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Impact of intellectual capital on the financing of startups with new business models

Nirjhar Nigam (Icn Artem Business School, Nancy, France)
Sondes Mbarek (Institut Mines-Télécom Business School, Evry, France)
Afef Boughanmi (Université de Lorraine, Nancy, France)

Journal of Knowledge Management

ISSN: 1367-3270

Article publication date: 5 October 2020

Issue publication date: 23 January 2021

1553

Abstract

Purpose

Financing investments in a knowledge-intensive sector may be more difficult as there is a greater degree of uncertainty and asymmetries of information. This paper aims to examine whether a company’s intellectual capital (human capital, relational capital and structural capital) can serve as a quality signal in the financing of health care startups with new business models.

Design/methodology/approach

The study constructed a manual database using several paid and unpaid databases. This paper collected random data from 204 startups that obtained funding during the 2014–2017 period and used signaling theory to examine the factors that impact access to external financing for Indian health care technology startups.

Findings

This paper found that venture capitalists partly base their financing decisions on the relational capital of the startup represented by startups’ age and the average number of website visits, the presence of a syndicate of investors. Human capital variables and structural variables do not show much significant impact. This paper also find some business models show a negative impact on financing implying that investors are reluctant to invest in new technologies that carry more uncertainty and take a longer time to become profitable.

Research limitations/implications

Before concluding this paper, it is important to acknowledge the limitations of the study and some implications for future research purposes. First, the study is conducted on only 204 startups from India, and as such, it suffers from a small sample size, like many other comparable survey-based studies in entrepreneurship. Second, the results are obtained with respect to data collected from Indian startups and represent the Indian context which limits the generalization on a global level.

Practical implications

The results suggest that years of experience and prior relevant experience, do not actually impact the financing of a new venture. These results are crucial as India has a unique demographic advantage over other countries in relation to age. If young minds are adequately nurtured, this can result in innovation, entrepreneurship and job creation (which still remains as a foremost challenge for India).

Social implications

From a policy perspective, a number of implications emerge from the current study. There is a need for ameliorating the capacity of the education system in providing top-quality support including a greater focus on entrepreneurship courses and to replicate the education delivery model from top foreign institutes. The government should take this opportunity to revive the system of education and follow the methodology of elite institutes and to develop entrepreneurship spirit in other colleges and schools.

Originality/value

Financing the investments of young startups with new business models in knowledge-based sectors may be more difficult. In this paper, this paper demonstrates that startups have to effectively use and manage their intellectual assets to achieve sustainable competitive advantage. The findings of the paper emphasize the role of intellectual capital in securing financing through venture capital.

Keywords

Acknowledgements

Authors are grateful to anonymous reviewers and editors for their comments, suggestions that helped them to improve the quality of paper immensely. Thanks to University of Lorraine and Prof. Jean-Noel Ory and Prof. Vincent Braun for financing this project with University grant. They are also thankful to ICN Artem Business School for allowing them to present the paper in International conferences. They are also thankful to participants of internal and external seminars for their useful comments and suggestions. Errors and oversights are of authors alone.

Citation

Nigam, N., Mbarek, S. and Boughanmi, A. (2021), "Impact of intellectual capital on the financing of startups with new business models", Journal of Knowledge Management, Vol. 25 No. 1, pp. 227-250. https://doi.org/10.1108/JKM-11-2019-0657

Publisher

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Emerald Publishing Limited

Copyright © 2020, Emerald Publishing Limited

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