No. 160: The Effectiveness of University Knowledge Spill-Overs: Performance Differences between University Spin-Offs and Corporate Spin-Offs
Karl Wennberg, Johan Wiklund och Mike Wright.
December 2010
Abstract: While much prior research has focused
upon how the Technology Transfer Offices and other contextual
characteristics shape the level of university spin-offs (USO),
there is little research on entrepreneurial potential among
individual academics, and to the best of our knowledge, no
comparative studies with other types of spin-offs exist to date. In
this paper we suggest that knowledge transfer from academic
research may flow indirectly to entrepreneurship by individuals
with a university education background who become involved in new
venture creation by means of corporate spin-offs (CSO) after
gaining industrial experience, rather than leaving university
employment to found a new venture as an academic spinoff. In fact,
the commercial knowledge gained by industry experience is
potentially more valuable for entrepreneurial performance compared
to the academic knowledge gained by additional research experience
at a university. This leads us to posit that not only will the
average performance of CSOs be higher than comparable USOs, but the
gains from founder's prior experiences will also be higher among
CSOs. We investigate these propositions in a comparative study
tracking the complete population of USOs and CSOs among the Swedish
knowledge-intensive sectors between 1994 and 2002.
JEL CODES: M13, O32, O34, L53
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