Exploring the effects of corporate venturing on new business creation

Salvatore Sciascia (Università Cattaneo‐LIUC)
Fernando G. Alberti (Università Cattaneo‐LIUC)
Riccardo De Vita (Università Cattaneo‐LIUC)
Alberto Poli (Università Cattaneo‐LIUC)

New England Journal of Entrepreneurship

ISSN: 2574-8904

Article publication date: 1 March 2007

1257
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Abstract

One of the main problems of large firms is that they tend to lose their entrepreneurial orientation (EO) once they have grown.The launch of corporate ventures (CV) has been adopted by managers, and studied by scholars, as the means to create new businesses within large companies with a low level of EO. Extensive research on CV has been carried out to understand how these projects can effectively lead to new business creation. However, there are no studies on the effect of CV projects on new business creation after the project has ended. More specifically, scholars have overlooked the prospect that a CV project may continue to influence new business creation and how this is possible. This article explores how CV projects have an effect on new business creation after they end, if any.The discussion builds on the analysis of the case study of Riso Gallo, an Italian company operating in the rice industry, which developed a CV project between 1988 and 1996 to sidestep a poor EO.

Citation

Sciascia, S., Alberti, F.G., De Vita, R. and Poli, A. (2007), "Exploring the effects of corporate venturing on new business creation", New England Journal of Entrepreneurship, Vol. 10 No. 1, pp. 13-24. https://doi.org/10.1108/NEJE-10-01-2007-B001

Publisher

:

Emerald Publishing Limited

Copyright © Published by DigitalCommons©SHU, 2007


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