Founder personality and entrepreneurial outcomes: A large-scale field study of technology startups

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Abstract

Technology startups play an essential role in the economy—with seven of the ten largest companies rooted in technology, and venture capital investments totaling approximately $300B annually. Yet, important startup outcomes (e.g., whether a startup raises venture capital or gets acquired) remain difficult to forecast—particularly during the early stages of venture formation. Here, we examine the impact of an essential, yet underexplored, factor that can be observed from the moment of startup creation: founder personality. We predict psychological traits from digital footprints to explore how founder personality is associated with critical startup milestones. Observing 10,541 founder–startup dyads, we provide large-scale, ecologically valid evidence that founder personality is associated with outcomes across all phases of a venture’s life (i.e., from raising the earliest funding round to exiting via acquisition or initial public offering). We find that openness and agreeableness are positively related to the likelihood of raising an initial round of funding (but unrelated to all subsequent conditional outcomes). Neuroticism is negatively related to all outcomes, highlighting the importance of founders’ resilience. Finally, conscientiousness is positively related to early-stage investment, but negatively related to exit conditional on funding. While prior work has painted conscientiousness as a major benefactor of performance, our findings highlight a potential boundary condition: The fast-moving world of technology startups affords founders with lower or moderate levels of conscientiousness a competitive advantage when it comes to monetizing their business via acquisition or IPO.

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APA

Freiberg, B., & Matz, S. C. (2023). Founder personality and entrepreneurial outcomes: A large-scale field study of technology startups. Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America, 120(19). https://doi.org/10.1073/pnas.2215829120

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