Serial Entrepreneurship
Serial entrepreneurship refers to the repeated behaviour of starting new ventures. However, in the academic literature, the distinction is more specific. Plehn-Dujowich (2010) categorizes founders into two main groups:
- Novice Entrepreneurs: Individuals launching a business for the first time.
- Habitual Entrepreneurs: This group includes Serial Entrepreneurs (who launch businesses sequentially) and Portfolio Entrepreneurs (who run multiple businesses concurrently).
The Learning Curve Advantage
Plehn-Dujowich argues that serial entrepreneurs differ substantially from first-time founders because they develop new capabilities over time. Experience allows them to develop heuristics (mental shortcuts) that guide their decision-making processes.
While a novice might suffer from "analysis paralysis," a serial entrepreneur can assess risks quickly and effectively. These cognitive advantages lead to equal or higher success rates and a higher likelihood of sticking to entrepreneurship as a lifelong career choice.
Businesses as "Stepping Stones"
Serial entrepreneurship theory relies on the decision to stay, exit, or re-enter. For the serial founder, each business is a stepping stone to the next—a means to an end, not an end in itself.
This perspective leads to a critical policy implication: Reducing the cost of shutting down a business is just as important as reducing the cost of starting one. If exit barriers are high, serial entrepreneurs cannot move on to their next, potentially more successful, venture.
Serial vs. Portfolio: A Question of Timing?
Are serial entrepreneurs simply portfolio entrepreneurs who lack the time to multi-task? Sarasvathy, Menon, & Kuechle (2013) suggest exactly that.
They argue that serial entrepreneurship is essentially "temporal portfolio entrepreneurship." Most entrepreneurs might wish to launch multiple businesses (a portfolio), but the cognitive load is too high to manage them simultaneously. Therefore, they prefer to learn from each experience sequentially rather than dealing with too many variables at once.
Related Theories
Serial entrepreneurship is a "temporal portfolio" where experience transforms behavior. These frameworks explore the evolution from novice to habitual founder:
1. Cognitive Evolution
- Experiential Learning: The core engine that builds the heuristics required to move from novice to expert.
- Effectuation Theory: Why experienced founders focus on "available means" rather than rigid market predictions.
- Jack-of-All-Trades: Using multiple ventures to build a broad, cross-functional skill set over time.
2. Persistence & Exit
- Resilience Theory: Viewing an exit as a strategic pivot rather than a failure, enabling rapid re-entry.
- Addiction Theory: Exploring the psychological drive to experience the "high" of the launch phase repeatedly.
- Real Options Theory: Managing a sequential series of ventures as a portfolio of strategic options.
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