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“Really being yourself”? Racial minority entrepreneurs navigating othering and authenticity through identity work

Drawing on an intersectional perspective on racial, migrant and entrepreneurial identities, this paper investigates the identity work of racial minority entrepreneurs with native-born and migrant backgrounds, confronted to experiences of othering in a White entrepreneurial ecosystem.

The study takes a qualitative-interpretivist approach and builds on six cases of racial minority entrepreneurs in nascent stages of venture development within the Dutch technology sector. The dataset comprises 24 in-depth interviews conducted over the course of one and a half year, extensive case descriptions and online sources. The data is thematically and inductively analysed.

Despite strongly self-identifying as entrepreneurs, the research participants feel marginalised and excluded from the entrepreneurial ecosystem, which results in ongoing threats to their existential authenticity as they build a legitimate entrepreneurial identity. Minority entrepreneurs navigate these threats by either downplaying or embracing their marginalised racial and/or migrant identities.

The study contributes to the literature on the identity work of minority entrepreneurs. The paper reveals that, rather than “strategising away” the discrimination and exclusion resulting from othering, racial minority entrepreneurs seek to preserve their sense of existential authenticity and self-worth, irrespective of entrepreneurial outcomes. In so doing, the study challenges the dominant perspective of entrepreneurial identity work among minority entrepreneurs as overly instrumental and market-driven. Moreover, the study also contributes to the literature on authenticity in entrepreneurship by highlighting how racial minority entrepreneurs navigate authenticity threats while building legitimacy in a White ecosystem.

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Maud van Merriënboer (she/her) - PhD, Management and Organisation

Maud van Merriënboer (she/her) - PhD, Management and Organisation

Maud (she/her) is a PhD candidate at the department of Management and Organisation at Vrije Universiteit Amsterdam. She holds a BA in African Studies and an MSc in Organisational Ethnography. She conducts qualitative and ethnographic research on race, class, and gender in entrepreneurship, and entrepreneurial identities. Her dissertation focuses on the identity work of women and racial minority founders in the Dutch start-up scene. 

Publication details

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Authors

  • Maud van Merriënboer
    VU Amsterdam
  •  Michiel Verver
    VU Amsterdam
  • Miruna Radu-Lefebvre

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