Sociopreneurial behaviour formation: antecedents and conversion. Case of dairy farming industry in Indonesia

Purpose This study aims to identify the psychological factors predicting sociopreneurial intention (SEI) and gain insight into the conversion of SEI to sociopreneurial behaviour (SEB) in the presence of facilitating events (FE) as a moderating factor. Design/methodology/approach Hypotheses are stati...

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Bibliographic Details
Published inSocial enterprise journal
Main Authors Arrasyid, Muhammad Iqbal, Sidek, Shafie Bin, Ismail, Noor Azlin, Amaliyah, Amaliyah
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published 05.08.2024
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Summary:Purpose This study aims to identify the psychological factors predicting sociopreneurial intention (SEI) and gain insight into the conversion of SEI to sociopreneurial behaviour (SEB) in the presence of facilitating events (FE) as a moderating factor. Design/methodology/approach Hypotheses are statistically tested using a partial least square structural equation modelling (PLS-SEM) based on purposive survey data ( n = 110) from the leaders of dairy cooperatives in Indonesia. The measurement items are specifically developed for this research after thoroughly analysing the questionnaire items provided by prior studies. Findings The findings support the hypotheses that empathy (EM), perceived social responsibility (PSR) and self-efficacy (SEFF) are strong predictors of SEI. Moreover, although SEI can be directly converted to SEB, FE significantly moderated that conversion. Research limitations/implications Future research should also involve the impact of SEB on the community and the sociopreneurs. Originality/value This research empirically examines the influence of external factors in converting SEI into SEB, which prior studies overlooked. Moreover, it involves the leaders of dairy cooperatives in Indonesia who perform SEB to help smallholder farmers’ communities facing dairy farming issues such as capital, milk productivity, land size and others as research participants.
ISSN:1750-8614
1750-8614
DOI:10.1108/SEJ-10-2023-0135