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ICC Advance Access originally published online on August 28, 2007
Industrial and Corporate Change 2007 16(5):793-821; doi:10.1093/icc/dtm024
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© The Author 2007. Published by Oxford University Press on behalf of Associazione ICC. All rights reserved.

What distinguishes a serial entrepreneur?

Ari Hyytinen and Pekka Ilmakunnas

Correspondence: Ari Hyytinen, University of Jyväskylä, School of Business and Economics, P.O. Box 35 (MaE), FI-40014 University of Jyväskylä, Finland. e-mail: ari.hyytinen{at}econ.jyu.fi

Correspondence: Pekka Ilmakunnas, Helsinki School of Economics, PO Box 1210, FI-00101 Helsinki, Finland. e-mail: pekka.ilmakunnas{at}hse.fi

We analyze serial entrepreneurship using a unique cross-sectional survey of employees that is for this study linked with longitudinal, register-based employer-employee data. Serial entrepreneurship accounts for nearly 30% of the transitions from paid employment into entrepreneurship. What make an entrepreneur serial are her aspirations and her ability to go ahead and live by them. Specifically, we document that having worked in the past as an entrepreneur increases both the probability that a person presently in paid employment aspires to again become an entrepreneur and, holding the aspirations constant, the probability of her again becoming an entrepreneur. We also find that an employee with entrepreneurial aspirations is more likely to become an entrepreneur subsequently, than an employee without such aspirations. Finally, holding aspirations constant, working in the public sector and being a union member are negatively correlated with the likelihood of transiting into entrepreneurship.


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