Logo image
The moderating influence of national culture on female and male entrepreneurs’ social network size and new venture growth
Journal article   Peer reviewed

The moderating influence of national culture on female and male entrepreneurs’ social network size and new venture growth

Bat Batjargal, Justin W. Webb, Anne S. Tsui, Jean-Luc Arregle, Michael A. Hitt and Toyah L. Miller
Cross Cultural and Strategic Management, Vol.26(4), pp.490-521
01/10/2019

Abstract

Culture networks entrepreneurship Gender stereotypes Gender differences New ventures Gender norms Relational orientation Gender egalitarianism
Purpose The purpose of this paper is to disentangle individual-level gender differences and norm-based gender roles and stereotypes to provide a finer-grained understanding of why female and male entrepreneurs experience different growth returns from their social networks across different national cultures. Design/methodology/approach This research uses a survey of 637 (278 female and 359 male) entrepreneurs across four nations varying on relational culture (importance of social relationships) and gender egalitarianism (importance of gender equality or neutrality in social and economic roles). Findings The authors find evidence that male entrepreneurs in high relational cultures benefit the most in terms of growth in revenues from larger network size while women in low relational cultures benefit the least. In cultures with low gender egalitarianism, male entrepreneurs benefit more from their larger social networks than did the female entrepreneurs. Practical implications The study presents implications for female entrepreneurs’ behaviors to gain more benefits from their social networks, especially in cultural contexts where relationships are important or where there is equality in gender roles. In these contexts, they may need to develop other strategies and rely less on social networks to grow their ventures. Social implications This research suggests that female entrepreneurs still are disadvantaged in some societies. National policy may focus on developing more opportunities and providing more support to women entrepreneurs as a valuable contributor to economic growth of the nations. Originality/value The authors disentangle the effects of gender differences, norm-based gender stereotypes and networks on entrepreneurial outcomes.
pdf
CCSM_Arregle_201910
Restricted Access

Metrics

22 Record Views

Details

InCites Highlights

These are selected metrics from InCites Benchmarking & Analytics tool, related to this contribution

Collaboration types
Domestic collaboration
International collaboration
Citation topics
6 Social Sciences
6.3 Management
6.3.726 Entrepreneurship
Web of Science research areas
Management
Logo image