A pressing question in entrepreneurial research is where opportunities come from. Prior research indicates that some opportunities stem from known parameters and outcomes; some are discovered through engagement with unknown but knowable factors; and others are unknowable until brought into being through a creative process. This paper explores the second and more prevailing view in entrepreneurial research – that individuals discover business opportunity – and examines how high-growth entrepreneurs perceive opportunity through engagement with the world. Survey results, based on responses from 165 women entrepreneurs in high-growth startups, indicate that individuals with a strong discover mindset act and think in ways that support opportunit...
Extant literature lacks the integrative theory of first-time (pure) nascent entrepreneurs’ ongoing o...
Cognitive elements are some of the most influential features characterizing the “entrepreneurial min...
[[abstract]]Opportunity recognition is often an initial, but crucial step in the entrepreneurial pro...
Abstract: A pressing question in entrepreneurial research is where opportunities come from. Prior re...
Purpose – Whether opportunities are discovered or created by entrepreneurs is a foundational questio...
This study examined multiple dimensions of opportunity recognition (OR) among a group of excepti...
Purpose: Women contribute to economic growth. Changing global sociocultural conditions have increase...
Purpose: This research studies an important, but relatively unexplored entrepreneurial aspect: motiv...
In recent years the number of women-owned firms with employees has expanded at three times the rate ...
To be able to act efficiently and productively on a certain market, an entrepreneur must have a perc...
While women entrepreneurs have significantly contributed to the U.S. economy, their enterprises have...
Recent scholarly works in entrepreneurial opportunities have shifted towards the two main sources of...
The purpose of this study is to explore how individuals go about identifying new business opportunit...
Pioneering opportunity acknowledgment assumes a significant job in perceiving and form an open door ...
In this article we report on the results of a survey of innovative practices in a sample of U.S. fir...
Extant literature lacks the integrative theory of first-time (pure) nascent entrepreneurs’ ongoing o...
Cognitive elements are some of the most influential features characterizing the “entrepreneurial min...
[[abstract]]Opportunity recognition is often an initial, but crucial step in the entrepreneurial pro...
Abstract: A pressing question in entrepreneurial research is where opportunities come from. Prior re...
Purpose – Whether opportunities are discovered or created by entrepreneurs is a foundational questio...
This study examined multiple dimensions of opportunity recognition (OR) among a group of excepti...
Purpose: Women contribute to economic growth. Changing global sociocultural conditions have increase...
Purpose: This research studies an important, but relatively unexplored entrepreneurial aspect: motiv...
In recent years the number of women-owned firms with employees has expanded at three times the rate ...
To be able to act efficiently and productively on a certain market, an entrepreneur must have a perc...
While women entrepreneurs have significantly contributed to the U.S. economy, their enterprises have...
Recent scholarly works in entrepreneurial opportunities have shifted towards the two main sources of...
The purpose of this study is to explore how individuals go about identifying new business opportunit...
Pioneering opportunity acknowledgment assumes a significant job in perceiving and form an open door ...
In this article we report on the results of a survey of innovative practices in a sample of U.S. fir...
Extant literature lacks the integrative theory of first-time (pure) nascent entrepreneurs’ ongoing o...
Cognitive elements are some of the most influential features characterizing the “entrepreneurial min...
[[abstract]]Opportunity recognition is often an initial, but crucial step in the entrepreneurial pro...