Entrepreneurial Identity and Role Expectations in Nascent Entrepreneurship
Journal article, 2015

Entrepreneurship has been defined as an individual ↔ new value creation dialogic. To study how entrepreneurial identity evolves, this article, drawing from entrepreneurial learning theory, adds an entrepreneurial role expectations dialogic. Longitudinal evidence from nascent entrepreneurs working in venture teams around invention disclosures offers illustration of dialogics, including how they evolve over time to build entrepreneurial identity. In contrast to the theory of planned behavior, the findings suggest that becoming entrepreneurial does not primarily stem from intention but rather from interacting with new value creation and role expectations in an immediate team environment.

becoming entrepreneurial

I↔NVC dialogic

nascent

role

identity

Author

Mats Lundqvist

Chalmers, Technology Management and Economics, Entrepreneurship and Strategy

Karen Williams Middleton

Chalmers, Technology Management and Economics, Entrepreneurship and Strategy

Pamela Nowell

Chalmers, Technology Management and Economics, Entrepreneurship and Strategy

Industry & higher education

0950-4222 (ISSN) 20436858 (eISSN)

Vol. 29 5 327-344

Driving Forces

Innovation and entrepreneurship

Subject Categories

Other Social Sciences

DOI

10.5367/ihe.2015.0272

More information

Created

10/8/2017