Once bitten, twice shy? The relationship between business failure experience and entrepreneurial collaboration
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Journal of Business Research
Abstract
This paper draws on entrepreneurial failure and firm collaboration literature to conduct two studies on serial
entrepreneurs in a developing economy. In Study 1, we used qualitative, semi-structured interviews to derive
insights from 16 entrepreneurs with business failure experience. We observed that business failure experience
incentivizes some serial entrepreneurs to collaborate with other entrepreneurs, and this phenomenon is shaped
by religious orientation. In Study 2, we conducted a survey of 421 serial entrepreneurs to empirically test the
effect of business failure experience and entrepreneurial collaboration. We also examined the moderating roles of
religious and family orientations on this relationship. The results from the survey revealed a positive relationship
between entrepreneurs’ business failure experience and entrepreneurial collaboration. In addition, our results
indicate that the positive impact of business failure experience on entrepreneurial collaboration is stronger
among entrepreneurs leading non-family firms than family firms. Among firms led by non-religious-oriented
entrepreneurs, business failure experience was more positively related to collaboration. Theoretical and practical
implications are considered.
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Research Article
