Public or Private by Genetics or Design? A Case Study of Organizational Design Decisions for New Public Ventures

Authors

  • Roxanne Zolin
  • Fredric Kropp

Abstract

When a new enterprise is born, how can an entrepreneur or intrapreneur decide how public or private the new enterprise should be? Should the publicness or privateness of a new enterprise be based upon genetics, i.e. replicate the publicness of the parent organization, or decided by design? As differences between public and private firms are blurred, entrepreneurs and intrapreneurs need to consider how public or private their new enterprise will be. This case study illustrates the tendency to replicate the publicness of the parent firm, which may not provide the right source of funding, ownership, control or other structures, such as board membership. This article provides propositions and a methodology to guide four major public versus private organizational decisions and establishes a future research agenda.

Author Biographies

Roxanne Zolin

Roxanne Zolin, Ph.D. is Associate Professor in the School of Management, Queensland University of Technology, Brisbane, Queensland, Australia with a joint appointment to the Naval Postgraduate School, Monterey.

Fredric Kropp

Fredric Kropp is Associate Professor of Marketing and Entrepreneurship, Fisher Graduate School of International Business, Monterey Institute of International Studies.

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How to Cite

Zolin, R., & Kropp, F. (2014). Public or Private by Genetics or Design? A Case Study of Organizational Design Decisions for New Public Ventures. International Public Management Review, 9(1), 130–147. Retrieved from https://ipmr.net/index.php/ipmr/article/view/48

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Articles