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PhD defence by Nicola Anne Thomas: "For Richer or Poorer, Better or Worse? Exploring How Conflict and Emotions Impact Start-up Team Separation"

Nicola Anne Thomas will defend her PhD project "For Richer or Poorer, Better or Worse? Exploring How Conflict and Emotions Impact Start-up Team Separation".

Follow on Zoom: https://dtudk.zoom.us/j/68633749709?pwd=UUpaeW9RNW5hZVBSeWg4THNCaElKQT09

Abstract

Entrepreneurship is an incredibly emotional journey, and nowhere are the emotional dynamics in a founder’s journey more pronounced than in founding teams. While research into founding teams has flourished in recent years, we know surprisingly little about how conflict and emotions interact in founding teams to impact the likelihood of a founding team separation. Yet practitioners rely on

the metaphor of marriage to teach founders how to manage conflict and affect to avoid a team ‘divorce’, however no entrepreneurship research explores this metaphor empirically to assess the validity and appropriateness of comparing a founding team to a marriage. In this thesis, I argue that to explore these complex phenomena in a rich, nuanced way, we need to deviate from traditional theories and methodologies relied on in entrepreneurship research. Hence, I draw inspiration from marital research, and capitalise on recent technological advancements like artificial intelligence algorithms that monitor real-time valence and activation fluctuations throughout founding team interactions. I explore the role of conflict, affect and affective interactions that lead to co-founder exits and founding team separation in a novel way.

This thesis consists of three core articles that employ a range of methodological approaches to examine, and predict, how founding team dynamics lead to co-founder exits over the long run. I propose a theoretical framework that posits three main, interconnected findings. First, there are a range of affective responses throughout founding team conflict, and contrary to expectations, negative affect is not only expressed in relationship conflict, but also task and process conflict. Second, patterns of group affect and group cognition change the nature of team interactions, which in turn influence team conflict and resulting co-founder exits. Finally, rather than negative affect and relationship conflict predicting a cofounder exit, positive affect and task conflict are highly predictive of a founding team separation.

Taken together, in this body of work I contribute to the literature on entrepreneurial affect, entrepreneurial exits, and founding team conflict by challenging core assumptions about the deleterious role of negative affect and relationship conflict in founding teams. I introduce important new insights about what impacts founding teams in the long run: namely, how affective heterogeneity and ‘masked
positivity’ increase the likelihood, and detriment of a co-founder’s exit.

Keywords: Founding team, team conflict, affect, co-founder exits, entrepreneurial affect, team dynamics.

Principal supervisor

Associate Professor Carina Lomberg

Co-supervisor

Associate Professor Philip Cash

Examiners

Professor Liisa Välikangas, DTU Management
Professor Melissa Cardon, The University of Tennesse Knoxville
Professor Nicola Breugst, Technical University of Munich

Chairperson at defence

Director, Professor Jes Broeng

A copy of the PhD thesis is available for reading at the centre.

Related: How can we harness emotions to increase productivity and entrepreneurial innovation?

Watch video about related research by Nicola Anne Thomas

 

Time

Thu 17 Feb 22
15:00 - 18:00

Organizer

DTU Entrepreneurship

Where

DTU, Technical University of Denmark
Diplomvej
Building 371, 2nd floor, meeting room 217
DK-2800 Kgs. Lyngby