Reconceptualizing entrepreneurial exit: Divergent exit routes and their drivers |
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Authors: | Karl Wennberg Johan Wiklund Dawn R. DeTienne Melissa S. Cardon |
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Affiliation: | 1. Imperial College London, South Kensington, London SW7 2AZ, United Kingdom;2. Stockholm School of Economics, P.O. Box 6501, SE-113 83 Stockholm, Sweden;3. Whitman School of Management, Syracuse University, 721 University Avenue/Suite 116, Syracuse NY 13244-2450, United States;4. Colorado State University, 207 Rockwell Hall, Fort Collins, CO 80523, United States;5. Pace University, Goldstein 227, Pleasantville NY 10570, United States |
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Abstract: | We develop a conceptual model of entrepreneurial exit which includes exit through liquidation and firm sale for both firms in financial distress and firms performing well. This represents four distinct exit routes. In developing the model, we complement the prevailing theoretical framework of exit as a utility-maximizing problem among entrepreneurs with prospect theory and its recent applications in liquidation of investment decisions. We empirically test the model using two Swedish databases which follow 1,735 new ventures and their founders over eight years. We find that entrepreneurs exit from both firms in financial distress and firms performing well. In addition, commonly examined human capital factors (entrepreneurial experience, age, education) and failure-avoidance strategies (outside job, reinvestment) differ substantially across the four exit routes, explaining some of the discrepancies in earlier studies. |
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Keywords: | Entrepreneurial exit Prospect theory Human capital |
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