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GUESSS - Global University Entrepreneurial Spirit Students' Survey
Type
fundamental research project
Start Date
01 November 2005
End Date
30 March 2013
Status
ongoing
Keywords
Academic Entrepreneurship
entrepreneurial intentions
new ventures
entrepreneurial activities
succession
Description
The GUESSS Project investigates students' career choice intentions across the world. Of special interest are entrepreneurial intentions in different forms, such as founding an own firm, acquiring one, or taking over the parents' family business.
Founded in 2003, GUESSS has grown remarkably since then. The 5th wave of data collection in Spring 2011 takes place in 27 countries, with around 1 Million of students from more than 200 Universities addressed.
GUESSS is organized and managed by the Swiss Research Institute of Small Business and Enterpreneurship at the University of St. Gallen (KMU-HSG). The aim is to contribute not only to practice and policy, but also to the scientific community.
Founded in 2003, GUESSS has grown remarkably since then. The 5th wave of data collection in Spring 2011 takes place in 27 countries, with around 1 Million of students from more than 200 Universities addressed.
GUESSS is organized and managed by the Swiss Research Institute of Small Business and Enterpreneurship at the University of St. Gallen (KMU-HSG). The aim is to contribute not only to practice and policy, but also to the scientific community.
Leader contributor(s)
Member contributor(s)
Partner(s)
27 University institutions worldwide
Funder(s)
Topic(s)
Entrepreneurship
entrepreneurial intentions
Method(s)
Quantitative
web-based online survey
Range
HSG Internal
Range (De)
HSG Intern
Principal
KMU-HSG
Eprints ID
9586
55 results
Now showing
1 - 10 of 55
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PublicationType: work report
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PublicationEntrepreneurial Intentions and Activities of Students across the World : International Report of GUESSS 2011The economic and social relevance of entrepreneurship in general and new ventures in particular is well-established across the world. Students, as they could be the entrepreneurs of tomorrow, have attracted considerable scholarly and public attention in the last decades. Despite strong research efforts in the past, many questions are still not sufficiently answered. Which individual, societal, family- and university-related factors enhance students' intention to found their own company? How do students' entrepreneurial intentions and activities compare across a multitude of nations? Are there globally applicable best practices? To generate unique insights and contributions that address these gaps, it is thus imperative to further investigate students' entrepreneurial intentions, activities and their antecedents on a global level. This is the overarching goal of the GUESSS research project (Global Universiy Entrepreneurial Spirit Students' Survey). This report presents the results and insights of the 2011 edition of the GUESSS project on the global level. In Spring 2011, a large-scale quantitative survey was conducted in 26 different countries, addressing more than 1 Million students from 489 Universities, leading to a data set with more than 93'000 responses (N=93'265).Type: work report
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PublicationType: work report
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PublicationOpportunity-Recognition Beliefs among Student EntrepreneursOpportunity recognition is a central concept in entrepreneurship research. However, research on entrepreneurship education has so far neglected this topic. There is hardly any systematic evidence concerning the effect of entrepreneurship education on opportunity recognition, one reason for this being that research on opportunity recognition in general has been hampered by a conceptual ambiguity and - until recently - the lack of a reliable and valid measure of this concept. This contribution investigates opportunity-recognition beliefs among intentional and nascent student entrepreneurs in Germany. It applies a refined and extended version of the measure of opportunity-recognition beliefs proposed by Gregoire, Shepherd, & Schurer Lambert (2010). The results support the view that opportunity-recognition beliefs are not a unidimensional concept but consist of related but somehow distinct constructs. Determinants of opportunity-recognition beliefs are investigated using structural equation modeling. I find a negative direct effect of entrepreneurship education and a positive indirect effect, mediated by entrepreneurial self-efficacy. Previous work experience and venture gestation activities are also positively related to opportunity-recognition beliefs. The analysis is based on data from the 2011 Global University Entrepreneurial Spirit Students' Survey (GUESSS) in Germany. This study explicitly only includes people who are currently in the process of evaluating an entrepreneurial opportunity, avoiding problems of hindsight and survivor bias.Type: conference paperJournal: Academy of Management Annual Meeting Proceedings
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PublicationType: work report
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PublicationType: newspaper articleJournal: io new ManagementVolume: 75Issue: 6
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PublicationStudent Entrepreneurship Across the Globe: A Look at Intentions and ActivitiesWhat are students' entrepreneurial intentions and activities across the world? This question is of highest social and economic relevance. Students represent the entrepreneurs of tomorrow; their entrepreneurial plans and activities will shape tomorrow's societies and the overall economic well-being. Hence, it is of highest interest for different stakeholders such as academics, practitioners, educators, policy-makers, and last but not least students how many students intend to pursue an entrepreneurial career and how those ntrepreneurial intentions come into being. The GUESSS project (Global Universiy Entrepreneurial Spirit Students' Survey) addresses this question on a global level. For that purpose, the 6th data collection wave in the history of GUESSS was conducted in 34 countries at more than 700 universities between October 2013 and March 2014. This led to a dataset with more than 109'000 complete student responses. This report provides an in-depth analysis of this unique dataset, shedding a nuanced light on students' entrepreneurial intentions and concrete activities. We focused in particular on cross-country comparisons, whereby we also consider numerous other relevant aspects, such as gender and specific social and cultural determinants.Type: work report
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PublicationThe Influence of Family Businesses on the Personality and Career Choice Motives for Students( 2005-04-14)Golla, StephanType: conference paper
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PublicationErgebnisse einer internationalen Befragung zum akademischen Unternehmertum(Verl. Bertelsmann-Stiftung, 2009)
;Klandt, Heinz ;Laspita, Stavroula ;Chlosta, SimoneHekman, BjörnType: book section -
PublicationLe comportement entrepreneurial des étudiants en Suisse : Résultats du Global University Entrepreneurial Students' Spirit Survey (GUESSS 2008)(KMU-HSG - Schweizerisches Institut für Klein- und Mittelunternehmen an der Universität St. Gallen, 2009)Baldegger, RicoType: work report