How Do Accelerators Impact the Performance of High-Technology Ventures?
Published Online:18 Oct 2019https://doi.org/10.1287/mnsc.2018.3256
References
- (2005) Pricing diagnostic information. Management Sci. 51(7):1092–1100.Link, Google Scholar
- (2011) Cash-out or flameout! Opportunity cost and entrepreneurial strategy: Theory, and evidence from the information security industry. Management Sci. 57(10):1844–1860.Link, Google Scholar
- (1962) Economic welfare and the allocation of resources for inventions. R. Nelson, ed. The Rate and Direction of Inventive Activity: Economic and Social Factors (Princeton University Press, Princeton, NJ), 609–626.Crossref, Google Scholar
- (2001) Profitable advice: The value of information provided by Canada’s inventor’s assistance program. Econom. Innovation New Tech. 10(1):45–72.Crossref, Google Scholar
- (1991) The economic impact of agricultural extension: A review. Econom. Development Cultural Change 39(3):607–650.Crossref, Google Scholar
- (2009) Spawned with a silver spoon? Entrepreneurial performance and innovation in the medical device industry. Strategic Management J. 30(2):185–206.Crossref, Google Scholar
- (2014) Accelerating startups the seed accelerator phenomenon. SSRN working paper, University of Georgia, Athens, http://ssrn.com/abstract=2418000.Google Scholar
- (2013) A resource-based view of new firm survival: New perspectives on the role of industry and exit route. J. Developmental Entrepreneurship 18(1):1350002.Crossref, Google Scholar
- (1984) The acquisition of information and the adoption of new technology. Amer. J. Agricultural Econom. 66(3):312–320.Crossref, Google Scholar
- (1985) Adoption of agricultural innovations in developing countries: A survey. Econom. Development Cultural Change 33(2):255–298.Crossref, Google Scholar
- (2018) The effects of business accelerators on venture performance: Evidence from Start-Up Chile. Rev. Financial Stud. 31(4):1566–1603.Crossref, Google Scholar
- (1957) Hybrid corn: An exploration in the economics of technological change. Econometrica 25(4):501–522.Crossref, Google Scholar
- (2019) Do accelerators accelerate? If so, how? Organ. Sci. Forthcoming.Google Scholar
- (2019) Prior ties and the limits of peer effects on startup team performance. Strategic Management J. 40(9):1394–1416.Crossref, Google Scholar
- (2002) Venture capital and the professionalization of start-up firms: Empirical evidence. J. Finance 57(1):169–197.Crossref, Google Scholar
- (2017) Reducing information frictions in venture capital: The role of new venture competitions. NBER Working Paper No. 23874, National Bureau of Economic Research, Cambridge, MA.Crossref, Google Scholar
- (2004) What do entrepreneurs pay for venture capital affiliation? J. Finance 59(4):1805–1844.Crossref, Google Scholar
- (1982) Selection and the evolution of industry. Econometrica 50(3):649–670.Crossref, Google Scholar
- (2014) The consequences of entrepreneurial finance: Evidence from angel financings. Rev. Financial Stud. 27(1):20–55.Crossref, Google Scholar
- (1961) Technical change and the rate of imitation. Econometrica 29(4):741–766.Crossref, Google Scholar
- (1981) Good news and bad news: Representation theorems and applications. Bell J. Econom. 12(2):380–391.Crossref, Google Scholar
- (2011) Founder backgrounds and the evolution of firm size. Indust. Corporate Change 20(6):1515–1538.Crossref, Google Scholar
- (2015) Swinging for the fences: How do top accelerators impact the trajectories of new ventures? Working paper, BI Norwegian Business School, Oslo, Norway.Google Scholar

