INTRODUCTION
This paper reports the development of an identity approach to support research and thus provide insight into how Māori entrepreneurs might best be served by enterprise assistance in Aotearoa New Zealand. Indigenous entrepreneurs represent a growing segment of the business community in many countries but face sometimes stark challenges in starting and running enterprises. The success of indigenous entrepreneurs matters because they draw upon their indigeneity as sources of inspiration and innovation, contribute to the collective wellbeing of indigenous peoples, and some represent world class exemplars of sustainable ways of doing business (see e.g., Mika, Reference Mika2016). While enterprise assistance for entrepreneurs is widely accepted as a worthwhile use of public funds (Reihana, Sisley, & Modlik, Reference Reihana, Sisley and Modlik2007) few guidelines exist to help policy makers and providers understand the needs of indigenous entrepreneurs and how best to respond. In this paper, we use the theoretical lens of identity to provide insight into this challenging context.
We argue for identity as a potentially useful explanatory concept for our study because it provides a lens into how context shapes entrepreneurship, an important focus for entrepreneurship scholars in recent years (Welter, Reference Welter2011). The Aotearoa New Zealand context is different, culturally, socially and economically, through its bicultural population (indigenous Māori and European settlers) and its geographical isolation. As well as the distinctive nature of Māori culture in regard to entrepreneurship, several studies have pointed to the existence of the ‘Tall Poppy’ syndrome (TPS) in Aotearoa New Zealand, a phenomenon of Australian origin referring to conspicuously successful people being subject to the enactment of envy, jealousy and hostility (Mouly & Sankaran, Reference Mouly and Sankaran2002). Kirkwood (Reference Kirkwood2007) examines this phenomenon in relation to entrepreneurs in Aotearoa, New Zealand, concluding that the notion is pervasive and can damage entrepreneurs who seek a high profile in getting off the ground. Research in this area is still sparse, for both New Zealand and entrepreneurship, particularly Māori entrepreneurship. The notion that identity for Māori entrepreneurs is important is not new; the contribution of this paper is in unpacking the concept more fully than has previously been reported in the literature. Developing a deeper insight into an identity perspective may enable us to tease out how being identified as a Māori entrepreneur can enable and also hinder change in this context, through the interplay of entrepreneurial identity with the evolving community dynamic. In this paper we bring together the literature on entrepreneurial identity in Aotearoa, New Zealand, and indigenous entrepreneurship to better understand how Māori entrepreneurs might best be targeted by assistance programmes, given that present uptake is low (Mika, Reference Mikaere2015). In doing so, we extend the use of the identity concept to the contextual aspects surrounding enterprise assistance to Māori entrepreneurs.
MĀORI ENTREPRENEURS: MULTIPLE DISCOURSES
In this section, we consider the phenomena at the heart of this paper: entrepreneurial identity, Māori entrepreneurship and TPS.
Entrepreneurial identity
There is increasing recognition of entrepreneurship as a process within a social and cultural context in the entrepreneurship literature (Welter, Reference Welter2011). Entrepreneurs must engage in a set of interactions concerning what they do and how they present their activity as part of the social context which they may actually be trying to change. Behaviours are enacted and of course perceived by individuals, in accordance with the wider cultural context. To be well received and therefore successful, they must carry out what it means ‘to be an entrepreneur’ in the eyes of society. They need to go beyond realising opportunity and creating economic and social value; they must build legitimacy for themselves and their emerging venture in the eyes of the public (Lounsbury & Glynn, Reference Lounsbury and Glynn2001). Identity offers a useful theoretical lens for this study, as it captures both perceptions and practices; what entrepreneurs do and how they are seen in society (Alvesson, Lee Ashcraft, & Thomas, Reference Alvesson, Lee Ashcraft and Thomas2008; Lewis, Reference Lewis2015). Identity offers a means of understanding the roles that people present and how those roles are received (Nicolson & Anderson Reference Nicolson and Anderson2005) and further, how they rationalise the need to be different (by creating novel value) with a sense of belonging (Shepherd & Haynie, Reference Shepherd and Haynie2009). An entrepreneurial identity can be an asset for challenging the rules and the status quo when creating something new (Brenkert, Reference Brenkert2009; Anderson & Warren, Reference Anderson and Warren2011; Bureau & Zander, Reference Bureau and Zander2014), but this is not universal (Hytti, Reference Hytti2005; Warren & Smith, Reference Warren and Smith2015).
It is appropriate to draw on the literature that views identity as a fluid, social construct, rather than an unproblematic given. Leitch and Harrison (Reference Leitch and Harrison2016) highlight a European tradition of interpretivist studies of entrepreneurial identity taking a social constructivist perspective (Cohen & Musson, Reference Cohen and Musson2000; Down & Reveley, Reference Down and Warren2004; Berglund, Reference Berglund2006; Down, Reference Down2006; Mills & Pawson, Reference Mills and Pawson2006; Jones, Latham, & Betta, Reference Jones, Latham and Betta2008; Reveley & Down, Reference Reveley and Down2009; Watson, Reference Watson2009; Boje & Smith, Reference Boje and Smith2010; Kjellander, Nordqvist, & Welter, Reference Kjellander, Nordqvist and Welter2012; Williams Middleton, Reference Williams Middleton2013; Lewis, Reference Lewis2015). In this tradition, Down (Reference Down2006) proposes identity is a mutable achievement in time and space, built through relationships with others, and also in relation to the surrounding social context (Leitch & Harrison, Reference Leitch and Harrison2016). Identities can serve as powerful drivers for entrepreneurial behaviours around legitimacy, reputation and ethical conduct. Correspondingly, Watson (Reference Watson2009) talks about the need for entrepreneurs to carry out ‘identity work’ to legitimise what they do. Williams Middleton (Reference Williams Middleton2013) notes that studies explain how entrepreneurs narratively construct and negotiate their identities (e.g., Warren, Reference Warren2004; Mills & Pawson, Reference Mills and Pawson2006; Down & Warren, Reference Down and Reveley2008; Jones, Latham, & Betta, Reference Jones, Latham and Betta2008). Here entrepreneurs try to present their story as legitimate to local stakeholders to justify access to resources and opportunities (Lounsbury & Glynn, Reference Lounsbury and Glynn2001; Navis & Glynn, Reference Nana2011). How they do this may require the careful negotiation of conflicting discourses: the need for the entrepreneur to be different and stand out from the crowd in the creation of novelty, and perhaps becoming wealthy as a result, which may be received differently in different cultures.
There is an established sociological tradition (Goffman, Reference Goffman1978) of treating identity as a practice – the presentation of self – in symbolic interactionism (Anderson, 2005). In entrepreneurship the interactive view has surfaced as identity work which is shaped by the social environment (Watson, Reference Watson2009; Ybema, Keenoy, Oswick, Beverungen, Ellis, & Sabelis, Reference Ybema, Keenoy, Oswick, Beverungen, Ellis and Sabelis2009; Brown, Reference Brown2015). In doing identity work, individuals draw on available socially constructed discursive resources and then weave these discourses into their narrative of identity (Sveningsson & Alvesson, Reference Sveningsson and Alvesson2003; Alvesson, Lee Ashcraft, & Thomas, Reference Alvesson, Lee Ashcraft and Thomas2008; Hamilton, Reference Hamilton2014) in line with social attractiveness and dominant interests (Wieland, Reference Wieland2010). Warren and Smith (Reference Warren and Smith2015) note how public perceptions of entrepreneurs vary over time, highlighting problems for those who fail to navigate socially contextualised rules. Thus, there is tension between being different, but not too different.
In Westernized economies (including Aotearoa New Zealand), the ‘enterprise discourse’ has become powerful in the media and through government policy, encouraging people to become entrepreneurs. De Clercq and Voronov (Reference De Clercq and Voronov2009: 399) explain, ‘discourses of entrepreneurship and enterprise may have taken a special position in capitalist societies by providing a normative prescription of the roles people are to play and how they should interrelate with important institutions in society and one another’. The enterprise discourse promoted by government policy makers identifies entrepreneurs as drivers of economic growth, even aligned to restructuring public services (Du Gay, Reference Du Gay2004), or regional development (McKeever, Anderson, & Jack, Reference McKeever, Anderson and Jack2014). The enterprise discourse thus offers stereotypical scripts of ‘the entrepreneur’ (Down & Warren, Reference Down and Reveley2008; Perren & Dannreuther, Reference Perren and Dannreuther2013), aligned to a plethora of initiatives and schemes that promote competition and high profile achievement.
As Gill and Larson (Reference Gill and Larson2014) show, the enterprise discourse is not monolithic, it is shaped by local discourses of home, self and place. Local networks have been shown to legitimise entrepreneurial activity, and the local environment can dramatically impact the ability of entrepreneurs to thrive in that locality, as well as the wider national context (Johannisson & Nilsson, Reference Johannisson and Nilsson1989; Hustedde, Reference Hustedde2007; Fortunato, Reference Fortunato2014; Gill & Larson, Reference Gill and Larson2014). If there is a ‘moral space’ (Anderson & Smith, Reference Anderson and Smith2007) created for entrepreneurship in such discourses, entrepreneurs must understand that as they strive for a legitimate entrepreneurial identity. Warren (Reference Warren2004) showed that an entrepreneurial identity can be negative when constructions of entrepreneurship carry connotations of greed or selfishness – ‘the unfriendly face of capitalism’. Otherwise, negative responses may occur, provoking resistance to entrepreneurial action (Doern & Goss, Reference Doern and Goss2012). An identity lens enables us to focus on the subtleties of such interactions. We strive to be able to account for how acceptance of Māori entrepreneurship is granted or withheld and how identity work from Māori entrepreneurs influences that approval during the quest for legitimacy.
Māori entrepreneurship
Studies of Māori entrepreneurship are informed by studies of indigenous entrepreneurship. Indigeneity refers to the quality of being indigenous; with the New Zealand variant of indigeneity being ‘Māoriness’ or Māoritanga, that is, Māori cultural identity (Rangihau, Reference Rangihau1992; NZIER, 2003). Peredo et al. (2004) and Hindle and Moroz (Reference Hindle and Moroz2010) argue for the notion of indigenous entrepreneurship as a separate field, where there is a need to reconcile history and understand indigenous values. In this perspective, entrepreneurship has often been aligned with the history of an indigenous people which has then been disrupted through colonisation, often by Europeans (Ivory, 2002). As a result, indigenous peoples are typically cast within Western analysis as marginalised subcultures, underdeveloped, impoverished, vanquished, but who may have legitimate emancipatory claims hinged to treaty rights, hard-won court-rulings, legislation and policy provisions, antiestablishmentarianism and outright human suffering (Havemann, Reference Havemann1999; Mikaere, Reference Mika and O’Sullivan2000; Howard, Reference Howard2003; Chakrabarti, Reference Chakrabarti2006; Smith, Reference Smith1999). Yet, burgeoning indigenous economies suggest indigenous entrepreneurs have much to offer as they seek to create value not just in ‘traditional’ sectors such as crafts and food, but also in, for example, emerging digital spaces (Walker, Mika, & Palmer, Reference Walker, Mika and Palmer2017). Mika (Reference Mikaere2015) summarises three broad views of indigenous entrepreneurship: as poverty alleviation; as fulfilling aspirations for economic independence on indigenous terms; and finally, as an emancipatory endeavour for populations disenfranchised from the states within which they live.
In Aotearoa, New Zealand, while estimated to be worth around US$42 billion in 2013 (Nana, Khan, & Schulze, Reference Navis and Glynn2015), the scale of the Māori economy is insufficient on its own to support a Māori population of around 712,000 (Statistics New Zealand, 2016). Instead, Māori aspirations for economic self-sufficiency are to be met by Māori participation in the Māori, national and global economies (Parker, Reference Peeters2000; Allen, Reference Allen2011; Durie, Reference Durie2011; Nana, Reference Nana, Khan and Schulze2013). There is an economic imperative then to support successful Māori entrepreneurship, yet this must be achieved via policies that recognise past disenfranchisement, inequities, disagreements and false starts. Overall, there is some consensus in the literature that entrepreneurship has always been part of Māori society (Pihama & Penehira, Reference Pihama and Penehira2005), but how this should be expressed, supported and developed post disruption and in an increasingly urbanised population is subject to debate. Anderson and Giberson (Reference Anderson and Giberson2003) point out the strong tie between process and place for indigenous entrepreneurship. Yet, Mason and Brown (Reference Mason and Brown2014) caution policy makers against replicating ecosystems from elsewhere without sufficient local adaptation to the local context.
Who is a Māori entrepreneur and what is Māori entrepreneurship are premised upon a Māori world view. A Māori world view draws upon Māori knowledge, language, culture, methods and self-identification and socialisation as Māori within te ao Māori (Māori society). A Māori entrepreneur is thus a person who identifies as Māori and engages in entrepreneurial activity according to a Māori world view, but integrates within this, elements of a Western world view. Māori entrepreneurship is not contingent upon a Western world view, but the prevailing institutions of democracy and capitalism which derive from Western heritage condition Māori entrepreneurship (Mika, Reference Mikaere2015). Within this context, the central concern of Māori entrepreneurship is not merely creating economic value through new combinations of products, processes, and markets, but doing so in a way that accords with Māori cultural imperatives. While the degree to which Māori knowledge, values, language and customs are applied may vary, these elements of Māoriness (values, language and customs), which are acquired by socialisation within whānau (family), hapū (sub-tribe), iwi (tribe) and Māori communities, are associated with Māori entrepreneurship. (King, Reference King1975; Black, Bean, Collings, & Nuku, 1992, Reference Black, Bean, Collings and Nuku2012; Ministry of Justice, 2001; Mead, Reference Mead2003; Royal, Reference Royal2005; Gillies, Tinirau, & Mako, Reference Gillies, Tinirau and Mako2007). Thus, there is a clash of paradigms between the preoccupation with value creation in Western entrepreneurship and an emphasis on holism, relational well-being, and interconnectedness by Māori seeking to create social, spiritual and cultural value (Pio, Tipuna, Rasheed, & Parker, Reference Pio, Tipuna, Rasheed and Parker2013).
The prioritisation of cultural, social and spiritual values by Māori enterprises is evident in Māori management theory and practice (Warriner, Reference Warriner1999; Puketapu, Reference Puketapu2000; Harmsworth & Tahi, Reference Harmsworth and Tahi2008; Harmsworth, Reference Harmsworth2009; Yates, Reference Yates2009; Spiller, Reference Spiller2010; Knox, Agnew, & McCarthy, Reference Knox, Agnew and McCarthy2014; Mika & O’Sullivan, Reference Mika, Bensemann and Fahey2014). For instance, Morgan and Mulligan (Reference Morgan and Mulligan2006), in examining the characteristics of 30 Māori enterprises, find a common desire to be both culturally and commercially successful, with cultural values the higher priority. Harmsworth (Reference Harmsworth2005) shows that Māori values are instrumental in defining what is a Māori organisation, setting cultural and ethical standards, enterprise direction, and market differentiation.
TPS
Kirkwood (Reference Kirkwood2007) argues that TPS is presumed to have emerged from New Zealand’s geographic isolation (Packer, Reference Parker2014) and has been argued as a mix of the social characteristics of its indigenous Māori population (Haar & Delaney, Reference Haar and Delaney2009) and early British immigrants (Packer, Reference Parker2014), resulting in a discourse pertaining to an egalitarian culture being desirable (Trevor-Roberts, Ashkanasy, & Kennedy, Reference Trevor-Roberts, Ashkanasy and Kennedy2003; Peeters, Reference Peredo, Anderson, Galbraith, Honig and Dana2004; Hugo, Reference Hugo2006). TPS is often considered to be culturally specific to Australasia, but it is also noted elsewhere, such as the Nordic countries where the ‘Law of Jante’ (janteloven) discourages people from promoting their achievements (Scott, Reference Scott2016), or showing pride (Bromgard, Trafimow, & Linn, Reference Bromgard, Trafimow and Linn2014).
In business, perceptions of success are related to a number of factors such as venture creation, business growth and job creation, and also the accumulation of personal wealth and social stature for business leaders. The likelihood of TPS is linked to wider societal perceptions of what it means to act legitimately in business. There is evidence that managers behave differently in accordance with societal expectations, which differ in societies that aspire to an egalitarian culture, such as Aotearoa New Zealand and the United States, for example, where Americans generally perceive the upward and downward mobility of individuals with respect to wealth to be more legitimate than Australians (Mandisodza, Jost, & Unzueta, Reference Mandisodza, Jost and Unzueta2006).
Within the business context, entrepreneurs are expected to take a high profile role in leading the development of new products, new services, new ventures, new markets, as well as instigating new behaviours, around new technologies for example. In Aotearoa, New Zealand, if TPS is a cultural norm, then this might well impact perceptions of entrepreneurial legitimacy, and perhaps even the notion of being an entrepreneur at all. Kirkwood’s exploratory qualitative study (2007) found that over half of the 40 participating entrepreneurs in New Zealand had experienced TPS in their role as business owners; recognising this, they had employed strategies for managing its impact. These strategies included ‘staying under the radar’, not telling people they owned a business and not ‘flaunting’ their wealth. In particular, the key way that these business owners managed the effects of TPS was in relation to their assets – not buying expensive vehicles, houses or taking expensive holidays. These results parallel Maritz and Beaver (Reference Maritz and Beaver2011), who found that New Zealand entrepreneurs chose ‘lifestyle’ pathways that enabled the cloaking of wealth and thus ‘hiding’ from potential TPS conflict.
Kirkwood (Reference Kirkwood2007) suggests that the effects of TPS may have three significant implications for entrepreneurship in Aotearoa, New Zealand. First, TPS may discourage entrepreneurs from starting a business; second, it may inhibit ‘failed’ entrepreneurs to establish another business because of the public reaction to their ‘fall’. Finally, entrepreneurs may deliberately limit business growth because they do not want to attract additional attention (Kirkwood, Reference Kirkwood2007). This is worrying for Aotearoa New Zealand, as not only does it need entrepreneurs to grow the economy, it is also allocating resources to support entrepreneurship: this is a tension of legitimisation that needs to be addressed.
ENTERPRISE ASSISTANCE AND MĀORI ENTREPRENEURIAL IDENTITY
Aotearoa New Zealand is eminently concerned with business growth, and sees entrepreneurship, innovation, science, education and infrastructure all having a role in bringing this about (Joyce & Parata, Reference Joyce and Parata2014; Ministry of Business Innovation and Employment, 2014; New Zealand Government, 2015). Mika (Reference Mikaere2015) notes that traditional enterprise assistance policies favour direct intervention addressing specific needs (e.g., advice, markets, finance, technology) within given industries and firms, provided there is evidence of market failure and the benefits of acting outweigh the costs of not doing so; though the results of direct intervention have been mixed (Greene & Storey, Reference Greene and Storey2010; Mason & Brown, Reference Mason and Brown2014). More recently, policy makers have been drawn to more holistic forms of enterprise assistance, recognising that the complex and dynamic nature of firms and the social and economic environments in which they operate, require more subtle, systemic and contingent policy interventions (Acs & Szerb, Reference Acs and Szerb2006; Audretsch, Grilo, & Thurik, Reference Audretsch, Grilo and Thurik2007; OECD, Reference O’Sullivan and Dana2010; Smallbone, Reference Smallbone2010; Mason & Brown, Reference Mason and Brown2014).
Māori enterprise development relates to the growth of Māori enterprises within the Māori economy, how that growth is classified and activated, and the business needs, which give rise to help-seeking by Māori entrepreneurs (Mika, Reference Mikaere2015). Māori business needs are generally inferred from theory, industry and policy and can be identified as macro and micro (Zapalska, Perry, & Dabb, Reference Zapalska, Perry and Dabb2003; Reihana, Sisley, & Modlik, Reference Reihana, Sisley and Modlik2007; Battisti & Gillies, Reference Battisti and Gillies2009). At the macro-level (i.e., business environment), Māori business needs include market access, economic policy, taxation, research and development, property rights, and compliance costs. At the firm-level, Māori business needs include finance, management, marketing, networking, training, technology, and advice.
Mika (Reference Mikaere2015) finds that publicly funded enterprise assistance performs three roles in respect of Māori entrepreneurship. The first role of enterprise assistance is to satisfy the firm-level business needs of Māori entrepreneurs as clients. These needs are not dissimilar to the business needs of non-indigenous enterprises, with Māori entrepreneurs making use of typical forms of enterprise assistance (i.e., information, advice, facilitation, training, grants and finance) (Storey, Reference Storey1994). The second role of enterprise assistance is to build the entrepreneurial capabilities of Māori entrepreneurs. Entrepreneurial capabilities are determinants of entrepreneurship that manifest within five forms of capital: social capital, human capital, cultural capital, financial capital, and spiritual capital (Bourdieu, Reference Bourdieu1986; Firkin, Reference Firkin2001; Light & Gold, Reference Light and Gold2000; Verter, Reference Verter2003; Ahmad & Hoffman, Reference Ahmad and Hoffman2007; Chu, Reference Chu2007). Mika (Reference Mikaere2015) finds, however, that these capabilities are modified by Māori indigeneity, redefining entrepreneurial capabilities, legitimising Māori spirituality, knowledge, institutions, language, values and methods in entrepreneurship. If, as Mika (Reference Mikaere2015) suggests, cultural authenticity is a key component of the success of such initiatives, then how Māori create an authentic entrepreneurial identity must be part of the picture. This must recognise the imperatives of Māori cultural identity, the enterprise discourse, and further TPS, which seems to be a factor for both Māori and settler cultures in Aotearoa, New Zealand (albeit that TPS might be perceived and expressed differently in the two communities).
While the identity of Māori as iwi and hapū is well established, there is less recognition of the subtle nuances around the construction of a legitimate entrepreneurial identity. The notion of the ‘mauientrepreneur’ (Tapsell & Woods, Reference Tapsell and Woods2008; Keelan, Reference Keelan2010) has found some purchase in attempting to reconcile Māori history and values for entrepreneurs (Dell & Houkamau, Reference Dell and Houkamau2016). Within Māori mythology, Māui is a charismatic, mischievous mythical figure, who appears in oral traditions throughout the Pacific (O’Sullivan & Dana, Reference Packer2008; Keelan, Reference Keelan2009). It has been suggested that Māori entrepreneurs have embraced Māui as an inspirational metaphor for innovative pursuits (Keelan, Reference Keelan2009; Hanita, Te Kanawa, & Rihia, Reference Hanita, Te Kanawa and Rihia2016; Mika, Reference Mika2016). Māui achieved many feats, one of which was an adventure to seek the source of fire. Thus, the concept of ahi kimi or fire-seeking takes its meaning from a traditional understanding of the importance of interacting with the external world to innovate, through environmental scanning and the recognition and development of opportunities in the wider world (Dell & Houkamau, Reference Dell and Houkamau2016), thus affording direct connection with the mainstream entrepreneurship literature, while embracing and advocating Māori entrepreneurial freedom and empowerment.
Thus, Dell and Houkamau (Reference Dell and Houkamau2016) contrast fire-seeking with the metaphor of ahi kā or fire keeping, an inward focused function, describing the actions and people who keep the home fires burning (Mead, Reference Mead2003). Dell and Houkamau (Reference Dell and Houkamau2016: 9) state that fire keeping, recognises the importance of maintaining ‘cultural diversity, knowledge systems, customs, and identities that belong to the Māori people’. Fire keeping enhances what it means to be a Māori entrepreneur and do business in a Māori way, creating value directly benefitting indigenous communities. In contrast, the metaphoric notion of keeping the fire alight refers to the nurturing, preservation, and protection of the cultural and spiritual aspects that constitute the heart and soul of indigenous communities.
These authors connect the concept to a range of initiatives in Aotearoa, New Zealand, including for example, Hinepreneur, a collaboration by Māori Woman’s Development Incorporated (MWDI), the Global Indigenous Woman’s Leadership and Development programme, and RP Enterprises, that builds, through a cultural lens, the capacity of Māori woman to create personal and whānau wealth (MWDI, 2015). In addition, Māori specific entrepreneurial programmes and competitions such as Dig My Idea (ATEED, 2015), Māori hi-tech awards (New Zealand Hi-Tech Trust, 2015), and Whiua ki te Ao (Velocity & Centre for Innovation and Entrepreneurship, 2017), focus on encouraging Māori to develop ideas with global potential. Moreover, Māori-specific innovation and entrepreneurship roles within public and private institutions are emancipating and empowering Māori entrepreneurs to participate in their external environments (Mika, Reference Mikaere2015). Some of these include, the Māori economy team within Callaghan Innovation (‘Callaghan looks to boost Māori economy’, 2013), the Māori business team within New Zealand Trade and Enterprise (NZTE, 2015), and the Māori economic unit within the Ministry of Business, Innovation and Employment (MBIE, 2017), among others. While good progress is being made, overall the uptake of such programmes remains low (Mika, Reference Mikaere2015).
We find entrepreneurial identity has fundamental implications for Māori entrepreneurship as well as policies intended to assist Māori entrepreneurs. Identifying as Māori and as a Māori entrepreneur are choices Māori are entitled to make as tangata whenua, the indigenous people of Aotearoa. In identifying as a Māori entrepreneur, one is opting into the Māori economy wherein their commercial activity is counted as contributing to this economy. The act of self-identifying as a Māori entrepreneur also implies an affinity with a Māori world view, which shapes entrepreneurial identity and practice. Some in this category will identify instead as Māori in business, which separates ethnic affilition as Māori from the nature of the entrepreneurial activity they undertake (Mika, Bensemann, & Fahey, Reference Mika2016). Not all Māori who are ‘entrepreneurial’, however, will identify as a Māori entrepreneur, exercising as is their right to self-select their identity. They are in effect opting out of the Māori economy. This group may be sizeable, but few studies have examined this segment, that is, those who opt out of identifying as Māori entrepreneurs, and indeed, as Māori enterprises.
Māori entrepreneurial identity gives policy makers some sense of the scope, scale, and modes of enterprise assistance that are likely to work for Māori entrepreneurs and the basis for doing so. When asked what works, Māori entrepreneurs consistently identify three expectations of providers: cultural competency (knowledge of the Māori language, culture and history and the ability to use it); relational competency (relationships with Māori entrepreneurs that are mana-enhancing for both provider and entrepreneur); and technical competency (the capacity to deliver promised technical assistance) (Mika, Reference Mikaere2015). Three steps providers can take to satisfy these expectations are: first, identify who among their clients are Māori entrepreneurs by asking clients to self-identify as Māori; second, ask the client (i.e., the Māori entrepreneur) what their business needs are and their preferred way of working with the provider; and third, develop the cultural capacity to interact with Māori entrepreneurs in ways that are authentic, appropriate and effective.
CONCLUSION
Māori entrepreneurship will be key in future to supporting the needs of the Māori community and realising the full, unique, potential of the Māori community in an increasingly global and digital world. Māori entrepreneurs must behave in ways that are perceived as legitimate to the Māori community and also to Aotearoa, New Zealand, society overall. For an entrepreneur to practice in a legitimate manner in Aotearoa, New Zealand, they must take account of both Māori cultural values and wider societal values in the construction of their entrepreneurial identity. In taking a fluid perspective on identity, we take account of Bargh’s (Reference Bargh2012) caution against oversimplification of complex economic and social contexts through legitimising any one identity construct. Foley (Reference Foley2006), for example in Australia, suggests that the focus on community-based enterprise can render invisible urban entrepreneurs.
Thus, in this paper we have demonstrated the different discourses that shape the construction of a Māori entrepreneurial identity: the challenges of indigeneity; Māori cultural values and aspirations; the wider enterprise discourse of ‘Western’ economies; and the subtle and pervasive notion of TPS. In taking a social constructionist approach to Māori entrepreneurial identity, we recognise the fluidity of the construct (Leitch & Harrison, Reference Leitch and Harrison2016) in a country context that is shaped by intertwined discourses around what it means to be an entrepreneur, as Māori and as a New Zealander, of a particular context and place (Gill & Larson, Reference Gill and Larson2014). Our contribution is in showing how better understanding of entrepreneurial identity can enable provision of focussed aid for Māori entrepreneurs.
Acknowledgements
We acknowledge support from Ngā Pae o te Māramatanga – New Zealand’s Māori Centre of Research Excellence (NPM) for the project Entrepreneurial ecosystem efficacy for Indigenous entrepreneurs.