Technopreneurial Intentions: The Effect of Innate Innovativeness and Academic Self-Efficacy

Date
2021
Journal Title
Journal ISSN
Volume Title
Publisher
SAGE journals
Abstract
Several factors can affect students’ intention to start a new technology-based venture (technopreneurial intentions). Understanding these factors is important when developing technical educational programs. This study investigates the effect of innate innovativeness and academic self-efficacy on technopreneurial self-efficacy and the forming of technopreneurial intentions. It does this by developing a conceptual model that relates technopreneurial intentions, technopreneurial self-efficacy, academic self-efficacy, and innate innovativeness. The data was collected from 378 un dergraduate engineering students enrolled in a Jordanian university with a self-administered ques tionnaire survey. The results of the structural equation modeling (SEM) using AMOS showed that technopreneurial self-efficacy had a positive and significant impact on technopreneurial intentions. Academic self-efficacy had both a direct and indirect positive effect on technopreneurial intention. The indirect effect occurred through increased technopreneurial self-efficacy. Innate innovativeness had a direct effect on technopreneurial intentions, but it did not have a significant indirect effect through technopreneurship self-efficacy as was initially hypothesized. The findings suggest that those who show interest in starting a new technology-based venture have a strong belief in their abilities to perform the technological and entrepreneurial tasks needed, are confident about their ability to acquire the academic technical skills required, and have the inner motivation to seek what is technologically new and different.
Description
Keywords
Rational choice, mobile service, switching services, multinomial logistics regression, Jordan telecommunication marke
Citation
Sa’Ed M Salhieh and Al-Abdallat, Y. (2022) “Technopreneurial Intentions: The Effect of Innate Innovativeness and Academic Self-Efficacy,” Sustainability, 14(1), p. 238.