"Pivoting Strategies: A Study of Pivot Severity, Investor Reliance, and" by Cesar Bandera and Ellen Thomas
 

Pivoting Strategies: A Study of Pivot Severity, Investor Reliance, and Revenue among Startups

Document Type

Conference Proceeding

Publication Date

1-1-2022

Abstract

“Pivoting”, or a strategic shift in the direction of a venture, may be one of the most recognizable terms in entrepreneurship. Although this term has entered the entrepreneurial lexicon, very little is known about the impact pivoting has on new venture performance. Some studies suggest pivoting has positive effects on performance while others suggest executing too many pivots adversely affect it. This paper seeks to better understand the impact of multiple pivots on revenue by investigating the moderating roles of pivot severity (the degree to which a pivot represent a market shift) and reliance on investors. We investigate the impact of multiple pivots on revenue, distinguishing between high-tech vs low-tech startups and between mild vs severe pivots. We also investigate the impact that equity investments have on the pivot-revenue relationship of high-tech firms. Using change in a venture's NAICS code as a proxy for pivoting, we find an inverted-U relationship between magnitude of pivots and the likelihood of revenue among Kauffman Firm Survey participants. Among high-tech firms, this relationship differs based on the firm's reliance on investors. This longitudinal empirical study on the relationship between pivot magnitude, investor reliance, and revenue aims to attract attention to this important topic of entrepreneurship, and help the entrepreneur facing the difficult decision of whether or not to pivot.

Identifier

85152119851 (Scopus)

ISBN

[9780998133157]

Publication Title

Proceedings of the Annual Hawaii International Conference on System Sciences

ISSN

15301605

First Page

5364

Last Page

5369

Volume

2022-January

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