Starting Anew: Entrepreneurial Intentions and Realizations Subsequent to Business Closure
2006-03-29
Research Paper
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(ERS 2006 015 ORG.pdf, 0.3MB) |
We know that most businesses fail. But what is not known is to what extent failed ex-entrepreneurs set up in business again. The objective of this article is to explore potential and realized serial entrepreneurship. Based on three disciplines – psychology, labour economics, and the sociology of careers – we formulated propositions to explain (potential) serial entrepreneurship. We tested these propositions empirically with a longitudinal database of 79 businesses that had closed within 5 years after start-up. A large majority of the ex-entrepreneurs maintained entrepreneurial intentions subsequent to business closure, while almost one in four business closures were followed by a new business (serial entrepreneurship). Our results show that the determinants of restart intention (potential serial entrepreneurship) and actual restart realization (realized serial entrepreneurship) are different. Ex-entrepreneurs who are young, who worked full-time in their prior business, and who recall their business management experience positively are likely to harbour restart intentions. Only ‘being located in an urban region’ transpired to have a significant effect on the start of a new business. Although entrepreneurial intentions are a necessary condition for the start of a new business, this study shows that the explanation of entrepreneurial intentions is distinct from the explanation of new business formation subsequent to business closure.
- The Netherlands
- Business Closure
- Entrepreneurial Intentions
- New Business Formation
- Serial Entrepreneurship
- O32 : Management of Technological Innovation and R&D
- M : Business Administration and Business Economics; Marketing; Accounting
- M13 : New Firms; Startups
- business
- entrepreneur
- entrepreneurship
- intention
- business closure
- closure
- realization
- experience
- ex-entrepreneur
- research
- economic
- study
- labour
- indicator
- career
- westhead
- personality
- opportunity
- market
- effect