From zero to hero : entrepreneurial experience and its motivational dynamics
This dissertation proposes a theoretical framework of how personal and external motivations may shape entrepreneurs' early venture creation experience, conceptualized as a simultaneous pursuit of the dual goals of venture uniqueness and commercial viability, throughout the founding and growt...
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Format: | Theses and Dissertations |
Language: | English |
Published: |
2017
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Subjects: | |
Online Access: | http://hdl.handle.net/10356/72491 |
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Institution: | Nanyang Technological University |
Language: | English |
Summary: | This dissertation proposes a theoretical framework of how personal and external
motivations may shape entrepreneurs' early venture creation experience,
conceptualized as a simultaneous pursuit of the dual goals of venture uniqueness
and commercial viability, throughout the founding and growth phases of venture
creation. I then develop propositions on how such a psychological and behavioral
experience may provide the learning context where entrepreneurs clarify their role
schema and the relationship among their multiple role identities. Based on this
reasoning, I then develop additional propositions and hypotheses regarding the
moderating role of entrepreneurial experience on how role identities motivate
entrepreneurs' cognition and behavior, specifically, when generating and
evaluating creative business ideas. Across three studies, I found preliminary
support for this framework. Particularly, entrepreneurial experience moderates the
relationship between role identities and creative behavior such that role
identification predicts creativity evaluation criteria consistent with the role schema,
only among experienced entrepreneurs but not among nascent entrepreneurs.
Moreover, when one (but not the other) role is made salient, experienced
entrepreneurs (but not nascent entrepreneurs) still fulfill the schema of the nonsalient
role. This work contributes to the literatures on entrepreneurial experience,
entrepreneurial motivation, and creativity. Practical implications and future
directions are discussed. |
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