Abstract
PurposeThis article explores in a qualitative manner the motivations of women entrepreneurs who start and run ethnic food businesses in London.Design/methodology/approachOur approach is qualitative and deploys phenomenographical analysis of interview narratives around categories of motivation.FindingsWe find that women ethnic food entrepreneurs are driven by a combination of desire for self-actualisation, identity-maintenance and community considerations. We demonstrate that women ethnic food entrepreneurs often go against the logic of the market, and they do so not because they lack other options, but for reasons that have to do with their (self-)identification as women and professionals, their prerogatives as mothers and daughters, their ethnic heritage, their emplacement in urban and global communities and their need to contribute. Our findings enrich understanding of female-led ethnic food entrepreneurship not as a demanding, overall unproductive undertaking for women with no other options, but as a realm of inspiration, community engagement and female-led innovation.Originality/valueOur main contributions are the qualitative interrogation of perceptions and experiences of identity and difference in urban entrepreneurship from the point of view of our interviewees; providing concrete empirical evidence for it through our sample and proposing an approach to thinking women-led ethnic food entrepreneurship as a vehicle for translating urban superdiversity into social interactions across barriers of difference. We speak to the field of women entrepreneurship studies but specifically to the understudied realm of women-led food entrepreneurship, and to the cross-disciplinary field of (im)migrant entrepreneurship.
Reference65 articles.
1. Akerlind, G. (2005), “Learning about Phenomenography: interviewing, data analysis and the qualitative research paradigm”, in Bowden, J. and Green, P. (Eds), Doing Developmental Phenomenography, Melbourne, RMIT University Press.
2. Research practices in entrepreneurship: problems of definition, description and meaning;The International Journal of Entrepreneurship and Innovation,2008
3. Entrepreneurial marketing in online businesses: the case of ethnic minority entrepreneurs in the UK;Qualitative Market Research,2016
4. Market-oriented ethnography: Interpretation building and marketing strategy formulation;Journal of Marketing Research,1994