Abstract

This study extends the literature on self-employment and entrepreneurship by offering empirical insights into the factors that influence technology entrepreneurs at the early stages of the new venture creation process. Specifically, this research focuses on how technology entrepreneurs assess opportunities at the start of the process. Using data from technology entrepreneurs in Ireland, we analyze differences between part-time entrepreneurs and full-time entrepreneurs and discover that not all entrepreneurs attach importance to activities that were previously considered fundamental. While we confirm that opportunity cost, market assessment, and financial analysis are critical and ever-present, we argue that aspiring technology entrepreneurs must be cognizant that when employment-related costs are included as a dimension of opportunity costs, the level and importance of opportunity costs rise for both part-time and full-time entrepreneurs. We also find that whether nascent entrepreneurs work full-time or part-time on the new venture has an impact on which activities are completed and at what point of the process they are completed. For example, we show that part-time entrepreneurs identify markets earlier than full-time entrepreneurs whereas the opposite is true when it comes to financial data preparation. We argue that a greater understanding of these issues will help technology entrepreneurs to make informed decisions. As a result, our findings may influence an aspiring entrepreneur’s decision to start a new venture. They also have ramifications for investors and support services. Consequently, we discuss theoretical contributions, practical ramifications, and future research possibilities.

Highlights

  • This research is motivated by a realization that the success of new businesses is crucial to world economies [1,2] as well as the rate at which new businesses emerge annually [3].There are already many studies on entrepreneurship examining what entrepreneurs do, how they think and how they discover opportunities [4,5,6,7,8,9,10]

  • All participants in the study were actively engaged in technology entrepreneurship, the nascence of which is evidenced by the fact that 77% of respondents were in receipt of accelerator or incubation center support programs

  • This research primarily sought to confirm whether conventionally held beliefs about the entrepreneurial process applied to those in the early stages of new business development

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Summary

Introduction

This research is motivated by a realization that the success of new businesses is crucial to world economies [1,2] as well as the rate at which new businesses emerge annually [3].There are already many studies on entrepreneurship examining what entrepreneurs do, how they think and how they discover opportunities [4,5,6,7,8,9,10]. While the importance of exploiting opportunities is unquestionable for any successful venture [15,16], we argue that some type of evaluation is required in the early phases of the entrepreneurial process. This research focuses on how entrepreneurs assess opportunities in the early stages of the process and examines whether traditional evaluation approaches still apply and whether such applications are universal in a real-world context.

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