Assessment of Eight Entrepreneurial Personality Dimensions: Validity Evidence of the BEPE Battery
Metadatos
Mostrar el registro completo del ítemAutor
Cuesta, Marcelino; Suárez-Alvarez, Javier; Lozano, Luis M.; García-Cueto, Eduardo; Muñiz, JoséEditorial
Frontiers Media
Materia
personality entrepreneurs assessment
Fecha
2018-11-29Referencia bibliográfica
Cuesta, M. et .al. Front. Psychol. 9:2352. [https://doi.org/10.3389/fpsyg.2018.02352]
Patrocinador
Spanish Ministry of Economy and Competitiveness. References: PSI2014-56114-P and PSI2017-85724-PResumen
Background: The study of entrepreneurial activity has undergone intense development
in recent decades. Traditionally this topic has been addressed from three approaches:
economic, sociological and psychological. In the study of enterprising personality, two
fundamental perspectives stand out: the use of general personality traits, like the Big
Five, and the use of more specific traits related to entrepreneurial spirit, such as selfefficacy,
autonomy, innovation, optimism, and others. The objective of this study is to
provide validity evidence for a new instrument for measuring eight specific dimensions
of entrepreneurial personality (BEPE).
Methods: The sample was composed of 1,170 adults from the general population
(59.9% women). The average age was 42.34 years with a standard deviation of 12.96.
Of the sample, 13% were self-employed. Internal factorial structure and reliability of
BEPE were examined. The relationships with other variables and the discriminative
capacity of the BEPE between different groups of workers were analyzed.
Results: First order exploratory factor analyses show the essential unidimensionality of
each of the eight proposed sub-scales, with factorial weights ranging between 0.341
and 0.825. In the Confirmatory Factor Analysis, the best fit was achieved with a Bifactor
model. With regards to reliability, the eight BEPE sub-scales gave high alpha coefficient
values, between 0.81 and 0.89, as did the total battery (0.97). BEPE sub-scales show
a high canonical correlation with the Big Five personality factors (0.796) and with the
sub-scales of the Measure of Entrepreneurial Talents and Abilities questionnaire (0.779).
Conclusion: The BEPE questionnaire for the evaluation of the eight fundamental
specific dimensions of the entrepreneurial personality presents adequate psychometric
properties. Its relationships with other measures of personality traits are in line with what
is expected. Therefore, the BEPE is a new measurement instrument that can be used
with confidence both in the applied field and in research.