Abstract:
Software entrepreneurship involves generating an idea of some product, development, testing,
installation, release, marketing and finally monetization of developed product. The concentration of
Software industry is on skill. Prior studies indicate that software companies face issues and quality gets
compromised in creation of a first-rate software product which includes time sharing, monetary
arrangements and allocations of resources. For high quality software products, conformance to
Software Process Improvement (SPI) models however requires a lot of cost, time, manpower and has
requirements to fulfil which are sometimes not affordable for the small enterprises or SMEs and quality
gets compromised. For this purpose, qualitative research is carried out as the already existing literature
does not riposte the problem specifically in the context of Pakistan to reconnoiter the innovation
performances of software firms with reference the process and SPI used – mainly CMMI as known as
Capability Maturity Model Integration. The research is exploratory in nature based on interpretivist
paradigm. Semi structured interviews of software corporations of Islamabad were conducted using
purposeful and maximum variance sampling techniques. Thematic analysis was later done using
ATLAS.ti software for results and analysis. The in-depth research discovered that the firms following
and trying to achieve CMMI levels or other high-level SPI are involved in delivering B2B services and
products. Their products are implemented and used on large-scale – they are expanding their business
and bringing continuous innovation. Almost all the firms even if they do not possess any SPI
framework, were found to be practicing agile software development in their firms. Thus, for
lightweights approaches such as Lean, Scrum, XP, Kanban, or Agile – SPI can be endorsed, and it
could be an easy way forward for firms. The study conforms to previous studies that in order to achieve
different maturities levels of CMMI, agile procedures can be equipped with for continuous product and
process innovation. That will allow software firms to nurture and capitalize in particular knowledge
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mechanisms while practicing agile software process for development. Henceforth, for the small firms
which believe that CMMI is expensive and not practical for their business – differing to widespread
belief – the compliance will undeniably aid them in preparing enhancements as they expand their
business. The proposed research adds value to the literature of both engineering and entrepreneurial
innovation. One prominent theoretic contribution of this research is merging the literature of software
process models, improvement processes, resource, and knowledge-based perspective into one context
and the in-depth understanding of involvement of SPI. The research is however limited to software
industry only and the results are software business based. Future research can be carried out to assess
if the company size and maturity could make it more prone to conform with SPI frameworks or not.