Transnational Experience and High-performing Entrepreneurs in Emerging Economies: Evidence from Vietnam

Do high-performing entrepreneurs in the technology sector in emerging economies have more, or different, transnational experience than the founders of high-performing non-technology businesses? Employing Vietnam as a case study, we find that they do; the founders of high-performing technology-oriented businesses are 15 times more likely to have transnational experience in the U.S. compared to their non-technology peers, and are 35 times more likely to be graduates of American universities compared to founders of high-performing, non-technology-oriented business. The founders of high-performing non-technology businesses are more ‘place-based’, as they have predominantly lived and studied in Vietnam. Our data and methods are comprised of a logistic regression analysis of the biographical details of Vietnam’s 143 highest-performing entrepreneurs; the founders of the 76 Vietnam’s (non-technology-based) companies with the highest market capitalizations and the 67 founders of Vietnam’s highest performing technology-oriented companies, in terms of private equity fundraising, as of April 2020. The paper’s theoretical contribution is the advance it makes in analytical explanations of why technology-based entrepreneurs have more transnational experience, especially in the U.S., than high-performing founders of businesses in other sectors; this helps extend theory on the relationship between social and human capital and entrepreneurial performance, specifically in the technology sector.

For more information, please read at Transnational Experience and High-performing Entrepreneurs in Emerging Economies: Evidence from Vietnam

Ref: Klingler-Vidra, R., Tran, B. L., & Chalmers, A. W. (2021). Transnational experience and high-performing entrepreneurs in emerging economies: Evidence from Vietnam. Technology in Society66, 101605.