Exploring How Hope-Driven Decision-Making Influences Entrepreneurial Performance in A Precarious Ghanaian Fashion Industry: The Role of Personal and Sociocultural Factors
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University of Ghana
Abstract
The purpose of the study is to examine how precarious work environment influence the use of
hope in decision-making and its consequentially effect on entrepreneurs’ performance.
Specifically, the study explores the role of hope in navigating uncertain working conditions
and decision-making among Ghanaian fashion entrepreneurs, drawing on Neo-institutional
theory and the theory of practice. The study collected qualitative and quantitative data from
fashion entrepreneurs to gain a comprehensive understanding of their decision-making
processes and entrepreneurial performance. As none of the research methods are without
weakness it is argued that their integration offset the weaknesses of each, thereby offering a
deeper understanding of the factors underpinning decision-making and performance of
Ghanaian fashion entrepreneurs. The findings highlight nine key factors significantly
influencing decision-making and entrepreneurial performance namely: perceived uncertainty,
intuition, taste, experience, resilience, cultural intermediaries, cultural values, social networks,
and strife. The results revealed that perceived uncertainty, taste, experience, cultural
intermediaries, competition, and cultural values did not significantly influence the relationship
between decision-making and entrepreneurial performance. However, decision-making itself
directly and significantly impacted performance, with resilience emerging as a key mediating
factor in this relationship. These include deliberate strategies and subtle practices that emerge
from industry dynamics, such as hope, trend-following, leveraging relational infrastructure,
and adherence to institutional pressures. Based on the findings, the study recommends that
policymakers recognise and leverage context-specific resources—particularly hope and
resilience—as strategic assets that enable entrepreneurs to persevere, adapt, and thrive amidst
limited institutional support, informality, and precarity. These internal capabilities should be
integrated into entrepreneurship support programmes, training initiatives, and policy
frameworks to strengthen entrepreneurial capacity in resource-constrained environments.
Description
PhD. Human Resource Management
