Results 171 to 180 of about 644,033 (203)
Some of the next articles are maybe not open access.

Plunging into the sea, again? A study of serial entrepreneurship in China

Asia Pacific Journal of Management, 2008
While it stands to reason that serial entrepreneurs—individuals who have founded more than one new venture—should achieve higher levels of success than novices, to date researchers have found little support for this proposition. Is this rather perplexing result only limited to the developed countries in which most research has been conducted?
Sali Li, William Schulze, Zhineng Li
openaire   +1 more source

Determinants of novice, portfolio, and serial entrepreneurship: an occupational choice approach

Small Business Economics, 2020
Emanuela Carbonara   +2 more
semanticscholar   +1 more source

The Antecedents of Serial Entrepreneurship: the Role of Entrepreneurs’ Narcissism and Human Capital

2019
Extant researches highlighted controversial results regarding the relation between serial entrepreneurs, i.e. those who started business sequentially (Wright, et al., 2007), and start-ups' growth and survival. The prior entrepreneurial experience of serial entrepreneurs enhances the opportunity Identification capability and the easiness in acquiring ...
Leonelli Simona, Masciarelli Francesca
openaire   +5 more sources

Serial entrepreneurship and born-global new-ventures. A case

2008
During the last decade in a lot of different countries a new type of firms - Born Globals firms (BGs) or International New Ventures (INVs) - have emerged in opposition to the traditional view of internationalization. BGs address the internationalization issue at the early stage, targeting foreign markets since inception.
PRESUTTI, MANUELA   +2 more
openaire   +1 more source

Serial Entrepreneurship and the Impact of Credit Constraints of Economic Development [PDF]

open access: possible, 2014
This paper argues that the impact of credit constraints on the entrepreneurial activity and, via it, on economic development, crucially depends on the serial correlation in arrival of entrepreneurial ideas. Using an occupational choice model, it demonstrates that calibrating the serial correlation to match the amount of repeated entrepreneurship ...
openaire  

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