TY - GEN
T1 - The art of asking the tiger for its skin
T2 - 32nd International Conference on Information System 2011, ICIS 2011
AU - Chen, Jin
AU - Tan, Bernard C.Y.
N1 - Copyright:
Copyright 2013 Elsevier B.V., All rights reserved.
PY - 2011
Y1 - 2011
N2 - In emerging economies, political institutions (i.e., government and its agencies), act as a major force in defining and mobilizing resources. IT entrepreneurial firms endeavor to obtain resources from political institutions, named as political institutional resources (PIRs), to overcome insurmountable handicap of resource deficiency. However, how PIRs matter remains unclear. Acknowledging this gap, this study examines the influences of PIRs on IT entrepreneurial firms in emerging economies. Drawing on the institution-based view, we first present a comprehensive typology of PIRs in emerging economies. Moreover, we develop a theoretical model to explain how PIRs shape the performance of IT entrepreneurial firms. We further provide more deep insights to see whether the impacts of PIRs depend on IT entrepreneurial firm's internal R&D resources. This study has important contributions to the theory development of the institution-based view and the practices of IT entrepreneurship in emerging economies.
AB - In emerging economies, political institutions (i.e., government and its agencies), act as a major force in defining and mobilizing resources. IT entrepreneurial firms endeavor to obtain resources from political institutions, named as political institutional resources (PIRs), to overcome insurmountable handicap of resource deficiency. However, how PIRs matter remains unclear. Acknowledging this gap, this study examines the influences of PIRs on IT entrepreneurial firms in emerging economies. Drawing on the institution-based view, we first present a comprehensive typology of PIRs in emerging economies. Moreover, we develop a theoretical model to explain how PIRs shape the performance of IT entrepreneurial firms. We further provide more deep insights to see whether the impacts of PIRs depend on IT entrepreneurial firm's internal R&D resources. This study has important contributions to the theory development of the institution-based view and the practices of IT entrepreneurship in emerging economies.
KW - Firm performance
KW - IT entrepreneurial firms
KW - Political institutional resources
KW - Star scientists
KW - The institution-based view
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=84884638877&partnerID=8YFLogxK
M3 - Conference contribution
AN - SCOPUS:84884638877
SN - 9781618394729
T3 - International Conference on Information Systems 2011, ICIS 2011
SP - 3592
EP - 3603
BT - International Conference on Information Systems 2011, ICIS 2011
Y2 - 4 December 2011 through 7 December 2011
ER -