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Karl Wennberg

Researcher at Linköping University

Publications -  143
Citations -  8267

Karl Wennberg is an academic researcher from Linköping University. The author has contributed to research in topics: Entrepreneurship & New Ventures. The author has an hindex of 41, co-authored 142 publications receiving 6775 citations. Previous affiliations of Karl Wennberg include Ratio Institute & Stockholm School of Economics.

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Reconceptualizing Entrepreneurial Exit: Divergent Exit Routes and Their Drivers

TL;DR: This article developed a conceptual model of entrepreneurial exit which includes exit through liquidation and firm sale for both firms in financial distress and firms performing well, and empirically test the model using two Swedish databases which follow 1,735 new ventures and their founders over eight years.
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Reconceptualizing entrepreneurial exit : divergent exit routes and their drivers

TL;DR: The authors developed a conceptual model of entrepreneurial exit which includes exit through liquidation and firm sale for both firms in financial distress and firms performing well, and empirically test the model using two Swedish databases which follow 1,735 new ventures and their founders over eight years.
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Creativity in entrepreneurship education

TL;DR: In this article, the authors used social cognitive theory to investigate entrepreneurial intent among participants in graduate entrepreneurship programs and found that high scores on a creativity test and prior entrepreneurial experiences are positively associated with entrepreneurial intentions, whereas perception of risks has a negative influence.
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Hybrid Entrepreneurship

TL;DR: This work considers that individuals might transition incrementally by retaining their wage job while entering into self-employment, and test the model on a population of Swedish wage earners in the knowledge-intensive sector.
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The role of R&D in new firm growth

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors present empirical evidence on the effects of R&D on new product development, inter-firm alliances and employment growth during the early life course of firms.