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RESEARCH PRODUCT

On the signaling effect of reward-based crowdfunding: (When) do later stage venture capitalists rely more on the crowd than their peers?

Christos KolympirisMaria VasiPaolo Roma

subject

Reward-based crowdfundingSignalNew venturesStrategy and Management05 social sciencesNew VenturesSample (statistics)CertificationManagement Science and Operations ResearchVenture capital050905 science studiesHGCertification effectVenture capitalManagement of Technology and InnovationComplementarity (molecular biology)0502 economics and businessBusiness0509 other social sciencesMarketing050203 business & management

description

Abstract Venture capitalists (VCs) make only a small number of investments and are more likely to invest in ventures where other VCs have invested previously. As such, valuable opportunities may be forgone if they are not funded by VCs in the first place. We demonstrate how crowdfunding (CF) can remedy this concern. Using a sample of new technology-based ventures, we reveal that ventures initially funded through reward-based CF can be even more likely than those initially backed by VCs in attracting follow-up funds from VCs. This happens when ventures originally funded via reward-based CF complement the certification they derive from CF with patents and a founding team with a track record of success. In those cases, VCs rely on the crowd more than their peers. Overall, the results suggest that signal complementarity can at least equalize the effectiveness of an a priori inferior and an a priori superior signal.

10.1016/j.respol.2021.104267http://hdl.handle.net/10447/530898