创始人还是加入者?偏好与情境在塑造不同创业兴趣中的作用

Founder or Joiner? The Role of Preferences and Context in Shaping Different Entrepreneurial Interests

Management Science · 2015
被引 186 · 同刊同年前 10%
人大 A+FT50UTD24ABS 4*

中文导读

研究对比了潜在创业者和初创企业员工(加入者)在偏好和情境因素上的差异,发现创始人兴趣更受个人偏好驱动,而加入者兴趣则受偏好和情境共同影响。

Abstract

Entrepreneurial ventures rely not only on founders but also on “joiners”—start-up employees who are attracted to entrepreneurship, but who do not want to be founders themselves. Drawing on both preference and contextual theories of entrepreneurship, we examine how individuals’ interest in being a founder, a joiner, or neither forms prior to the first career transition. We find that although individuals with founder and joiner interests share similar preferences for entrepreneurial job attributes such as autonomy and risk, their preferences for these attributes also differ in significantly meaningful ways. Contextual factors such as norms, role models, and opportunities exhibit very different relationships with founder and joiner interests. Most interestingly, our results suggest that preferences and context interrelate in unique ways to shape different entrepreneurial interests. In particular, an interest in being a founder is most strongly associated with individuals’ preferences for entrepreneurial job attributes, whereas contextual factors do little to shape a founder interest in individuals who lack these preferences. An interest in being a joiner, on the other hand, is associated with both preferences and context, and this relationship is most pronounced for individuals with preferences that predispose them toward entrepreneurship. This study highlights joiners as a distinct type of entrepreneurial actor and demonstrates the importance of considering the interplay between preferences and context in the study of entrepreneurship. This paper was accepted by David Hsu, entrepreneurship and innovation.

创业偏好创业情境创始人兴趣加入者兴趣