From potential to early nascent entrepreneurship: the role of entrepreneurial competencies
Metadatos
Mostrar el registro completo del ítemEditorial
Springer Nature
Fecha
2021Referencia bibliográfica
Published version: González-López, M.J., Pérez-López, M.C. & Rodríguez-Ariza, L. From potential to early nascent entrepreneurship: the role of entrepreneurial competencies. Int Entrep Manag J 17, 1387–1417 (2021). https://doi.org/10.1007/s11365-020-00658-x
Resumen
Entrepreneurial intention has been observed to be a necessary, but insufficient, condition for new business creation. Another variable apart from intention that requires
consideration is how potential entrepreneurs perceive their own capacity or ability to
exercise control over entrepreneurial behaviour. Drawing on the Rubicon model of
action phases, this paper analyses the role of the perceived entrepreneurial competencies in the preactional phase of the entrepreneurial process. This corresponds to the
moment when individuals have formed their entrepreneurial intention and must embark
on how to implement it. A structural equations modelling analysis on a sample of
undergraduate business students in their final year who manifest an intention to start up
a new business after graduation served both to analyse the relationship between
entrepreneurial competencies and gestation behaviour and determine the moderating
role of competencies in the relationship between the intention and nascent activities.
The findings reveal that entrepreneurial intention and competencies related to commitment, planning and organisation have a significant and direct influence on nascent
entrepreneurial behaviour and that the whole set of entrepreneurial competency factors
enhances the relationship between entrepreneurial intention and entrepreneurial gestation activities. This paper provides a comprehensive analysis of the role of entrepreneurial competencies in the transition from intention to early nascent business gestation
and addresses a valuable and relatively unexplored line of research concerning the
interaction effects of intention and perceived competencies on the performance of
entrepreneurial gestation activities. The paper also delves into the practi