Direct ties, prior knowledge, and entrepreneurial resource acquisitions in China and Singapore/
Zhang, Jing
Direct ties, prior knowledge, and entrepreneurial resource acquisitions in China and Singapore/ created by Jing Zhang, Pek-Hooi Soh and Poh-kam Wong - International small business journal Volume 29, number 2 .
The entrepreneurship literature suggests that network ties are useful in mitigating the problem of information asymmetry faced by entrepreneurs when acquiring resources at the early stage of venture creation. We introduce prior knowledge of resource owners as an inverse measure of information asymmetry and investigate the contingent effect of prior knowledge and tie strength between entrepreneurs and resource owners on the likelihood of entrepreneurial resource acquisition. Using data from 378 high-tech ventures located in Beijing, China and Singapore, the analysis shows that strong ties are more important than weak ties, in entrepreneurs’ resource acquisition and this importance grows when resource owners have less prior knowledge to offset problems of information asymmetry. Similar network effects are found in both China and Singapore. The insignificant country difference suggests that the social network culture of the start-up community is universal.
02662426
Direct ties--Resource acquisition--China--Singapore--Prior knowledge
HD2341.167
Direct ties, prior knowledge, and entrepreneurial resource acquisitions in China and Singapore/ created by Jing Zhang, Pek-Hooi Soh and Poh-kam Wong - International small business journal Volume 29, number 2 .
The entrepreneurship literature suggests that network ties are useful in mitigating the problem of information asymmetry faced by entrepreneurs when acquiring resources at the early stage of venture creation. We introduce prior knowledge of resource owners as an inverse measure of information asymmetry and investigate the contingent effect of prior knowledge and tie strength between entrepreneurs and resource owners on the likelihood of entrepreneurial resource acquisition. Using data from 378 high-tech ventures located in Beijing, China and Singapore, the analysis shows that strong ties are more important than weak ties, in entrepreneurs’ resource acquisition and this importance grows when resource owners have less prior knowledge to offset problems of information asymmetry. Similar network effects are found in both China and Singapore. The insignificant country difference suggests that the social network culture of the start-up community is universal.
02662426
Direct ties--Resource acquisition--China--Singapore--Prior knowledge
HD2341.167