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Academic Journal
Strategy & Entrepreneurship

“The Dynamics of Advice-Giving by Venture Capital Firms: Antecedents of Managerial Cognitive Effort”

This study investigates what leads managers to allocate constrained
the cognitive effort towards new versus familiar aspects of a business. We
explore this question in the context of venture capitalists’ (VCs) advice-giving
to their portfolio companies on business topics on which they have
advised other ventures in the past, versus on topics new to the VC that
may be outside their areas of expertise. We use both demand-side
(venture-driven) and supply-side (VC-driven) perspectives to build a novel
theory about the antecedents of cognitive effort underlying advice-giving.
By empirically testing our theory using a novel dataset, we find that both
perspectives explain important aspects of advice-giving dynamics for VCs.
This supports the idea that VCs, facing dynamic environments and capacity
constraints, definitely respond to stimuli from ventures, but also that VCs
change their behavior as they accumulate experience in ways that reflect
expanding confidence in their ability to add value and concerns about overextension
of their efforts, depending on the valence of VC experience. Our
findings provide novel insights to the antecedents of cognitive effort and to
research on the VC-venture relationship by exploring the dynamics of how
these advice-giving relationships evolve over time as VCs gain experience.
Details
Academic Journal
Strategy & Entrepreneurship

“The evolution and internalization of international joint ventures in a transitioning economy”

Although international joint ventures (IJVs) may mature over time and develop competitive viability, they maintain some risk of instability owing to their shared ownership. Such instability can ultimately lead to their internalization by one of the partners. In this study, we consider factors that influence (1) whether IJVs evolve toward becoming a wholly owned subsidiary, and (2) which parent (foreign or local) gains ownership of the venture. We use a sample of Hungarian joint ventures, and find that only when there is both a power imbalance between the parents and high levels of conflict is the likelihood that the joint venture converts to a wholly owned subsidiary enhanced. The extent to which the joint venture has learned from the foreign parent indirectly determines which parent gains full ownership. Extensive knowledge transfer to a joint venture in a transitioning economy combined with high levels of conflict increases the likelihood of the foreign parent gaining full ownership. In contrast, when there is extensive knowledge transfer and low conflict between the parents, the local parent is more likely to internalize the venture. Our results suggest that the relationship between partner power and outcomes in ventures is more complex than originally believed, and is contingent upon the level of conflict between the parents of the IJV.
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