Fini, Riccardo
(2008)
Do Academic and Private Entrepreneurs differ? An empirical analysis of the Micro-Foundation of Entrepreneurial Orientation, [Dissertation thesis], Alma Mater Studiorum Università di Bologna.
Dottorato di ricerca in
Direzione aziendale, 20 Ciclo. DOI 10.6092/unibo/amsdottorato/1158.
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Abstract
This Doctoral Thesis focuses on the study of individual behaviours as a result of
organizational affiliation. The objective is to assess the Entrepreneurial Orientation of individuals
proving the existence of a set of antecedents to that measure returning a structural model of its
micro-foundation. Relying on the developed measurement model, I address the issue whether some
Entrepreneurs experience different behaviours as a result of their academic affiliation, comparing a
sample of ‘Academic Entrepreneurs’ to a control sample of ‘Private Entrepreneurs’ affiliated to a
matched sample of Academic Spin-offs and Private Start-ups.
Building on the Theory of the Planned Behaviour, proposed by Ajzen (1991), I present a
model of causal antecedents of Entrepreneurial Orientation on constructs extensively used and
validated, both from a theoretical and empirical perspective, in sociological and psychological
studies. I focus my investigation on five major domains: (a) Situationally Specific Motivation, (b)
Personal Traits and Characteristics, (c) Individual Skills, (d) Perception of the Business
Environment and (e) Entrepreneurial Orientation Related Dimensions.
I rely on a sample of 200 Entrepreneurs, affiliated to a matched sample of 72 Academic
Spin-offs and Private Start-ups. Firms are matched by Industry, Year of Establishment and
Localization and they are all located in the Emilia Romagna region, in northern Italy. I’ve gathered
data by face to face interviews and used a Structural Equation Modeling technique (Lisrel 8.80,
Joreskog, K., & Sorbom, D. 2006) to perform the empirical analysis.
The results show that Entrepreneurial Orientation is a multi-dimensional micro-founded
construct which can be better represented by a Second-Order Model. The t-tests on the latent means
reveal that the Academic Entrepreneurs differ in terms of: Risk taking, Passion, Procedural and
Organizational Skills, Perception of the Government, Context and University Supports. The
Structural models also reveal that the main differences between the two groups lay in the predicting
power of Technical Skills, Perceived Context Support and Perceived University Support in
explaining the Entrepreneurial Orientation Related Dimensions.
Abstract
This Doctoral Thesis focuses on the study of individual behaviours as a result of
organizational affiliation. The objective is to assess the Entrepreneurial Orientation of individuals
proving the existence of a set of antecedents to that measure returning a structural model of its
micro-foundation. Relying on the developed measurement model, I address the issue whether some
Entrepreneurs experience different behaviours as a result of their academic affiliation, comparing a
sample of ‘Academic Entrepreneurs’ to a control sample of ‘Private Entrepreneurs’ affiliated to a
matched sample of Academic Spin-offs and Private Start-ups.
Building on the Theory of the Planned Behaviour, proposed by Ajzen (1991), I present a
model of causal antecedents of Entrepreneurial Orientation on constructs extensively used and
validated, both from a theoretical and empirical perspective, in sociological and psychological
studies. I focus my investigation on five major domains: (a) Situationally Specific Motivation, (b)
Personal Traits and Characteristics, (c) Individual Skills, (d) Perception of the Business
Environment and (e) Entrepreneurial Orientation Related Dimensions.
I rely on a sample of 200 Entrepreneurs, affiliated to a matched sample of 72 Academic
Spin-offs and Private Start-ups. Firms are matched by Industry, Year of Establishment and
Localization and they are all located in the Emilia Romagna region, in northern Italy. I’ve gathered
data by face to face interviews and used a Structural Equation Modeling technique (Lisrel 8.80,
Joreskog, K., & Sorbom, D. 2006) to perform the empirical analysis.
The results show that Entrepreneurial Orientation is a multi-dimensional micro-founded
construct which can be better represented by a Second-Order Model. The t-tests on the latent means
reveal that the Academic Entrepreneurs differ in terms of: Risk taking, Passion, Procedural and
Organizational Skills, Perception of the Government, Context and University Supports. The
Structural models also reveal that the main differences between the two groups lay in the predicting
power of Technical Skills, Perceived Context Support and Perceived University Support in
explaining the Entrepreneurial Orientation Related Dimensions.
Tipologia del documento
Tesi di dottorato
Autore
Fini, Riccardo
Supervisore
Dottorato di ricerca
Ciclo
20
Coordinatore
Settore disciplinare
Settore concorsuale
Parole chiave
Entrepreneurial orientation, organizational membership, theory of the planned behaviour, structural equation modeling
URN:NBN
DOI
10.6092/unibo/amsdottorato/1158
Data di discussione
4 Giugno 2008
URI
Altri metadati
Tipologia del documento
Tesi di dottorato
Autore
Fini, Riccardo
Supervisore
Dottorato di ricerca
Ciclo
20
Coordinatore
Settore disciplinare
Settore concorsuale
Parole chiave
Entrepreneurial orientation, organizational membership, theory of the planned behaviour, structural equation modeling
URN:NBN
DOI
10.6092/unibo/amsdottorato/1158
Data di discussione
4 Giugno 2008
URI
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