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The study of Corporate Venture Capital in TaiwanLo, Wei-ter 04 July 2006 (has links)
Growth is the important lessons for corporation. The key factors of growth are the spirit of innovation and entrepreneurship and the energy of next business. Corporate venture capital(CVC) can not only achieve these goals, but also provide many important strategic purposes, which is a innovative bridge connect to external and internal environment.
However, how to effectively manipulate CVC in Taiwan is not clear. The purpose of this study is to analyze the situation of CVC in Taiwan nowadays, create the CVC categorization model and the work suggestion of each type.
Through the literature discussion, we create CVC categorization model. According to the investment purposes and content, the model conclude six types, ¡§capacity strengthen, ecosystem complement, innovation probe, opportunity create, leverage harvest and venture investing.¡¨ Then, interviewing with experts who familiarity with the real business of CVC to understand the situation and comprehend the key successful factors. Finally, discuss, analyze and generalize the conclusion and suggestion.
The success of CVC must match the investment strategic purposes and the operation model. Corporations should choose the right operation model type by different considerations such as organization structure, investment implement, and administration mechanism.
Moreover, there are another five points of view deserve to refer. First of all, the open innovation of CVC is not equal to give up internal independent innovation. Second, the spirit of CVC can¡¦t be diverged. Third, CVC should step by step, from the ecosystem, innovation to encourage the intra-entrepreneur CVC type. Fourth, Corporations should have the courage to invest the potential business besides the current business even if will destroy the profit. Fifth, the managers must have the wider attitude and the further vision.
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The Life Cycle of Corporate Venture CapitalMa, Song January 2016 (has links)
<p>This paper establishes the life-cycle dynamics of Corporate Venture Capital (CVC) to explore the information acquisition role of CVC investment in the process of corporate innovation. I exploit an identification strategy that allows me to isolate exogenous shocks to a firm's ability to innovate. Using this strategy, I first find that the CVC life cycle typically begins following a period of deteriorated corporate innovation and increasingly valuable external information, lending support to the hypothesis that firms conduct CVC investment to acquire information and innovation knowledge from startups. Building on this analysis, I show that CVCs acquire information by investing in companies with similar technological focus but have a different knowledge base. Following CVC investment, parent firms internalize the newly acquired knowledge into internal R&D and external acquisition decisions. Human capital renewal, such as hiring inventors who can integrate new innovation knowledge, is integral in this step. The CVC life cycle lasts about four years, terminating as innovation in the parent firm rebounds. These findings shed new light on discussions about firm boundaries, managing innovation, and corporate information choices.</p> / Dissertation
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Growth investment matrix : a framework linking corporate venture capital investment with business growth strategyAbinusawa, Adedayo January 2017 (has links)
This thesis explores the role of corporate venture capital (CVC) investment in business growth strategy. It is particularly concerned with identifying the CVC investment options for business development and growth. Business growth strategy involves choices of products (and services) or markets for an organisation to enter or exit. An organisation has a choice between penetrating its existing markets, developing new products for its existing markets, bringing its existing products into new markets, or diversifying its activities by introducing new products into new markets. A framework linking CVC investment with business growth strategy is developed and is used for identifying the relevant contribution which the different CVC investments make to business growth. Firms interested in diversifying their investment portfolio utilise CVC for this purpose. These investments, however, support organisational growth when they are aligned to business strategy, defined by the goal of increasing demand for existing products (or services), bringing new products to existing markets faster, protecting against a competitive threat which involves offering existing products to new markets, and developing new products in new markets. There are instances where CVC investments can be used as a channel for later stage funding of corporate venturing projects. This thesis highlights the fact that contrary to both popular wisdom and academic arguments, CVC funds can still be successful when they function like independent venture capital funds, with reliance on financial return on investment as critical to their success. They are, however, able to endure by executing this practice in line with the corporation’s business growth strategy. Using archival data collected from three case studies over a 34-year period, the framework developed from literature review is applied as a basis for understanding how CVC investment can be linked to business growth strategy.
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Essays on interorganizational relationships between entrepreneurial ventures and industry incumbentsJoonhyung Bae (5929475) 04 January 2019 (has links)
<div>
<p>In this
dissertation, I investigate how entrepreneurial ventures and industry
incumbents enter into interorganizational relationships in the context of
corporate venture capital (CVC) investments. In Essay 1, drawing from the
literature on employee mobility and entrepreneurship, I investigate how the
competitive tension between spinouts and their parent firms with regard to potential
knowledge diffusion influences other industry incumbents’ decisions to invest
in spinouts. Specifically, I suggest that a high level of technological overlap
between a spinout and its parent firm deters other industry incumbents from
investing in the spinout due to anticipated hostile actions by the parent firm.
Moreover, such negative effects can be amplified when the parent firm has a
strong litigiousness to claim its intellectual property rights. I also consider
that the negative effects can be mitigated when industry incumbents expect to
benefit from gaining indirect access to parent firms’ technological knowledge
through investing in spinouts.</p><p><br></p>
<p>In Essay 2, I
focus on academic hybrid entrepreneurs—defined as individuals who found their
own ventures while working at academic institutions (e.g., professors,
scientists)—and investigate how their intended exit strategy influences their
decisions regarding CVC financing. Specifically, I first propose that academic
hybrid entrepreneurs may have strong preferences for acquisitions over initial
public offerings as an exit strategy for their ventures because of the high
level of opportunity/switching costs associated with transitioning between
their academic roles and entrepreneurial activities. Drawing from the
literature on mergers and acquisitions, I then suggest that compared to other
ventures, those founded by academic hybrid entrepreneurs are more likely to
receive funding from CVC investors to effectively disclose the quality of their
resources and knowledge to potential acquirers.</p><p><br></p>
<p>In Essay 3, I examine
how the industry incumbents’ relative positions in technology domains vis-à-vis
other firms influence their CVC investment activities. Drawing upon the
literature on factor market, I conceptualize CVC investments as external
knowledge acquisition activities in knowledge factor markets consisting of
several different technology domains. Building on this conceptualization, I
emphasize that industry incumbents’ choices of investment areas are dependent
on their positions vis-à-vis their rival investors in a given technology
domain. This is because a firm’s technology position in a given domain can
simultaneously influence the opportunities and incentives that jointly
determine the likelihood of CVC investments in the domain. The theoretical
arguments and empirical results suggest that firms with intermediate technology
positions (i.e., technology intermediates) with moderate levels of
opportunities and incentives are more likely to make CVC investments than are
technology laggards and leaders with the lowest levels of opportunities and
incentives, respectively.</p></div>
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A Study of New Venture Growth Model of Corporate Entrepreneurship from Corporate Venture Capital perspective¡VAn Empirical Study of IC Design Industry in TaiwanTeng, Kuo-Liang 22 June 2006 (has links)
Entrepreneur is the destructor of present mechanism, but entrepreneur also can be the value creator of company. If company can make good use of the energy of the entrepreneur, entrepreneur will create enormous value for the company. So how to manipulate the power of entrepreneur becomes an important issue.
This article discusses this issue from a perspective of Corporate Venture Capital. According to the independent-unit characteristic of CVC, start-up can avoid rigid bureaucracy and culture. The whole value creation process is as follows: Through CVC, parent company supports entrepreneur to build up business, and parent company will receive strategic value when start-up succeeds. There are two kinds of strategic value; one is the purpose of investment plan, another one is the activation of Corporate Entrepreneurship. As we know, when the core element of investment plan is entrepreneur, the plan is basically different from other plans. The essence of the investment plan which is based on the power of entrepreneur is Corporate Entrepreneurship. The definition of CE in this article is the process in which company makes use of individual entrepreneurship under the common vision to do innovative activities to create strategic value for the organization. In other words, from CVC perspective, the managing model of CE is the new venture growth model. CVC can follow the new venture growth model to support entrepreneur to build up business, and the success of start-up can return strategic value to parent company and promote the Corporate Entrepreneurship of parent company.
After the discussion of the ecosystem, culture and investment cases of IC design industry in Taiwan, we interview three professional in CVC area to get further details. Then we build the new venture growth model for company to make good use of the power of entrepreneurs.
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Innovationsmanagement durch internes Risikokapital : zur Sicherung der Rationalität des Aufbaus neuer Ventures /Lohfert, Oliver T. January 2003 (has links) (PDF)
Hochsch. für Unternehmensführung, Diss.--Vallendar, 2002.
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コーポレートベンチャーキャピタルの組織とパフォーマンスに関する研究 / コーポレート ベンチャー キャピタル ノ ソシキ ト パフォーマンス ニカンスル ケンキュウ倉林 陽, Akira Kurabayashi 21 March 2016 (has links)
米国のICT業界において、コーポレートベンチャーキャピタル(CVC)を活用したベンチャー企業との資本提携や、ベンチャー企業の買収によるR&Dの外部化は、事業開発上の標準的な手法として定着している。日本に於いても、近年大手企業によるCVCの設立が続くが、未だ米国程の成功を収めることのできた事例は少ない。本稿では、米国の先行研究を基にCVCの成功要因を抽出すると共に、日本のCVCの組織とパフォーマンスに関する実態調査を行い、米国CVCの成功要因が日本でも有効であるかどうかについて、分析を行った。 / In the US, IT companies used Open Innovation through Corporate Venture Capital (CVC) and M&A as a standard practice of corporate development to remain at the forefront of innovation. However in Japan, the number of successful CVC practices continues to be limited despite growing number of Japanese corporations launching a CVC practice. To explain this difference, this thesis first performed comprehensive review of US past researches regarding US CVC and sort out key success factors. Then, conducted a survey of Japanese CVC's organization profile and investment performance and undertook a statistical analysis to investigate whether US CVC's key success factors works in Japan. / 博士(技術・革新的経営) / Doctor of Philosophy in Technology and Innovative Management / 同志社大学 / Doshisha University
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Grandes corporações e startups: relações de inovação aberta no mercado brasileiro / Big corporations and startups: open innovation relationships in the brazilian marketSalles, Daniel Grossi de 14 December 2018 (has links)
Há um crescente interesse das grandes empresas em se aproximarem das startups como forma de desenvolver inovação aberta. Entre as 500 maiores empresas do ranking Forbes Global 500, 262 já têm iniciativas de engajamento com startups de alguma maneira: seja investindo, seja acelerando, incubando, realizando eventos ou buscando outros tipos de relacionamento. Nessa relação, a grande corporação pode se beneficiar da estrutura leve, da propensão a tomar riscos, da velocidade de operação e de tomada de decisão das startups, enquanto as startups podem se aproveitar do acesso à grande base de consumidores, do capital, da credibilidade e da estrutura voltada à eficiência da grande corporação, gerando ganhos mútuos. Para que uma grande empresa tenha sucesso nesse relacionamento, ela precisa saber quais são os seus objetivos, os seus resultados esperados, escolher a melhor forma de engajamento e criar uma operação equilibrada e integrada ao ecossistema empreendedor. Ter clareza de como cumprir essas etapas não é uma tarefa fácil. No mercado brasileiro, o desafio é ainda maior. O tema é recente e não há uma fonte de dados que consolide e analise as principais iniciativas de relacionamento entre startups e grandes empresas e as melhores práticas no país. Por meio de pesquisas exploratórias com dados secundários, este estudo identificou, mapeou e categorizou 137 programas de engajamento entre grandes corporações e startups no país. As informações encontradas foram confrontadas com o levantamento teórico e enriquecidas com informações coletadas em entrevistas com executivos responsáveis por algumas das principais iniciativas existentes no Brasil. Desta forma foi possível construir uma visão do mercado brasileiro e entender o nível de maturidade nessa área. Foi possível também identificar os objetivos das corporações, os modelos de relacionamento praticados, o perfil de interesse em startups, as formas como selecionam esse tipo de negócios, como operam os programas, os riscos envolvidos e as formas de mensuração de resultados. / There is increasing interest from the big companies to be closer to the startups as a way of fostering the open innovation. Among the 500 major companies of the Forbes Global 500 ranking, 262 are already running startup engagement programs in any way: investing, accelerating, incubating, running events or any other kind of relationship. In this relationship, the big company can benefit from the innovation focus, the willingness to take risks, the speed of operation and decision taking of the startups, meanwhile the startups can benefit from the access to the big consumer base, the capital, the credibility and the efficiency of the big corporations. To be successful in this journey the big company have to be clear about what are their objectives, the expected results and chose the best model of engagement to create a program that has to be balanced and integrated with the startup ecosystem. Being clear about how to achieve that can be challenging. The topic is recent and there is little literature about that. In Brazil, the challenge is even greater. There is no data source with consolidated data and information about the main startup engagement programs and its best practices. Trough exploratory research with open data this paper have sourced and categorized 137 startup and big companies engagement programs in the country. The gathered data was analyzed taking in consideration the related bibliography and enriched with information collected from interviews with executives responsible for some of the main initiatives in Brazil. This way it was possible to build a consolidated view of the market and its level of maturity. It was also possible to identify the main objectives of the big companies, the engagement models adopted, the startup target profile, the way they select the startups and run the programs, the risks and how they measure the results
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Antecedents and Consequences of Exploration and Exploitation Decisions : Evidence from Corporate Venture Capital Investing / Antécédents et Conséquences des Activités d'Exploration et d'Exploitation : Une Analyse Empirique dans le domaine du Corporate Venture CapitalJeon, Eui Ju 02 June 2017 (has links)
Cette thèse étudie la façon dont l’atteinte ou non des objectifs et la gouvernance influencent la direction du changement organisationnel – en termes d’exploration et d’exploitation - et analyse l’impact de ces effets sur la performance de l’entreprise au fil du temps. Dans un premier temps, je procède à une analyse détaillée de la littérature sur le Corporate Venture Capital afin de positionner mon propre travail de recherche dans le champs considéré et confirmer l’originalité de mes contributions. Ensuite, dans la première étude, j’examine comment la non-atteinte des objectifs fixés influe sur la direction du changement organisationnel mis en oeuvre dans l'entreprise, et étudie la façon dont ces changements sont influencés par la place qu’occupent les actionnaires stables ou passagers dans le capital de l’entreprise. Dans la seconde étude, je vérifie empiriquement la validité des propositions formulées en examinant les investissements de corporate venture capital (CVC) réalisés par un échantillon d’entreprises ayant une forte activité CVC. Enfin, l'équilibre entre exploration et exploitation au fil du temps, ainsi que les caractéristiques des oscillations entre ces deux types d’activités sont examinés dans la troisième étude constituant cette thèse. Les analyses empiriques portent sur les investissements de CVC effectués par 286 entreprises des États-Unis sur la période 1993-2013. Cette thèse contribue à la théorie comportementale de l’entreprise (Behavioral Theory of the Firm) en examinant la façon dont la structure du capital et l’actionnariat influe sur la prise de décisions en matière d’innovation et de changement. En étudiant la façon dont l'inertie organisationnelle et les phases de changement affectent les activités d'exploitation et d'exploration, cette thèse contribue aussi à la recherche sur l’ambidextrie organisationnelle. Pour finir, ce travail participe à la recherche sur le corporate venture capital au travers de l’étude des antécédents et des conséquences des activités d'exploration et d’exploitation dans le cadre de l’investissement CVC. / This dissertation addresses unexplored issues on the antecedents, management, and outcomes of corporate venture capital (CVC). More specifically, I examine how negative performance feedback and corporate governance influence the direction of organizational change ˗ in terms of exploration and exploitation ˗ and how balancing such change over time influences firm performance in the CVC context. I first review the extant literature on CVC and lay out the unique contributions of my research. Then, in the first essay, I theorize on how poor firm performance influences the resource allocation decisions on exploration and exploitation and how such decisions are affected by the concentration of dedicated and transient shareholders and by the board of directors' monitoring and advising intensities. In the second essay, I empirically examine how the resource allocation decisions on exploration and exploitation are influenced by dedicated and transient shareholders in the context of CVC investing. In the third essay, I examine how balancing exploration and exploitation over time and the characteristics of oscillation impact firm performance. The empirical analysis in the latter two essays is based on CVC investments made by 286 U.S. companies during 1993-2013. This dissertation contributes to the Behavioral Theory of the Firm and Corporate Governance research by introducing how shareholders and boards influence managerial decision-making in search and change, Ambidexterity research by studying how continuous change and organizational inertia impact temporal spillover between exploration and exploitation, and CVC research by examining the antecedents and consequences of explorative and exploitative initiatives in CVC investing.
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[pt] O EFEITO DE DIFERENTES INVESTIDORES DE VENTURE CAPITAL NO DESEMPENHO DE STARTUPS EM ESTÁGIO INICIAL NOS EUA E BRASIL / [en] THE EFFECTS OF DIFFERENT VENTURE CAPITAL INVESTORS ON EARLY-STAGE VENTURES PERFORMANCE IN THE UNITED STATES AND BRAZILRAONI ARRUDA BACELAR DA SILVA 22 May 2023 (has links)
[pt] A indústria de Capital de Risco tem recebido atenção significativa de
formuladores de políticas, investidores e empreendedores em todo o mundo devido
à sua história de sucesso em mercados desenvolvidos, especialmente nos Estados
Unidos. No entanto, sua implementação em países em desenvolvimento enfrenta
desafios que levam os investidores a se adaptar, especialmente nos estágios iniciais
e mais arriscados. Nesses segmentos, outros investidores, como Anjos,
Aceleradoras e Corporate Venture Capital (CVC), tornam o ambiente mais
competitivo, fornecendo mais opções para empreendedores que buscam capital. No
entanto, a literatura ainda não aborda os efeitos que esses investidores de diferentes
perfis têm em suas startups investidas. O paradigma da escada financeira, que
implica que os IVCs atuam apenas em estágios avançados, ainda está presente, mas
isso tem mudado na última década nos Estados Unidos e mais recentemente no
Brasil. Nesta tese, examinamos os efeitos de diferentes investidores em startups em
estágios iniciais nos Estados Unidos e no Brasil por meio de três artigos de pesquisa
relacionados. No primeiro artigo, realizamos uma revisão sistemática da literatura
de CVC de 2005 a 2019, identificando mecanismos impulsionadores e efeitos em
empreendimentos investidos. Isso fornece uma compreensão mais ampla dos
múltiplos fatores que influenciam a relação entre investidores e empreendimentos,
as diferenças nos perfis e incentivos de diferentes tipos de investidores de VC e
como eles influenciam os empreendimentos. Este artigo também revela tendências
e lacunas na literatura que orientam os artigos seguintes. No segundo artigo,
investigamos os efeitos comparativos e conjuntos dos principais tipos de
investidores de VC (IVC, CVC, Grupo de anjos e Aceleradoras) em 13.098
empreendimentos em estágios iniciais que receberam sua primeira rodada de
investimento nos Estados Unidos de 2005 a 2016. Os resultados mostram que
empreendimentos em estágios iniciais apoiados por IVCs alcançaram melhores
resultados do que seus pares em todos os objetivos de estágios iniciais,
contradizendo o efeito de marco esperado de investidores como Grupos de anjos
e Aceleradoras e levantando questões sobre a validade de alguns aspectos do
paradigma da escada financeira. No terceiro artigo, focamos nos resultados de
1.937 empreendimentos de estágio inicial que receberam seu primeiro investimento
no Brasil entre 2000 e setembro de 2022. Examinamos empreendimentos apoiados
por IVCs, CVCs, Anjos e Aceleradoras, e os resultados indicam diferenças
significativas em relação aos EUA. No Brasil, os IVCs não apresentaram presença
tão marcante como nos EUA, e o desempenho positivo esperado foi observado
apenas em empreendimentos apoiados por IVCs altamente experientes. Além disso,
os Anjos apresentaram o melhor desempenho para objetivos específicos de estágio
inicial. No geral, nossa análise dos dois mercados demonstra diferenças
significativas nos efeitos dos investidores de VC sobre o desempenho de
empreendimentos de estágio inicial. O modelo de investidor IVC demonstra
superioridade em relação aos seus pares no mercado americano, enquanto no Brasil,
outros investidores também se destacam, especialmente Anjos. Essas diferenças
podem ser devido a fatores no ambiente econômico local, moldando os perfis dos
investidores e influenciando a maneira como eles operam no país. / [en] The Venture Capital industry has gained widespread attention from
policymakers, investors, and entrepreneurs worldwide due to its success history in
developed markets, particularly in the United States. How ever, its implementation
in developing countries faces challenges that drive investors to adapt, particularly
in the earliest and riskiest stages. In these segments, other investors, such as Angels,
Accelerators, and Corporate Venture Capital (CVC), make the environment more
competitive, providing more options to entrepreneurs seeking capital. Nevertheless,
the literature still fails to address the effects these investors of different profiles
have on their invested startups. The finance escalator paradigm, implying that
IVCs only act in advanced stages, is still present, but this has been changing in the
last decade in the US and more recently in Brazil. In this thesis, we examine the
effects of different investors on early-stage startups in the US and Brazil through
three related research articles. In the first article, we conduct a systematic review of
the CVC literature from 2005 to 2019, identifying driving mechanisms and effects
on invested ventures. This provides a broader understanding of the multiple factors
influencing the relationship between investors and ventures, the differences in
profiles and incentives of distinct types of VC investors, and how they influence
ventures. This article also reveals trends and gaps in the literature that guide the
following articles. In the second article, we investigate the comparative and joint
effects of the main VC investor types (IVC, CVC, Angel Group, and Accelerator)
on 13,098 early-stage ventures that received their first investment round in the US
from 2005 to 2016. The results show that early-stage ventures backed by IVCs
achieved better results than their peers in all early-stage goals, contradicting the
milestone effect expected from investors like Angel Groups and Accelerators and
raising questions on the validity of some aspects of the finance escalator
paradigm. In the third article, we focus on outcomes for 1,937 early-stage ventures
that received their first investment round in Brazil between 2000 and September
2022. We examine ventures backed by IVCs, CVCs, Angels, and Accelerators, and
the results indicate significant differences from the US. In Brazil, IVCs have not
shown a pervasive presence as in the US, and the expected positive performance
was only true for ventures backed by highly experienced IVCs. Additionally,
Angels revealed the best performance for specific early-stage goals. Overall, our
analysis of the two markets demonstrates significant differences in the effects VC
investors have on the performance of early-stage ventures. The IVC model investor
demonstrates superiority over its peers in the American market, while in Brazil,
other investors also stand out, especially Angels. These differences may be due to
factors in the local economic environment, shaping investors profiles and
influencing the way they operate in the country.
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