Hidden treasures or red flags? A recruiter's view of (not) hiring former entrepreneurs into corporate jobs

Author:

Feng Jie1ORCID,Wang Danni2ORCID,Huang Lei3,Zhang Ruoyong4

Affiliation:

1. School of Management and Labor Relations Rutgers University New Brunswick New Jersey USA

2. Department of Management and Global Business Rutgers Business School, Newark and New Brunswick, Rutgers University Newark New Jersey USA

3. Department of Management Raymond J. Harbert College of Business, Auburn University Auburn Alabama USA

4. School of Management Lanzhou University Lanzhou China

Abstract

AbstractEntrepreneurs may enter the labor market to seek alternative employment opportunities, and their job applications are gaining increasing attention. With a focus on the recruiting side, we leverage the role congruity theory to examine how recruiters with various characteristics and backgrounds assess former entrepreneurs who apply for corporate jobs. We propose that job applicants with entrepreneurial experience will systematically receive fewer offers than otherwise equally qualified non‐entrepreneur applicants. However, we also suggest that this “entrepreneurship‐penalty effect” will be weakened when the recruiters are female, have shorter organizational tenure, or have entrepreneurial experience. We tested our hypotheses in a policy‐capturing experiment with follow‐up surveys using a sample collected in 2019 and 2022, that is, before and after the outbreak of COVID‐19. We found general support for our hypotheses and identified recruiters’ preferences for entrepreneur‐applicants at two‐time points. Results revealed that recruiters of different characteristics and backgrounds had varying assessments of former entrepreneur applicants, which provides implications for both sides of recruitment.

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

Organizational Behavior and Human Resource Management,Applied Psychology

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