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Book Description

The funding of innovative projects that are fundamentally ambiguous often leads to situations where decision-making is difficult. However, decision-making can be improved by practices such as syndication and step-by-step funding. The dynamic of this industry requires us to consider the economic and institutional variables that make this system coherent in English-speaking countries, but conversely reduce it to a privileged niche by the leading authorities in Europe and France.

This book proposes two guiding ideas. The first idea presents innovation as a very uncertain process. This modifies the decision-making in the entrepreneurial ecosystem, with intervention upstream in regards to stronger foundations, evaluations and selection of projects. The second idea is that the actors hold onto partial knowledge in a context where their attention span is limited. These cognitive limitations need the formation of networks, and lead to mutual and complementary dependency relations.

Table of Contents

  1. Cover
  2. Acknowledgments
  3. Introduction
  4. 1 Venture Capital, Behavior and Performance of Stakeholders
    1. 1.1. The analytical framework
    2. 1.2. From the theoretical framework to the empirical findings: observed behaviors
    3. 1.3. The contribution of venture capital to the performance of innovative companies
    4. 1.4. Conclusion
  5. 2 The Sectoral Dynamics of Venture Capital
    1. 2.1. Orientation by sector
    2. 2.2. High-tech industries, a less stable group
    3. 2.3. An econometric model for determining high-tech investment in Europe
    4. 2.4. Conclusion
  6. 3 The Three Structures for Interpreting Venture Capital: The Market, Industry and Institutions
    1. 3.1. An interpretation of venture capital in market terms
    2. 3.2. An interpretation of venture capital in terms of industry
    3. 3.3. The role of institutions in the dynamics of the venture capital industry
    4. 3.4. Conclusion
  7. Conclusion
  8. References
  9. Index
  10. End User License Agreement