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Hey, What if the Founder Gets Hit By a Bus? Nada

Written by: Paul Kedrosky

Article Overview: One of the questions investors in early-stage companies -- both private and public -- often ask is this: What if the founder gets hit by a bus? It is, of course, an investor's way of saying, "How much of this company's continuing success requires this man/women at the helm?"

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Hey, What if the Founder Gets Hit By a Bus? Nada

One of the questions investors in early-stage companies -- both private and public -- often ask is this: What if the founder gets hit by a bus? It is, of course, an investor's way of saying, "How much of this company's continuing success requires this man/women at the helm?"

Most investors skew toward believing that founders of successful companies matter a great deal. A new paper, however, makes the argument that founders are largely expendable. By looking at what happens when founders die, the author concludes that founders are good for ideas, but dispensable for managing the company -- even early in its life:

I analyze the causal effect of the founder for firms in their infancy by using variation in the occurrence of founder death. Both cross-sectional and within-firm estimates suggest that founder death has only a slight effect on firm performance, as measured by firm survival, profitability, or growth. I interpret this as the founder being substitutable even in a firm's infancy and that the main function of the founder is to discover new opportunities and setting up the firm rather than managing it. [Emphasis mine]

Source:

The Horse or the Jockey? Evidence from Nascent Firms where a Founder Dies
Hans K. Hvide
University of Aberdeen - Business School

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Home > Entrepreneur-Advice > Paul Kedrosky > Hey What if the Founder Gets Hit By a Bus Nada
Article Tags: aberdeen business school, causal effect, early stage companies, estimates, firm performance, founders, infancy, investor, investors, jockey, new opportunities, occurrence, profitability, sectional, successful companies, survival, university of aberdeen, variation, women at the helm

About the Author: Paul Kedrosky
RSS for Paul's articles - Visit Paul's website

Dr. Kedrosky is currently the Executive Director of the William J. von Liebig Center in San Diego, California. Using an innovative seed capital program, the Center catalyzes the commercialization of technologies from the internationally-ranked University of California, San Diego. Dr. Kedrosky is also a venture investor with Ventures West, Canada's largest institutional venture capital firm, where he is most active in consumer technologies and software. He is currently on the board of Marqui Corporation, a marketing automation software company.

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