Published May 14, 2026 | Version v1

HUMAN CAPITAL AND STAKEHOLDER INTEGRATION: A CONCEPTUAL FRAMEWORK FOR KNOWLEDGE ACQUISITION IN SMES

Authors/Creators

  • 1. 1. Ph. D Research Scholar, School of Management Studies, Cochin University of Science and Technology, Kerala.

Description

Knowledge acquisition is critical for the survival and growth of community-based and rural small and medium enterprises (SMEs), particularly where financial, technological, and institutional resources are limited. In such contexts, firms depend on knowledge residing outside organizational boundaries, embedded within relationships with stakeholders. This conceptual paper explores how stakeholder integration facilitates knowledge acquisition in SMEs and examines the role of human capital in enabling this process.The paper builds on stakeholder theory and the knowledge-based view of the firm to explain how SMEs engage external actors including customers, suppliers, community members, and local institutions as sources of valuable knowledge. Stakeholder integration is discussed through four distinct mechanisms namely buffering, co-optation, mutual learning, and meta-problem solving. Each mechanism represents a different way in which firms structure and manage interactions with stakeholders to support learning. The paper argues that the effectiveness of these mechanisms depends largely on the quality of human capital within the firm.By emphasizing stakeholder integration as a socially embedded process of knowledge transmission, the study contributes to the literature on SME knowledge management and community-based entrepreneurship. It highlights how localized interaction and collaborative engagement support the exchange of context-specific knowledge.

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