Fuoye Journal Of Management Innovation And Entrepreneurship «Must Try»

Recent disruptions, from the COVID-19 pandemic to the current foreign exchange volatility, have underscored the need for entrepreneurial resilience : the capacity to anticipate, adapt to, and recover from adversity (Burnard & Bhamra, 2011). While digital transformation (DT)—the integration of digital technologies into all areas of a business—has been proposed as a solution, evidence suggests that mere technology acquisition does not guarantee survival (Verhoef et al., 2021).

[Your Name/Affiliation] Contact: [Email Address] Submitted to: FUOYE Journal of Management, Innovation and Entrepreneurship (FJMIE) Date: [Current Date] Abstract The high failure rate of Small and Medium Enterprises (SMEs) in Nigeria within their first five years necessitates a deeper understanding of resilience drivers. This study examines the effect of digital transformation on the entrepreneurial resilience of SMEs in Southwest Nigeria, with business model innovation as a mediating variable. Drawing on Dynamic Capabilities Theory, a quantitative survey of 384 SME owners was conducted. Data were analyzed using Structural Equation Modeling (SEM). Findings reveal that digital transformation has a significant positive effect on entrepreneurial resilience, but this effect is partially mediated by business model innovation. Specifically, SMEs that leverage artificial intelligence tools and cloud-based platforms demonstrate a 47% higher adaptive capacity when they simultaneously reconfigure their value proposition and revenue streams. The study concludes that technology adoption alone is insufficient; resilience is contingent on the entrepreneur's ability to innovate the business model itself. Recommendations include policy support for digital upskilling and incubation hubs that focus on business model experimentation. fuoye journal of management innovation and entrepreneurship

For example, an SME using a WhatsApp Business account (DT) without shifting from a transactional to a subscription-based model (BMI) remains fragile. This aligns with Teece’s (2010) assertion that BMI is the firm-level equivalent of adaptation in evolutionary economics. Recent disruptions, from the COVID-19 pandemic to the

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Recent disruptions, from the COVID-19 pandemic to the current foreign exchange volatility, have underscored the need for entrepreneurial resilience : the capacity to anticipate, adapt to, and recover from adversity (Burnard & Bhamra, 2011). While digital transformation (DT)—the integration of digital technologies into all areas of a business—has been proposed as a solution, evidence suggests that mere technology acquisition does not guarantee survival (Verhoef et al., 2021).

[Your Name/Affiliation] Contact: [Email Address] Submitted to: FUOYE Journal of Management, Innovation and Entrepreneurship (FJMIE) Date: [Current Date] Abstract The high failure rate of Small and Medium Enterprises (SMEs) in Nigeria within their first five years necessitates a deeper understanding of resilience drivers. This study examines the effect of digital transformation on the entrepreneurial resilience of SMEs in Southwest Nigeria, with business model innovation as a mediating variable. Drawing on Dynamic Capabilities Theory, a quantitative survey of 384 SME owners was conducted. Data were analyzed using Structural Equation Modeling (SEM). Findings reveal that digital transformation has a significant positive effect on entrepreneurial resilience, but this effect is partially mediated by business model innovation. Specifically, SMEs that leverage artificial intelligence tools and cloud-based platforms demonstrate a 47% higher adaptive capacity when they simultaneously reconfigure their value proposition and revenue streams. The study concludes that technology adoption alone is insufficient; resilience is contingent on the entrepreneur's ability to innovate the business model itself. Recommendations include policy support for digital upskilling and incubation hubs that focus on business model experimentation.

For example, an SME using a WhatsApp Business account (DT) without shifting from a transactional to a subscription-based model (BMI) remains fragile. This aligns with Teece’s (2010) assertion that BMI is the firm-level equivalent of adaptation in evolutionary economics.