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[[Media:Egan_(2013)_-_How_Startups_Innovate_(Job_Market_Paper).pdf|Download a copy of my job market paper (pdf)]] and the [[Media:Egan (2013) - Model Appendix to Job Market Paper.pdf|separate model appendix]]
 
Visitors to this page might also be interested in my [[Job Market Applications|job market applications]] page, [[Profile|profile]] page, research [[Papers|papers]] page, [[Research Statement|research statement]] page (which contains summaries of some of my research papers), [[Projects|projects]] page (which details work that is not yet ready for submission to peer-reviewed journals), and [[Teaching Statement|teaching statement]] page.
 
==Overview==
 
My job market research consists of two papers: ''How Start-up Firms Innovate'', which is a strategy and business economics paper, and a companion paper ''Venture Capitalists as Vendors of Complementary Components'', which is a business economics and corporate finance paper. Comparative statics on the model in ''Venture Capitalists as Vendors of Complementary Components'' provide the basis for the empirical tests carried out in ''How Start-up Firms Innovate''.
Job Market paper:
*Egan, Edward J. (2013), ''How Start-up Firms Innovate: Technology Strategy, Commercialization Strategy, and their Relationship'', Job Market Paper[[Media:Egan_(2013)_-_How_Startups_Innovate_(Job_Market_Paper).pdf|(pdf)]] [[:Image:Egan_(2013)_-_How_Startups_Innovate_(Job_Market_Paper).pdf|(record)]]*Egan, Edward J. (2013), ''Model Appendix to 'How Start-up Firms Innovate: Technology Strategy, Commercialization Strategy, and their Relationship''' [[Media:Egan (2013) - Model Appendix to Job Market Paper.pdf|(pdf)]] [[:Image:Egan (2013) - Model Appendix to Job Market Paper.pdf|(record)]] 
Companion paper:
*Egan, Edward J. (2013), ''Venture Capitalists as Vendors of Complementary Components'', Job Market Companion Paper
==File(s)== ''How Start-up Firms InnovateNote:''*[[Media:Egan_(2012)_-_Technology_and_Commercialization_Strategy_(October_Version).pdf‎|Download the PDF]] *[[:Image:Egan_(2012)_-_Technology_and_Commercialization_Strategy_(October_Version).pdf‎|Repository record]]  Until ''Venture Capitalists as Vendors of Complementary Components'' is released, its model is included in the appendix of ''Model Appendix to 'How Start-up Firms Innovate'''.
==Abstracts==
''How Start-up Firms Innovate'':
A successful start-up firm makes two important strategic innovation choices during its early life. It must decide upon a 'technology strategy' -- how whether to allocate specialize or generalize in the allocation of its research and development efforts -- and a 'commercialization strategy' -- how whether to cooperate or compete with incumbents to secure the investment it will need to commercialize its inventions. Many start-up firms follow a predictable pattern. They either specialize in developing a technology that can be used by incumbents and are later acquired, or they develop a rival stand-alone product and raise commercialization investment through an initial public offering (IPO). In this paper, I advance a '`system vs. components' theory of innovation, which supposes that technological products are based on systems of patented complementary components. The A pattern of specializationspecialize-and-acquisition cooperate and generalizationgeneralize-and-IPO compete then occurs naturally as entrepreneurs maximize their expected profits given both the available technological opportunity and the state of technology in their industry. I derive measures of technology strategy for patent-holding start-up firms, and use the choice to sell the firm in an acquisition or to raise investment through an initial public offering (IPO) as prototypical examples of cooperate versus compete commercialization strategies. I then show that measures of technology strategy Granger-cause commercialization strategies in cross sectional analyses. I also address the endogeneity issue that arises because forward-looking start-up firms chose their technology strategy in anticipation of their commercialization strategy by using the introduction of the 2002 Sarbanes-Oxley Act (SOX) as a shock to the relative costs of an IPO. I provide evidence that successful start-up firms altered their technology strategies to favor component specialization following the introduction of SOX.
==Paper Development==
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