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Venture Capital and the Professionalization of Start‐up Firms: Empirical Evidence

Resource type
Authors/contributors
Title
Venture Capital and the Professionalization of Start‐up Firms: Empirical Evidence
Abstract
This paper examines the impact venture capital can have on the development of new firms. Using a hand‐collected data set on Silicon Valley start‐ups, we find that venture capital is related to a variety of professionalization measures, such as human resource policies, the adoption of stock option plans, and the hiring of a marketing VP. Venture‐capital‐backed companies are also more likely and faster to replace the founder with an outside CEO, both in situations that appear adversarial and those mutually agreed to. The evidence suggests that venture capitalists play roles over and beyond those of traditional financial intermediaries.
Publication
The Journal of Finance
Volume
57
Issue
1
Pages
169-197
Date
2002
Citation
Hellmann, T., & Puri, M. (2002). Venture Capital and the Professionalization of Start‐up Firms: Empirical Evidence. The Journal of Finance, 57, 169–197.
Topic
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