This paper links new firm survival with growth, with a focus on the patterns in firms' growth paths. We theorise a Gambler's Ruin framework by arguing that new firm performance is best modelled as a random walk process, but that survival is nonrandom and depends primarily on the stock of accumulated resources. A firm's resources are either there when the business begins or are generated by successful periods - 'wins'. The empirical section tracks, over six years, the sales and survival/non-survival of 6247 UK start-ups which all began trading in the same quarter of 2004. We do not find strong evidence in favour of a taxonomy of growth paths, because we observe that every possible growth path seems to occur with roughly equal probability. Ho...
Focusing on entrepreneurship entry modes, we investigate two research questions regarding firm survi...
This study commenced with an interest in the question; why do some firms survive for considerably lo...
This paper investigates the determinants of the survival, between 2001 and 2004, of 622 small firms ...
The performance of new firms is important for economic development but research has produced limited...
A number of studies have been undertaken on industry dynamics or about the process by which new firm...
This paper investigates whether new venture performance becomes easier to predict as the venture age...
This paper investigates whether new venture performance becomes easier to predict as the venture age...
Does our ability to predict the performance of new ventures improve in the years after start-up? We ...
In our paper ‘New venture survival: A review and extension’ in the Interna- tional Journal of Manage...
Strategic entrepreneurship can be described as simultaneous opportunity seeking and advantage seekin...
Fast-growing firms are considered as the central drivers of job creation in the economy. There is an...
This paper shows that randomness can be an artefact of the methods used to examine firm performance....
New firms in emerging industries are subject to complex dynamic processes which defy the attempts at...
Do moderate-growth new firms have higher survival rates than fast-growing new firms? To address this...
This paper examines setbacks in the early growth of new firms. Growth interruptions mark the unfold...
Focusing on entrepreneurship entry modes, we investigate two research questions regarding firm survi...
This study commenced with an interest in the question; why do some firms survive for considerably lo...
This paper investigates the determinants of the survival, between 2001 and 2004, of 622 small firms ...
The performance of new firms is important for economic development but research has produced limited...
A number of studies have been undertaken on industry dynamics or about the process by which new firm...
This paper investigates whether new venture performance becomes easier to predict as the venture age...
This paper investigates whether new venture performance becomes easier to predict as the venture age...
Does our ability to predict the performance of new ventures improve in the years after start-up? We ...
In our paper ‘New venture survival: A review and extension’ in the Interna- tional Journal of Manage...
Strategic entrepreneurship can be described as simultaneous opportunity seeking and advantage seekin...
Fast-growing firms are considered as the central drivers of job creation in the economy. There is an...
This paper shows that randomness can be an artefact of the methods used to examine firm performance....
New firms in emerging industries are subject to complex dynamic processes which defy the attempts at...
Do moderate-growth new firms have higher survival rates than fast-growing new firms? To address this...
This paper examines setbacks in the early growth of new firms. Growth interruptions mark the unfold...
Focusing on entrepreneurship entry modes, we investigate two research questions regarding firm survi...
This study commenced with an interest in the question; why do some firms survive for considerably lo...
This paper investigates the determinants of the survival, between 2001 and 2004, of 622 small firms ...