入门还是夺冠:创业评估各阶段中性别化结果如何变化

Getting in the Door vs. Winning It All: How Gendered Outcomes Change Across Evaluation Stages in Entrepreneurship

ADMINISTRATIVE SCIENCE QUARTERLY · 2026
被引 0 · 同刊同年前 4%
人大 A+FT50UTD24ABS 4*

中文导读

研究发现,在多阶段创业竞赛中,女性领导的初创企业在初选阶段入选概率比男性高18.7%,但在最终获胜阶段低30.7%,揭示了评估阶段不同导致性别结果反转的现象。

Abstract

Research has consistently found that organizational evaluations produce gendered outcomes. We advance understanding of this inequality by examining how multistage evaluations—a common organizational design feature—shape gendered evaluative disparities. We integrate and extend research on evaluations, status, and inequality to theorize how gendered outcomes can vary between stages within a single, unified evaluation process—what we term “stakes-driven gender inequality.” Our theoretical framework centers on a ubiquitous feature of organizational multistage evaluation processes that is missing from prior theoretical accounts: escalating stakes across stages via increasingly binding commitments and rising cost of wrong selections. We conceptualize two stylized stages within the same evaluation process: a shortlisting stage (a preliminary selection of candidates for further consideration) and a winners stage (in which final, binding selections are made). Using data from a large multistage startup competition, we test our theory and find that female-led startups are 18.7 percent more likely than male-led startups to be selected in the shortlisting stage but 30.7 percent less likely to be selected in the winners stage. Mechanism tests in the shortlisting stage are most consistent with female-led startups being assessed as higher quality, whereas in the winners stage, we find evidence consistent with gendered performance expectations and evaluators’ risk aversion.

创业性别不平等组织评估多阶段评估