Typology of Business Incubators in Spain According to the Stages of Startups Incubation

被引:1
|
作者
Asensio-Ciria, Ana [1 ,2 ]
De-Pablos-Heredero, Carmen [3 ]
Jimenez, Francisco Jose Blanco [1 ,2 ]
Martinez, Anton Garcia [4 ]
机构
[1] Rey Juan Carlos Univ, Dept Appl Econ & Hist 1, Paseo Artilleros S-N, Madrid 28032, Spain
[2] Rey Juan Carlos Univ, Econ Inst, Paseo Artilleros S-N, Madrid 28032, Spain
[3] Rey Juan Carlos Univ, Dept Business Adm Adm Management & Org, Appl Econ & Fundamentals Econ Anal 2, Paseo Artilleros s-n, Madrid 28032, Spain
[4] Univ Cordoba, Anim Sci Dept, Rabanales Univ Campus, Cordoba 14071, Spain
关键词
business incubators; entrepreneurship; multivariate methods; incubator classification; ENTREPRENEURSHIP; PERFORMANCE; SURVIVAL;
D O I
10.3390/admsci14110291
中图分类号
C93 [管理学];
学科分类号
12 ; 1201 ; 1202 ; 120202 ;
摘要
The aim of this work was to classify the business incubators in Spain according to the four phases of the startup's incubation process. Considering that the graduation rate implies greater survival and business success of the incubated companies, they have been identified at each stage of the incubation (spread of entrepreneurship, pre-incubation, advanced incubation, and graduation). The activities that present higher impacts on the success of the incubated companies and the activities carried out by the business incubator that have a greater relevance on the graduation of the companies have concretely been considered. Principal component (PC) cluster analysis has been applied. All the incubation variables were used simultaneously, reducing their number and grouping them into factors. Finally, the cases were grouped according to these latent variables. Principal component analysis reduced dimensionality to eight factors with a 74% explained variance. Factor 1 was positively related to pre-incubation variables; factor 2 was linked to training and collaboration variables within the entrepreneurship diffusion phase. Factor 3, named activity monitoring and control, was related to phase 3, or basic incubation variables. Cluster analysis facilitates the grouping of business incubators into three clusters: Group 1 (16% of the total), incubators with strong deficits in incubation phases 1, 2, and 3. They are small-sized business incubators, often located in rural areas or cities, with a low graduation rate. Group 2 (30%), business incubators with a very high graduation rate and strongly positive values in factors 1 and 2. Factor 3, although positive, is susceptible to improvement. They are the largest group of business incubators and usually located in industrial and technological parks. Group 3 (54%) is the majority, with values close to clusters 2 and 3.
引用
收藏
页数:24
相关论文
共 16 条
  • [1] Epistemology of business incubators and the incubation theory
    Sharma, Apoorva Ranjan
    Shukla, Balvinder
    Joshi, Manoj
    INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF ENTREPRENEURSHIP & SMALL BUSINESS, 2023, 50 (02) : 151 - 174
  • [2] Structural Equation Models to Determine the Relationship Between Startup Incubation Stages and the Graduation Rate of Incubators in Spain
    Asensio-Ciria, Ana
    De-Pablos-Heredero, Carmen
    Jimenez, Francisco Jose Blanco
    Botella, Jose Luis Montes
    Martinez, Anton Garcia
    SUSTAINABILITY, 2025, 17 (02)
  • [3] Performance of business incubators and accelerators according to the regional entrepreneurship ecosystem in Spain
    Fernandez Fernandez, M. Teresa
    Luis Santos, Juan
    Blanco Jimenez, Francisco Jose
    INVESTIGACIONES REGIONALES-JOURNAL OF REGIONAL RESEARCH, 2019, (43) : 41 - 56
  • [4] Incubation Push or Business Pull? Investigating the Geography of US Business Incubators
    Qian, Haifeng
    Haynes, Kingsley E.
    Riggle, James D.
    ECONOMIC DEVELOPMENT QUARTERLY, 2011, 25 (01) : 79 - 90
  • [5] Business Incubators and Survival of Startups in Times of COVID-19
    De Esteban Escobar, Debora
    De-Pablos-Heredero, Carmen
    Montes-Botella, Jose Luis
    Blanco Jimenez, Francisco Jose
    Garcia, Anton
    SUSTAINABILITY, 2022, 14 (04)
  • [6] Exploring technology business incubators and their business incubation models: case studies from China
    Tang, Mingfeng
    Walsh, Grace Sheila
    Li, Cuiwen
    Baskaran, Angathevar
    JOURNAL OF TECHNOLOGY TRANSFER, 2021, 46 (01) : 90 - 116
  • [7] Technology-based business incubators: the impacts on resources of startups in Brazil
    Freire, Clarissa Dourado
    Sacomano Neto, Mario
    Moralles, Herick Fernando
    Rodrigues Antunes, Luiz Guilherme
    INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF EMERGING MARKETS, 2023, 18 (12) : 5778 - 5797
  • [8] A Typology of University Business Incubators: Implications for Research and Practice
    Nicholls-Nixon, Charlene
    Valliere, Dave
    Hassannezhad, Zohreh
    PROCEEDINGS OF THE 13TH EUROPEAN CONFERENCE ON INNOVATION AND ENTREPRENEURSHIP (ECIE 2018), 2018, : 535 - 543
  • [9] Fostering startups through the vehicle of entrepreneurial support organisations like technology business incubators (TBIs): a systematic literature review
    Noronha, Concy Liberata
    Pillai, Subhash Kizhakan Veatil Bhaskaran
    JOURNAL OF GLOBAL ENTREPRENEURSHIP RESEARCH, 2025, 15 (01)
  • [10] How do business incubators govern incubation relationships with different new ventures?
    Han, Shaojie
    Su, Jingqin
    Lyu, Yibo
    Liu, Qing
    TECHNOVATION, 2022, 116