4.5 Article

From distinctiveness to optimal distinctiveness: External endorsements, innovativeness and new venture funding

期刊

JOURNAL OF BUSINESS VENTURING
卷 39, 期 1, 页码 -

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ELSEVIER
DOI: 10.1016/j.jbusvent.2023.106340

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Innovation; Endorsements; Optimal distinctiveness; Legitimacy; Equity crowdfunding; Entrepreneurship; Reward crowdfunding; Resource acquisition

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This study examines how external endorsements influence the funding attractiveness of new ventures with varying degrees of innovation. The findings suggest that the effects of external endorsements depend on the unique relationship between legitimacy and distinctiveness for different audiences. Moreover, the performance implications of external endorsements differ for return-seeking audiences and novelty-seeking audiences.
We examine how external endorsements help new ventures with varying degrees of innovative-ness to attract funding. According to optimal distinctiveness theory, new ventures should be as different from competitors as legitimately possible. However, initial research suggests that new ventures can also buffer their legitimacy through external endorsements. We clarify that effects of such legitimacy buffers depend critically on an audience's unique legitimacy-distinctiveness relationship. Specifically, external endorsements lead to different predictions about shifts in optimal distinctiveness for return-seeking audiences compared to novelty-seeking audiences as relevant new venture funders. For return-seeking audiences, new ventures are perceived as less legitimate when they are non-innovative or radically innovative so that incrementally innovative new ventures are most attractive without endorsements. External endorsements can thus buffer the legitimacy of non-innovative and radically innovative new ventures, but they lead to different performance implications for a return-seeking audience. While non-innovative new ventures in-crease their attractiveness, only radically innovative new ventures can become optimally distinctive and outperform other distinctiveness configurations. In contrast, novelty-seeking audiences already have a higher tolerance for radically innovative new ventures, so the effects of external endorsements are less pronounced. Four empirical studies, using observational data and experiments in equity and reward-based crowdfunding, provide strong support for this theory and account for alternative explanations such as risk perceptions. In turn, we shed new light on the crucial, audience-specific function of external endorsements, namely, as a means to alter optimal distinctiveness levels.

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