated novelty through their discovery of market gaps (Kirzner 1973) and creative imagination (Lachmann 1986), but their alertness/creativity was not unfettered; (...) constrained and shaped by the local culture (Scott 2001)” (McKelvey, 2004:314). This shift from equilibrium seeking to order creation (disequilibrium market process) is a key element for understanding complexity in the context of startup culture. (McKelvey, 2004:314). Hinterberger (1994 quoted in McKelvey, 2004: 317) also critiques the traditional reliance on equilibrium assumption from a different perspective linked both to competitive context and socio-economic actors, and uncover four elements that challenge the equilibrium assumption.
- Rapid changes in the competitive context of firms do not allow the kinds of extended equilibria seen in biology and classical physics.
- There is more and more evidence that the future is best characterized by ‘‘disorder, instability, diversity, disequilibrium, and nonlinearity’’ (Hinterberger, 1994:37)
- Firms are likely to experience changing basins of attraction—that is, the effects of different equilibria.
- Agents coevolve to create higher level structures that become the selection contexts for subsequent agent behaviors. (McKelvey, 2004:317)
- The reflexive identity of the entrepreneur: represented through the language of mental models, motivations, and everyday practice.
- The recursive (regular/repeating/established) activities of the entrepreneur’s firm.
- The recursive activities in a network of firms (for instance a technological cluster, or particular industry) in which the entrepreneurial firm is engaged
In relation to the domains outlined above, Fuller and Lewis (2003) states the fact that the firm's chosen strategy and its relationships are closely bound, and that interaction with others moderates the innovative entrepreneurial practices, leading to emergent properties that arise as a response to the interactions within the system. In relation to the impact of the relationships and interactions between the firm and the system, Lave and Wenger (1991) and later Wenger (1998) argue that “developing a practice, of any kind, requires the formation of a community (however loosely defined) whose members can engage with one another and thus acknowledge and legitimise each other as participants—a process of becoming, not just encountering—the social process view in other words” (in Fuller & Warren, 2006:964).