4.7 Article

Fortune favors the experienced: entrepreneurs' Internet-Era Imprint, digital entrepreneurship and venture capital

Journal

INFORMATION PROCESSING & MANAGEMENT
Volume 60, Issue 4, Pages -

Publisher

ELSEVIER SCI LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.ipm.2023.103406

Keywords

Digital entrepreneurship; Digital entrepreneur; Internet -era imprint; Venture capital; Signal; Socioeconomic status

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This study focuses on the influence of entrepreneurs' Internet-era imprint on digital entrepreneurship level and venture capital for entrepreneurial firms. The findings suggest that entrepreneurs with Internet-era imprint are more inclined to use digital technologies in their entrepreneurial process, leading to higher digital entrepreneurship level. Digital entrepreneurship driven by imprint acts as a quality signal, increasing the success rate of accessing venture capital. Venture capital providers value entrepreneurs' Internet-era imprint rather than their personal socioeconomic status, as it is more relevant to the success of digital entrepreneurship.
This study focuses on entrepreneurs' Internet-era imprint and its effect on the level of digital entrepreneurship and entrepreneurial firms' venture capital. From the perspective of imprinting theory and signaling theory, we find that entrepreneurs with Internet-era imprint are more willing to use digital technologies in their entrepreneurial process, which raises the level of digital entrepreneurship within a firm. Imprint-driven digital entrepreneurship acts as a quality signal to increase the success rate of access to venture capital from financial institutions. In addition, venture capital providers do not value the entrepreneurs' personal socioeconomic status for easier access to external resources, but rather their Internet-era imprint, which is more relevant to the success of digital entrepreneurship. Our hypotheses are supported using data from the Chinese private entrepreneurial firms in 2016. Overall, our efforts to extend imprinting theory to digital entrepreneurship literature suggest that the Internet-era imprint persists in the digital entrepre-neurial process. Moreover, this study enriches the signaling mechanisms in entrepreneurial venture capital research by conceptualizing digital entrepreneurship as a signal.

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