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A new study led by Kent Business School, University of Kent, finds that while the mumpreneur identity may enable women to participate in the business world and be recognized as "proper" entrepreneurs, this success is dependent on alignment with the conventional masculine norms of entrepreneurship.

These conventional masculine behaviors include working long hours and an ongoing dedicated commitment to the success of a .

Published in the International Small Business Journal and based on an interview study of women business owners, the study highlights the interviewees' belief that entrepreneurship and motherhood are compatible but challenges the claim in existing research that mumpreneurship represents a new feminized identity and a different way of doing business.

The study conceptualizes the mumpreneur as the hybrid combination of masculine and feminine behaviors, examining the tensions that emerge in simultaneously running a business and a family, and considering if these are managed through the curtailment of entrepreneurial activity.

The study found that for those women who see themselves as entrepreneurial mums, entrepreneurial curtailment is not an option and conventional masculine behaviors are valued higher than the feminine in the context of successful business development.

The consequences of this hybrid behavior are significant:

For a woman to be identified as a "normal" entrepreneur, feminine behaviors are accepted alongside masculine commitment to business, so long as they are not disruptive of the latter. Mumpreneurs must balance both behaviors yet avoid engaging in excessive feminine conduct that may restrict business development or devalue their entrepreneurial activities. Mumpreneurs perceived as "too feminine" in their business activities are marginalized as unengaged in "proper" entrepreneurship, creating a hierarchy of business identities.

Patricia Lewis, Professor of Management at the University of Kent and Principal Investigator, said, "The mumpreneur has undoubtedly had a on the way 's entrepreneurship is viewed. Nevertheless, our study demonstrates that it has not disrupted the dominant discourses of masculine or gendered power relations in the field. Women are still in a position of being committed to both sides of the balance between business and motherhood but are devalued as entrepreneurs when devoting time to their children rather than business."

More information: Patricia Lewis et al, Postfeminism, hybrid mumpreneur identities and the reproduction of masculine entrepreneurship, International Small Business Journal: Researching Entrepreneurship (2021). DOI: 10.1177/02662426211013791

Provided by University of Kent