Blueprint Silicon Valley? Explaining Idiosyncrasy of Startup Ecosystems

The concept of startup ecosystems has received significant attention from policy makers, particularly in the hope of transferring Silicon Valley performance effects to their own region. Previous research emphasizes the need to consider the unique and distinctive nature of the specific regional ecosy...

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Main Authors: Thomas Baron, MSc, Jörg Freiling, Full Professor, PhD
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Wydawnictwo Naukowe Wydziału Zarządzania Uniwersytetu Warszawskiego 2019-03-01
Series:Problemy Zarządzania
Subjects:
Online Access:http://pz.wz.uw.edu.pl/gicid/01.3001.0013.1927
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spelling doaj-f31839c55ec64e90858fc1b7faeb56b82021-02-15T10:59:28ZengWydawnictwo Naukowe Wydziału Zarządzania Uniwersytetu WarszawskiegoProblemy Zarządzania1644-95842019-03-01171(81) Contemporary Entrepreneurship...577610.7172/1644-9584.81.301.3001.0013.1927Blueprint Silicon Valley? Explaining Idiosyncrasy of Startup EcosystemsThomas Baron, MSc0Jörg Freiling, Full Professor, PhD1University of Bremen Chair in Small Business and Entrepreneurship (LEMEX)University of Bremen Chair in Small Business and Entrepreneurship (LEMEX)The concept of startup ecosystems has received significant attention from policy makers, particularly in the hope of transferring Silicon Valley performance effects to their own region. Previous research emphasizes the need to consider the unique and distinctive nature of the specific regional ecosystem in focus when developing policies for ecosystem development without a thorough specification and theoretically founded explanations. In this article, we address this gap and develop propositions why each ecosystem is unique in nature by employing resource-based reasoning. The article concludes that ecosystems are highly idiosyncratic and are, therefore, inimitable and non-transferable to other regions due to working isolating mechanisms. JEL: D830, D850, L140, L260, O180, R110 null The creation of the English-language version of these publications is financed in the framework of contract No. 607/P-DUN/2018 by the Ministry of Science and Higher Education committed to activities aimed at the promotion of education. http://pz.wz.uw.edu.pl/gicid/01.3001.0013.1927startup ecosystemidiosyncrasyresource-based approaches
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Thomas Baron, MSc
Jörg Freiling, Full Professor, PhD
spellingShingle Thomas Baron, MSc
Jörg Freiling, Full Professor, PhD
Blueprint Silicon Valley? Explaining Idiosyncrasy of Startup Ecosystems
Problemy Zarządzania
startup ecosystem
idiosyncrasy
resource-based approaches
author_facet Thomas Baron, MSc
Jörg Freiling, Full Professor, PhD
author_sort Thomas Baron, MSc
title Blueprint Silicon Valley? Explaining Idiosyncrasy of Startup Ecosystems
title_short Blueprint Silicon Valley? Explaining Idiosyncrasy of Startup Ecosystems
title_full Blueprint Silicon Valley? Explaining Idiosyncrasy of Startup Ecosystems
title_fullStr Blueprint Silicon Valley? Explaining Idiosyncrasy of Startup Ecosystems
title_full_unstemmed Blueprint Silicon Valley? Explaining Idiosyncrasy of Startup Ecosystems
title_sort blueprint silicon valley? explaining idiosyncrasy of startup ecosystems
publisher Wydawnictwo Naukowe Wydziału Zarządzania Uniwersytetu Warszawskiego
series Problemy Zarządzania
issn 1644-9584
publishDate 2019-03-01
description The concept of startup ecosystems has received significant attention from policy makers, particularly in the hope of transferring Silicon Valley performance effects to their own region. Previous research emphasizes the need to consider the unique and distinctive nature of the specific regional ecosystem in focus when developing policies for ecosystem development without a thorough specification and theoretically founded explanations. In this article, we address this gap and develop propositions why each ecosystem is unique in nature by employing resource-based reasoning. The article concludes that ecosystems are highly idiosyncratic and are, therefore, inimitable and non-transferable to other regions due to working isolating mechanisms. JEL: D830, D850, L140, L260, O180, R110 null The creation of the English-language version of these publications is financed in the framework of contract No. 607/P-DUN/2018 by the Ministry of Science and Higher Education committed to activities aimed at the promotion of education.
topic startup ecosystem
idiosyncrasy
resource-based approaches
url http://pz.wz.uw.edu.pl/gicid/01.3001.0013.1927
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