Incubators are reputed to be key institutions for the creation and growth
of viable and successful entrepreneurial ventures. One mechanism
through which their beneficial action should unfold is that incubatees
could be more likely to stipulate alliances with third parties. We explore,
both theoretically and empirically, the possibility that this crucial
bridging function performed by incubators is indeed contingent on
both (a) the type of alliance that start-ups are seeking for, where we
distinguish between R&D and commercial alliances; (b) the specific
ownership structure of the start-ups. Our analysis is based on a dataset
of 1766 incubatees and non-incubatees young innovative companies.
Results highlight that incubators accomplish their bridging role
depending on the two above-mentioned contingencies. In particular,
incubated start-ups show higher probabilities than non-incubates to
stipulate R&D alliances only if they are university-backed, while
commercial alliances figure as a prerogative of incubatees only when
these latter are business-backed.
Dettaglio pubblicazione
2024, ECONOMICS OF INNOVATION AND NEW TECHNOLOGY, Pages -
Do incubatees form more alliances? Nature of the alliance and start-up ownership as contingencies (01a Articolo in rivista)
Grilli Luca, Marzano Riccardo
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