Organization Science
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ORGANIZATION SCIENCE
Vol. 21, No. 1, January-February 2010, pp. 150-167
DOI: 10.1287/orsc.1090.0454
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Right arrow Articles by Dushnitsky, G.

Entrepreneurial Optimism in the Market for Technological Inventions

Gary Dushnitsky

The Wharton School, University of Pennsylvania, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania 19104
gdushnit{at}wharton.upenn.edu

How do potentially optimistic entrepreneurs attract prospective investors? We investigate an entrepreneur's decision to pursue either disclosure—where investors inspect the invention—or a contingent payment scheme (CPS) offer (e.g., salary deferral, royalty-based license)—where an invention's value is inferred from the entrepreneur's willingness to make her pay contingent on the invention's success. Using a parsimonious model, we highlight the role of optimism and demonstrate that it only affects CPS ex post. As a result, a novel trade-off unfolds ex ante: In choosing an action that maximizes the valuation of the invention, a moderately wealthy entrepreneur weighs optimism discount (affecting CPS) versus imitation discount (affecting disclosure). More broadly, the paper advances a view of entrepreneurs as optimists, thus departing from the prevailing approach, which characterizes entrepreneurs as opportunistic individuals who consciously pursue self-serving goals.

Key Words: entrepreneur; invention; investor; optimism; over-confidence; cognitive bias






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