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Speaker
Series 2007-2008
Psychology of
Entrepreneurship – State of the Art
Michael Frese
Department of Psychology
University of Giessen
Monday, November 5, 2007, 2:00 -
3:30 PM
Room 1303
Abstract:
Entrepreneurship research most
recently puts the perception and
exploitation of opportunity into the
foreground. This is a useful
definition of entrepreneurship. Such
a conceptualisation has a number of
psychological implications. What are
opportunities? How can they be used?
What relationship exists to the more
traditional research on initiative,
innovation, and other areas? What
kind of strategies do entrepreneurs
use to actually accomplish the
understanding of opportunities and
their exploitation?
Bringing psychology into
entrepreneurship improves
entrepreneurship research. The other
way around, bringing
entrepreneurship research into work
and organizational psychology, will
also improve work and organizational
psychology. Entrepreneurship is an
important area because 1) It is
important to understand the
relationship between individuals and
organizations, and the most
important issue is indeed how
individual make and design
organizations when they first start
them. 2) Entrepreneurs are sometimes
seen as being the most important
factors to contribute to innovations
and to make adaptations in
developed, but particularly in
underdeveloped economies. 3) The
number of entrepreneurs seems to be
increasing and quite clearly it is
mostly entrepreneurial units that
increase the number of jobs in
societies. 4) With the changes at
work even employees will be forced
to think much more
entrepreneurially, even when they
are employees of large
organizations.
The psychology of
entrepreneurship is a relatively new
field. To give an overview of this
field, we edited a book in the
Frontiers Series of the Society for
Industrial and Organization
Psychology (SIOP) (Baum, J. R.,
Frese, M., & Baron, R. A. (Eds.).
(2007). The Psychology of
Entrepreneurship. Mahwah, New
Jersey: Lawrence Erlbaum
Publishers). I shall discuss what I
think we should learn from this book
. My discussion provides a summary
of psychological approaches to
entrepreneurship in such topics as
personality, cognitive ability,
human capital, cognitions, actions,
motivation, leadership, environment,
networks, the entrepreneurial
process, innovation, and national
culture to understand better how
psychology can predict success and
starting a business in the area of
entrepreneurship.
Michael Frese received his
Diploma and Doctorate from the Free
University of Berlin and Technical
University Berlin respectively and
holds now a chair for work and
organizational psychology at the
University of Giessen; He also
teaches as a Visiting Professor at
London Business School. Prior to
this appointment, he has taught in
Berlin, was Associate Professor at
the University of Pennsylvania, and
professor at the Universities of
Munich and Amsterdam. In addition to
lecturing within Germany, he
lectured in the U.S.A., England,
Finland, Sweden, Zimbabwe,
Philippines, China (Visiting
Professor at Zheijang Univ., Center
for Human Resource and Strategic
Development), and elsewhere
internationally.
Prof. Frese’s research spans a
wide range of basic and applied
topics within work and
organizational psychology. Most
important are the longitudinal
studies on psychological effects of
unemployment, impact of stress at
work, predictors of personal
initiative in East Germany and
psychological success factors in
small scale entrepreneurs. These
studies have led to a larger project
on innovation. His field studies on
errors and on shift work are also
well known. In addition he is
studying training - most importantly
the concept of error training,
leadership training and
psychological training for
increasing entrepreneurship and
personal initiative. Most recently,
he has done studies on cultural
factors in organization and across
nations, as well as research that
looks at psychological success
factors in entrepreneurs in
developing countries (Africa, Latin
America, and Asia) and in Europe.
Curriculum Vita 
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