This study investigates the interplay between Eco-Innovation (EI) and Stakeholder Engagement (SE) as pivotal enablers of Sustainable Business Model Innovation (SBMI), ultimately gaining improved Sustainability-Oriented Practices (SOPs). Grounded in Stakeholder Theory, this research employs Structural Equation Modeling in LIS-REL, analyzing data from 1076 respondents. The findings reveal that organizations leveraging EI while engaging diverse stakeholder groups—customers, local communities, employees, and suppliers—effectively enhance the deployment of energy and plastic SOPs, with a statistically significant moderating effect for Manufacturing Organizations. The paper contributes to literature by showing that (i) EI precedes and enables SE, and together they underpin SOPs, (ii) clarifying the differentiated roles of stakeholders across types of SOPs – energy and plastic-, (iii) highlights how manufacturing organizational context moderates these dynamics, and (iv) ultimately reframes SBMI as the joint outcome of EI and SE.
Miozza, M., Alimehmeti, G., Paletta, A. (2025). The interplay of eco-innovation and stakeholder engagement: Driving sustainability-oriented business practices. JOURNAL OF ENVIRONMENTAL MANAGEMENT, 396, 1-12 [10.1016/j.jenvman.2025.128194].
The interplay of eco-innovation and stakeholder engagement: Driving sustainability-oriented business practices
Miozza, Mario
Primo
;Alimehmeti, GencSecondo
;Paletta, AngeloUltimo
2025
Abstract
This study investigates the interplay between Eco-Innovation (EI) and Stakeholder Engagement (SE) as pivotal enablers of Sustainable Business Model Innovation (SBMI), ultimately gaining improved Sustainability-Oriented Practices (SOPs). Grounded in Stakeholder Theory, this research employs Structural Equation Modeling in LIS-REL, analyzing data from 1076 respondents. The findings reveal that organizations leveraging EI while engaging diverse stakeholder groups—customers, local communities, employees, and suppliers—effectively enhance the deployment of energy and plastic SOPs, with a statistically significant moderating effect for Manufacturing Organizations. The paper contributes to literature by showing that (i) EI precedes and enables SE, and together they underpin SOPs, (ii) clarifying the differentiated roles of stakeholders across types of SOPs – energy and plastic-, (iii) highlights how manufacturing organizational context moderates these dynamics, and (iv) ultimately reframes SBMI as the joint outcome of EI and SE.I documenti in IRIS sono protetti da copyright e tutti i diritti sono riservati, salvo diversa indicazione.


