Influential Article Review - Analyzing the Variations Between the Motivations of Traditional and Entrepreneurial Scientists

Authors

  • Verna Floyd
  • Julian Copeland
  • Frances Barber

Keywords:

Motivation, Intention, Researchers, Entrepreneurship, University

Abstract

This paper examines entrepreneurship. We present insights from a highly influential paper. Here are the highlights from this paper: In recent decades, the rise of the entrepreneurial university and the need for commercialization of university knowledge has gained significant attention, thus posing major challenges for higher education institutions. The adequacy of commercialization requirements causes problems not only for institutions but also for individual researchers as well. Although an increasing number of scholars are focusing on researchers’ motivation in academic entrepreneurship, there is still a lack of surveys that investigate the motivational differences by specific group of academics. In this study, our aim is to investigate motivational differences among specific groups of researchers at 20 Hungarian higher education institutions. We distinguished academics into two segments: entrepreneurial scientists plan to commercialize their research results at a spin-off company, while traditional scientists show no interest in this. Our results suggest that there are differences and significant relationships with entrepreneurial intention in the case of direct control over the commercialization process, securing jobs for young researchers at one’s spin-off company, and the desire to demonstrate the practical relevance of one’s research to family/friends. With regard to previous experience, managerial experience gained at companies may play also an important role. For our overseas readers, we then present the insights from this paper in Spanish, French, Portuguese, and German.

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Published

2019-12-14

How to Cite

Floyd, V., Copeland, J., & Barber, F. (2019). Influential Article Review - Analyzing the Variations Between the Motivations of Traditional and Entrepreneurial Scientists. American Journal of Management, 19(6). Retrieved from https://mail.articlegateway.com/index.php/AJM/article/view/3486

Issue

Section

Articles