Published2010Management Science

Workplace peers and entrepreneurship

Authors: Nanda, Sorensen

Abstract

We examine whether the likelihood of entrepreneurial activity is related to the prior career experiences of an individual's coworkers, using a unique matched employer-employee panel data set. We argue that coworkers can increase the likelihood that an individual will perceive entrepreneurial opportunities as well as increase his or her motivation to pursue those opportunities. We find that an individual is more likely to become an entrepreneur if his or her coworkers have been entrepreneurs before. Peer influences also appear to be substitutes for other sources of entrepreneurial influence: we find that peer influences are strongest for those who have less exposure to entrepreneurship in other aspects

Keywords

Entrepreneurshippeersorganizational studiespersonnel

Tags of Social Finance

#Manager & Firm Behavior#Archival Empirical