Modeling Team Assembly

2021 ◽  
pp. 254-256
Keyword(s):  
Author(s):  
Martin Ganco ◽  
Florence Honoré ◽  
Joseph Raffiee

This chapter provides a review of the scholarly literature on entrepreneurial teams and team formation. It pays special attention to two emerging areas of research that present many promising opportunities for future work. First, the chapter discusses the role of resource transfer in the context of start-up firms. It argues that an understanding of the antecedents and consequences of the founding process would be significantly advanced by more explicit theorizing and effort to empirically identify the specific types of resources entrepreneurial team members bring to start-up firms. It highlights one recent advancement in this space—work that has focused on a team’s ability to transfer customer and client relationships from the parent to start-up firms—and provides an outline of open research questions in this realm. Second, the chapter provides a primer on a recent methodological advancement—the use of two-sided assortative matching models—that can be applied to entrepreneurial team assembly to alleviate ongoing concerns that team formation is fundamentally an endogenous process. It demonstrates how these models can be applied using a wide variety of founder, cofounder, and early team member attributes, including an individual’s ability to transfer customer relationships. Importantly, it proposes that synergies emerging from the use of two-sided assortative matching models to study a broader set of team member attributes that include resource transfer will open promising new avenues for future research.


2022 ◽  
Vol 68 ◽  
pp. 84-96
Author(s):  
Marlon Twyman ◽  
Daniel A. Newman ◽  
Leslie DeChurch ◽  
Noshir Contractor

1990 ◽  
Vol 1 (1) ◽  
pp. 35-39 ◽  
Author(s):  
J. Hartley
Keyword(s):  

Author(s):  
Emily Kaven ◽  
Ilana Kaven ◽  
Diego Gómez-Zará ◽  
Leslie DeChurch ◽  
Noshir Contractor

Author(s):  
Alina Lungeanu ◽  
Sophia Sullivan ◽  
Uri Wilensky ◽  
Noshir S. Contractor

Author(s):  
Sami Koivunen ◽  
Ekaterina Olshannikova ◽  
Thomas Olsson

AbstractThe team composition of a project team is an essential determinant of the success of innovation projects that aim to produce novel solution ideas. Team assembly is essentially complex and sensitive decision-making, yet little supported by information technology (IT). In order to design appropriate digital tools for team assembly, and team formation more broadly, we call for profoundly understanding the practices and principles of matchmakers who manually assemble teams in specific contexts. This paper reports interviews with 13 expert matchmakers who are regularly assembling multidisciplinary innovation teams in various organizational environments in Finland. Based on qualitative analysis of their experiences, we provide insights into their established practices and principles in team assembly. We conceptualize and describe common tactical approaches on different typical levels of team assembly, including arranging approaches like “key-skills-first”, “generalist-first” and “topic-interest-first”, and balancing approaches like “equally-skilled-teams” and “high-expertise-teams”. The reported empirical insights can help to design IT systems that support team assembly according to different tactics.


Procedia CIRP ◽  
2019 ◽  
Vol 86 ◽  
pp. 294-299
Author(s):  
Torsten Sievers ◽  
Carsten Goldenstein ◽  
Kirsten Tracht

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