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Resolving Information Asymmetry: Signaling, Endorsement, and Crowdfunding Success

Publication Type : Journal Article

Publisher : SAGE Publications

Source : Entrepreneurship Theory and Practice

Url : https://doi.org/10.1111/etap.12267

Campus : Bengaluru

School : School of Business

Year : 2016

Abstract : This article draws on information economics to examine when signals and endorsements obtained from multiple information sources enhance or diminish one another's effects. We propose that signals through start–up actions (use of media) and characteristics (crowdfunding experience) can mitigate information asymmetry concerns about project quality and founder credibility, enhancing the project's likelihood of attaining funding. Further, we posit that while start–up–originated signals offset each other's effects, third–party endorsements (sentiment expressed in backer comments) validate and complement start–up–originated signals. Empirical analyses based on a comprehensive dataset of crowdfunding projects on the Kickstarter website during 2009–2015 confirm our predictions.

Cite this Research Publication : Christopher Courtney, Supradeep Dutta, Yong Li, Resolving Information Asymmetry: Signaling, Endorsement, and Crowdfunding Success, Entrepreneurship Theory and Practice, SAGE Publications, 2016, https://doi.org/10.1111/etap.12267

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