Competing models of entrepreneurial intentions

被引:2512
|
作者
Krueger, NF [1 ]
Reilly, MD
Carsrud, AL
机构
[1] Boise State Univ, Boise, ID 83725 USA
[2] Montana State Univ, Bozeman, MT 59717 USA
[3] Univ Calif Los Angeles, Los Angeles, CA USA
关键词
D O I
10.1016/S0883-9026(98)00033-0
中图分类号
F [经济];
学科分类号
02 ;
摘要
Why are intentions interesting to those who care about new venture formation? Entrepreneurship is a way of thinking, away of thinking that emphasizes opportunities over threats. The opportunity identification process is clearly an intentional process, and, therefore, entrepreneurial intentions clearly merit our attention. Equally important, they offer a means to better explain-and predict-entrepreneurship. We don't start a business as a reflex, do we? We may respond to the conditions around us, such as an intriguing market niche, by starting a new venture. Yet, we think about it first; we process the cues from the environment around us and set about constructing the perceived opportunity into a viable business proposition. In the psychological literature, intentions have proven the best predictor of planned behavior particularly when that behavior is rare, hard to observe, or involves unpredictable rime lags New businesses emerge over time and involve considerable planning. Thus, entrepreneurship is exactly the type of planned behavior (Bird 1988; Katz and Gartner 1988) for which intention models are ideally suited. If intention models prove useful in understanding business venture formation intentions, they offer a coherent, parsimonious, highly-generalizable, and robust theoretical framework for understanding and prediction. Empirically, we have learned that situational (Sor example, employment status or informational cues) or individual (for example, demographic characteristics or personality traits) variables are poor predictors. That is, predicting entrepreneurial activities by modeling only situational or personal factors usually resulted in disappointingly small explanatory power and even smaller predictive validity. Intentions models offer us a significant opportunity to increase our ability to understand and predict entrepreneurial activity. The current study compares two intention-based models in terms of their ability to predict entrepreneurial intentions: Ajzen's theory of planned behavior (TPB) and Shapero's model of the entrepreneurial event (SEE). Ajzen argues that intentions in general depend on perceptions of personal attractiveness, social norms. and feasibility. Shapero argues that entrepreneurial intentions depend on perceptions of personal desirability feasibility, and propensity to act. We employed a competing models approach, comparing regression analyses results for the two models. We tested for overall statistical fit and how well the results supported each component of the models. The sample consisted of strident subjects facing imminent career decisions. Results offered strong statistical support for both models. (1) Intentions are the single best predictor of any planned behavior, including entrepreneurship. Understanding the antecedents of intentions increases our understanding of the intended behavior. Attitudes influence behavior by their impact on intentions. Intentions and attitudes depend on the situation and person. Accordingly, intentions models will predict behavior better than either individual (for example, personality) or situational (for example, employment status) variables. Predictive power is critical to better post hoc explanations of entrepreneurial behavior; intentions models provide superior predictive validity. (2) Personal and situational variables typically have an indirect influence on entrepreneurship through influencing key attitudes and general motivation to act For instance role models will affect entrepreneurial intentions only if they change attitudes and beliefs such as perceived self-efficacy Intention-based models describe how exogenous influences (for example, perceptions of resource availability) change intentions and, ultimately, venture creation. (3) The versatility and robustness of intention models support the broader rise of comprehensive, theory-driven, testable process models in entrepreneurship ;research (MacMillan and Katz 1992). intentional behavior helps explain and model why many entrepreneurs decide to start a business long before they scan for opportunities. Understanding intentions helps researchers and theoreticians to understand related phenomena. These include: what triggers opportunity scanning the sources of ideas for a business venture, and how the venture ultimately becomes a reality. Intention models can describe how entrepreneurial training molds intentions in subsequent venture creation (for example, how does training in business plan writing change attitudes and intentions?). Past research has extensively explored aspects of new venture plans once writ ten. Intentionality argues instead that we study the planning process itself for determinants of venturing behavior We can apply intentions models to other strategic decisions such as the decision to grow or exit a business. Researchers can model the intentions of critical stakeholders in the venture, such as venture capitalists' intentions toward investing inn given company. Finally management researchers can explore the overlaps between venture formation intentions and venture opportunity identification. Entrepreneurs themselves (and those who reach and train them) should benefit from a better understanding of their own motives. The lens provided by intentions affords them the opportunity to understand why they made certain choices in their vision of the new venture. Intentions-based models pro vide practical insight to any planned behavior. This allows Its to better encourage the identification of personally-viable, personally-credible opportunities. Teachers, consultants, advisors, and entrepreneurs should benefit from a better general understanding of how intentions are formed, as well as a specific understanding of how founders' beliefs, perceptions, and motives coalesce into the intent to start a business. This understanding offers sizable diagnostic power, thus entrepreneurship educators can use this model to better understand the motivations and intentions of students and trainees and to help students and trainees understand their own motivations and intentions. Carefully targeted training becomes possible. For example, ethnic and gender differences in career choice are largely explained by self-efficacy differences. Applied work in psychology and sociology tells us that we already know how to remediate self-efficacy differences. Raising entrepreneurial efficacies will raise perceptions of venture feasibility, thus increasing the perception of opportunity. Economic and community development hinges not on chasing smokestacks, but on growing new businesses. To encourage economic development in the form of new enterprises we must first increase perceptions of feasibility and desirability. Policy initiatives Ir ill increase business formations if those initiatives positively influence attitudes and thus influence intentions. The growing trends of downsizing and outsourcing make this more than a sterile academic exercise. Even if we successfully increase the quantity and quality of potential entrepreneurs, we must also promote such perceptions among critical stakeholders including suppliers, financiers, neighbors, government officials, and the larger community. The findings of this study argue that promoting entrepreneurial intentions by promoting public perceptions of feasibility and desirability is nor just desirable; promoting entrepreneurial intentions is also thoroughly feasible. (C) 2000 Elsevier Science Inc.
引用
收藏
页码:411 / 432
页数:22
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [1] Predictive Models for Nurses' Entrepreneurial Intentions Using Comparison of Competing Models
    Kim, Ye-Jung
    Lim, Ji-Young
    [J]. INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF ENVIRONMENTAL RESEARCH AND PUBLIC HEALTH, 2022, 19 (10)
  • [2] THE INFLUENCE OF ROLE MODELS ON ENTREPRENEURIAL INTENTIONS
    Van Auken, Howard
    Fry, Fred L.
    Stephens, Paul
    [J]. JOURNAL OF DEVELOPMENTAL ENTREPRENEURSHIP, 2006, 11 (02) : 157 - 167
  • [3] Inspiring Role Models and Student Entrepreneurial Intentions
    Nowinski, Witold
    Haddoud, Mohamed Yacine
    [J]. ADVANCING RESEARCH IN ENTREPRENEURSHIP IN THE GLOBAL CONTEXT, 2016, : 765 - 776
  • [4] Effects of role models and gender on students' entrepreneurial intentions
    Karimi, Saeid
    Biemans, Harm J. A.
    Lans, Thomas
    Chizari, Mohammad
    Mulder, Martin
    [J]. EUROPEAN JOURNAL OF TRAINING AND DEVELOPMENT, 2014, 38 (08) : 694 - 727
  • [5] From entrepreneurial passion to entrepreneurial intentions: The role of entrepreneurial passion, innovativeness, and curiosity in driving entrepreneurial intentions
    Syed, Imran
    Butler, Jonathan Craig
    Smith, Ronda M.
    Cao, Xian
    [J]. PERSONALITY AND INDIVIDUAL DIFFERENCES, 2020, 157
  • [6] The impact of role models on entrepreneurial intentions and behavior: a review of the literature
    Abbasianchavari A.
    Moritz A.
    [J]. Management Review Quarterly, 2021, 71 (1) : 1 - 40
  • [7] ENTREPRENEURIAL INTENTIONS AS A PRECONDITION FOR ENTREPRENEURIAL ACTIVITY
    Kulakovskyi, Taras
    Kulakovska, Olha
    [J]. SCIENCE AND EDUCATION, 2016, (05): : 194 - 200
  • [8] Gamification and entrepreneurial intentions
    Ruiz-Alba, Jose L.
    Soares, Anabela
    Angel Rodriguez-Molina, Miguel
    Banoun, Arnaud
    [J]. JOURNAL OF SMALL BUSINESS AND ENTERPRISE DEVELOPMENT, 2019, 26 (05) : 661 - 683
  • [9] ANALYSIS OF SPORT ENTREPRENEURIAL INTENTIONS THROUGH LINEAR MODELS VS QCA
    Huertas Gonzalez-Serrano, Maria
    Calabuig Moreno, Ferran
    Crespo Hervas, Josep
    [J]. MATERIALES PARA LA HISTORIA DEL DEPORTE, 2018, (16): : 6 - 15
  • [10] The Effects of Corruption in Entrepreneurial Ecosystems on Entrepreneurial Intentions
    Ceresia, Francesco
    Mendola, Claudio
    [J]. ADMINISTRATIVE SCIENCES, 2019, 9 (04)