2016
DOI: 10.1111/jsbm.12273
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The Family's Financial Support as a “Poisoned Gift”: A Family Embeddedness Perspective on Entrepreneurial Intentions

Abstract: We argue that greater availability of financial support by the family for creating a new venture entails stronger financial and non‐financial obligations. Cognizant of these obligations, potential founders anticipate negative performance implications for the planned firm and threats to the family system in the case of their non‐fulfillment. We thus postulate that the formation of actual entrepreneurial intentions is less likely the greater the available financial support. We confirm this by studying a sample o… Show more

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Cited by 84 publications
(118 citation statements)
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References 154 publications
(287 reference statements)
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“…Full description of the GUESSS project is available at the website www.guesssurvey.org. Some works based on the GUESSS project have already been published in entrepreneurship journals: see for example Sieger and Monsen (2015), Sieger and Minola (2016), Zellweger, Sieger, and Halter (2011). 3.…”
Section: Notesmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Full description of the GUESSS project is available at the website www.guesssurvey.org. Some works based on the GUESSS project have already been published in entrepreneurship journals: see for example Sieger and Monsen (2015), Sieger and Minola (2016), Zellweger, Sieger, and Halter (2011). 3.…”
Section: Notesmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…While most studies on university entrepreneurship focus on single levels of analysis (e.g., individual or country level), our multilevel approach uses both individual-and university-level factors to explain students' entrepreneurial progress (Morris et al 2016). In addition, studying the progression along the entrepreneurial ladder represents a step ahead in student entrepreneurship research, which is mostly focused on either entrepreneurship intention or nascent entrepreneurship phenomena (Sieger and Minola 2016); rather than predicting a specific stage of the entrepreneurial process, or the transition between two stages, our focus has been on whether internationalization promotes the climbing toward any upper stage on the ladder. This serves to a broader and deeper understanding of how universities spur entrepreneurship.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Hence, our analysis is based on a large sample generated in the GUESSS project in 2011. GUESSS data have recently been used to study students' entrepreneurial cognition (e.g., Zellweger et al 2011;Bergmann 2015;Sieger and Minola 2016 Students climbing the entrepreneurial ladder million students across 498 Universities, yielding 93,265 responses (response rate estimated as 6.3 %, 3 an acceptable value comparing to other GUESSS data collection waves and a number of e-mail student surveys, cf. Morris et al 2016).…”
Section: Samplementioning
confidence: 99%
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“…Parents behave for the benefit of their children and prepare them for subsequent family stages (Rodgers and White, ). As a result, at this stage, parents are eager to preserve business resources and not to invest them in high‐risk initiatives such as CV (Chaulk et al , ; Sieger and Minola, forthcoming).…”
Section: Theoretical Frameworkmentioning
confidence: 99%