Article ID: | iaor20001975 |
Country: | United States |
Volume: | 45 |
Issue: | 5 |
Start Page Number: | 621 |
End Page Number: | 632 |
Publication Date: | May 1999 |
Journal: | Management Science |
Authors: | Shepherd Dean A. |
Keywords: | decision: studies, performance |
This study investigates whether VCs' assessment policies of new venture survival are consistent with those arising from the strategy literature (using two established strategy perspectives). Strategy scholars suggest the nature of the markets, competition, and decisions made by the management team affect a new venture's survival chances. The findings demonstrate that VC's assessment policies are predominantly consistent with those proposed by strategy scholars – providing insight into why VCs consider criteria in their assessment of new venture survival as well as why some criteria are more important in their assessment than others. Through this increased understanding of venture capitalists' decision making, entrepreneurs seeking capital may be better able to address their requests for funding to those criteria venture capitalists find most critical to the survival of a new venture. Venture capitalists may use these findings to better understand their own decision making process, which, in turn, provides the opportunity to increase evaluation efficiency.