Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
891244 Personality and Individual Differences 2013 6 Pages PDF
Abstract

Despite the stereotype of entrepreneurs as corporate psychopaths, there has been little research on the overlap between individual differences in entrepreneurship and subclinical psychopathy. In line with this issue, the current study investigated whether primary and secondary psychopathy are linked to a measure of entrepreneurial tendencies and abilities, as well as entrepreneurial activities and achievements. Participants were 435 working adults. Structural equation models revealed that individual differences in entrepreneurial tendencies and abilities were positively related to primary psychopathy, but unrelated to secondary psychopathy. Secondary psychopathy did not predict entrepreneurial activity; primary psychopathy predicted some entrepreneurial outcomes, albeit modestly, providing partial support for the ‘corporate psychopath’ stereotype. Implications for entrepreneurship research and practice are discussed.

► Our sample includes over 400 working adults. ► First examination of how nonclinical psychopathy relates to entrepreneurship. ► SEM is used to test the stereotype of entrepreneurs being “corporate psychopaths”. ► The paper extends a recent study on EQ and entrepreneurship published in PAID. ► Primary and secondary psychopathy are differentially related to entrepreneurship.

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Life Sciences Neuroscience Behavioral Neuroscience
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