Startups

Startups turn technologies, talent and capital into products, organisations and new forms of work. This research stream studies how startups emerge, grow and shape innovation ecosystems.

We examine startups as complex systems of founders, teams, investors, technologies and institutions. Using large-scale digital trace data, natural language processing and network science, we analyse what makes startups different, how founding teams form and succeed, how venture capital flows, and how market structures affect entrepreneurial opportunities.

By linking founder characteristics, firm data, investment patterns and ecosystem dynamics, we aim to understand why some startups succeed while others do not. Our work helps reveal where entrepreneurial potential appears, how innovation ecosystems develop, and which conditions allow new firms to turn ideas into successful businesses.

Goals

  1. Understand how founders, teams and ecosystems shape startup success.
  2. Identify leverage points in building successful startup ecosystems.
  3. Analyse how markets, investors and institutional support affect startup growth.

Construction of a Startup Ecosystem Fingerprint

startup ecosystem fingerprint

Researchers

Publications

Startup Team

The impact of founder personalities on startup success

By Paul McCarthy, Xian Gong, Fabian Braesemann, Fabian Stephany, Marian-Andrei Rizoiu and Margaret Kern

Why some startups succeed more than others can be explained with founders’ personality traits and the diversity of personalities within the founding team.

Science of Startups Initiative
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