Attention allocation in venture capital investment selection

This dissertation uses verbal interactions between investment-seeking entrepreneurs and VC investors to uncover how variation in attention allocation by VC investors during venture screening influences venture funding decisions. Chapter 1 focuses on gender and investigates if VC investors evaluate m...

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主要な著者: Viashima, T.I. (Terwase Iorwuese), Valentini, G. (Giovanni), Samila, S. (Sampsa)
フォーマット: info:eu-repo/semantics/doctoralThesis
言語:eng
出版事項: 2023
主題:
オンライン・アクセス:https://hdl.handle.net/10171/65797
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author Viashima, T.I. (Terwase Iorwuese)
Valentini, G. (Giovanni)
Samila, S. (Sampsa)
author_facet Viashima, T.I. (Terwase Iorwuese)
Valentini, G. (Giovanni)
Samila, S. (Sampsa)
author_sort Viashima, T.I. (Terwase Iorwuese)
collection DSpace
description This dissertation uses verbal interactions between investment-seeking entrepreneurs and VC investors to uncover how variation in attention allocation by VC investors during venture screening influences venture funding decisions. Chapter 1 focuses on gender and investigates if VC investors evaluate male entrepreneurs differently from female entrepreneurs. The results show that female VCs appear to pay up to 23% more attention to entrepreneur / team criteria when evaluating female entrepreneurs than male VCs screening male entrepreneurs. This effect is explained by product gender orientation where female investors appear to favor female entrepreneurs whose ventures offer female-oriented products. Chapter 2 focuses on ethnicity and investigates if shared ethnicity between a VC investor and an entrepreneur influences the investor's assessment of the investment potential of the venture. The results provide evidence that co-ethnicity increases the likelihood of promotion-focused feedback from investors by up to 74%. However, rather than being systematically widespread among investors, this effect is limited to ethnic minority investors and entrepreneurs, who are severely under-represented in US VC and high-growth entrepreneurship. Chapter 3 focuses on personality factors and investigates the relationship between the Five Factor Model (FFM) personality traits verbally promoted by an entrepreneur and subsequent venture financing outcomes. The results suggest that entrepreneurs who communicate higher levels of extraversion via language are 13.5% more likely to receive venture funding, provided their ventures meet certain baseline quality standards. The results also provide evidence that investors perceive extraversion as a desirable entrepreneurial trait while neuroticism is perceived negatively.
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spelling oai:dadun.unav.edu:10171-657972023-10-27T10:17:38Z Attention allocation in venture capital investment selection Viashima, T.I. (Terwase Iorwuese) Valentini, G. (Giovanni) Samila, S. (Sampsa) Organización y gestión de empresas Venture capital Capital riesgo Investments Inversiones This dissertation uses verbal interactions between investment-seeking entrepreneurs and VC investors to uncover how variation in attention allocation by VC investors during venture screening influences venture funding decisions. Chapter 1 focuses on gender and investigates if VC investors evaluate male entrepreneurs differently from female entrepreneurs. The results show that female VCs appear to pay up to 23% more attention to entrepreneur / team criteria when evaluating female entrepreneurs than male VCs screening male entrepreneurs. This effect is explained by product gender orientation where female investors appear to favor female entrepreneurs whose ventures offer female-oriented products. Chapter 2 focuses on ethnicity and investigates if shared ethnicity between a VC investor and an entrepreneur influences the investor's assessment of the investment potential of the venture. The results provide evidence that co-ethnicity increases the likelihood of promotion-focused feedback from investors by up to 74%. However, rather than being systematically widespread among investors, this effect is limited to ethnic minority investors and entrepreneurs, who are severely under-represented in US VC and high-growth entrepreneurship. Chapter 3 focuses on personality factors and investigates the relationship between the Five Factor Model (FFM) personality traits verbally promoted by an entrepreneur and subsequent venture financing outcomes. The results suggest that entrepreneurs who communicate higher levels of extraversion via language are 13.5% more likely to receive venture funding, provided their ventures meet certain baseline quality standards. The results also provide evidence that investors perceive extraversion as a desirable entrepreneurial trait while neuroticism is perceived negatively. 2023-03-27T10:13:05Z 2023-03-27T10:13:05Z 2023-03-27 2022-07-06 info:eu-repo/semantics/doctoralThesis https://hdl.handle.net/10171/65797 eng info:eu-repo/semantics/openAccess application/pdf
spellingShingle Organización y gestión de empresas
Venture capital
Capital riesgo
Investments
Inversiones
Viashima, T.I. (Terwase Iorwuese)
Valentini, G. (Giovanni)
Samila, S. (Sampsa)
Attention allocation in venture capital investment selection
title Attention allocation in venture capital investment selection
title_full Attention allocation in venture capital investment selection
title_fullStr Attention allocation in venture capital investment selection
title_full_unstemmed Attention allocation in venture capital investment selection
title_short Attention allocation in venture capital investment selection
title_sort attention allocation in venture capital investment selection
topic Organización y gestión de empresas
Venture capital
Capital riesgo
Investments
Inversiones
url https://hdl.handle.net/10171/65797
work_keys_str_mv AT viashimatiterwaseiorwuese attentionallocationinventurecapitalinvestmentselection
AT valentiniggiovanni attentionallocationinventurecapitalinvestmentselection
AT samilassampsa attentionallocationinventurecapitalinvestmentselection