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A Scientific Approach to Entrepreneurial Decision Making: Evidence from a Randomized Control Trial
by
Cordova, Alessandro
, Gambardella, Alfonso
, Camuffo, Arnaldo
, Spina, Chiara
in
Businesspeople
/ Clinical trials
/ Control groups
/ Decision making
/ Entrepreneurs
/ Entrepreneurship
/ False positive results
/ Feasibility
/ Feedback
/ Heuristic
/ Methods
/ New business enterprises
/ randomized control trial
/ scientific method
/ startup
/ Startups
/ Training
2020
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A Scientific Approach to Entrepreneurial Decision Making: Evidence from a Randomized Control Trial
by
Cordova, Alessandro
, Gambardella, Alfonso
, Camuffo, Arnaldo
, Spina, Chiara
in
Businesspeople
/ Clinical trials
/ Control groups
/ Decision making
/ Entrepreneurs
/ Entrepreneurship
/ False positive results
/ Feasibility
/ Feedback
/ Heuristic
/ Methods
/ New business enterprises
/ randomized control trial
/ scientific method
/ startup
/ Startups
/ Training
2020
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While trying to remove the title from your shelf something went wrong :( Kindly try again later!
Do you wish to request the book?
A Scientific Approach to Entrepreneurial Decision Making: Evidence from a Randomized Control Trial
by
Cordova, Alessandro
, Gambardella, Alfonso
, Camuffo, Arnaldo
, Spina, Chiara
in
Businesspeople
/ Clinical trials
/ Control groups
/ Decision making
/ Entrepreneurs
/ Entrepreneurship
/ False positive results
/ Feasibility
/ Feedback
/ Heuristic
/ Methods
/ New business enterprises
/ randomized control trial
/ scientific method
/ startup
/ Startups
/ Training
2020
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A Scientific Approach to Entrepreneurial Decision Making: Evidence from a Randomized Control Trial
Journal Article
A Scientific Approach to Entrepreneurial Decision Making: Evidence from a Randomized Control Trial
2020
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Overview
A classical approach to collecting and elaborating information to make entrepreneurial decisions combines search heuristics, such as trial and error, effectuation, and confirmatory search. This paper develops a framework for exploring the implications of a more scientific approach to entrepreneurial decision making. The panel sample of our randomized control trial includes 116 Italian startups and 16 data points over a period of about one year. Both the treatment and control groups receive 10 sessions of general training on how to obtain feedback from the market and gauge the feasibility of their idea. We teach the treated startups to develop frameworks for predicting the performance of their idea and conduct rigorous tests of their hypotheses, very much as scientists do in their research. We let the firms in the control group instead follow their intuitions about how to assess their idea, which has typically produced fairly standard search heuristics. We find that entrepreneurs who behave like scientists perform better, are more likely to pivot to a different idea, and are not more likely to drop out than the control group in the early stages of the startup. These results are consistent with the main prediction of our theory: a scientific approach improves precision—it reduces the odds of pursuing projects with false positive returns and increases the odds of pursuing projects with false negative returns.
This paper was accepted by Marie Thursby, entrepreneurship and innovation.
Publisher
INFORMS,Institute for Operations Research and the Management Sciences
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