Publication | Closed Access
The Life Cycle of Corporate Venture Capital
153
Citations
73
References
2019
Year
Industrial FirmsStartup EcosystemEntrepreneurshipInnovative Start-upsCorporate InnovationManagementCvc DivisionsEntrepreneurial InnovationEntrepreneurial FinanceVenture CapitalStrategic ManagementInnovationFinanceCvc Entry ConcentratesBusinessBusiness StrategyIntrapreneurshipLife CycleCorporate Finance
Abstract This paper investigates why industrial firms conduct Corporate Venture Capital (CVC) investment in entrepreneurial companies. I test alternative views on CVC by exploiting the entry, investment, and termination decisions of CVC divisions. CVC entry concentrates in firms that experience deteriorations of internal innovation. At the investment stage, CVCs select startups with a similar technological focus but that have a non-overlapping knowledge base, and they integrate technologies generated from these ventures that create strategic value. CVCs are terminated when parent firms’ innovation recovers. Overall, the strategic desire to fix innovation weaknesses after adverse shocks motivates firms to adopt CVCs. Received November 15, 2017; editorial decision March 2, 2019 by Editor Francesca Cornelli. Authors have furnished an Internet Appendix, which is available on the Oxford University Press Web site next to the link to the final published paper online.
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