Showing posts with label conscientiousness. Show all posts
Showing posts with label conscientiousness. Show all posts

Monday, February 14, 2011

The Big 5 Personality Traits and Valentine's Advice

This post from the myPersonality Research blog presents results showing that traditional and conscientious people are more likely to be married. The blog-post discusses how it is possible that marriage might somehow cause people to change their personality to be more traditional and conscientious, rather than traditional and conscientious people getting and staying married. However, they still offer the following Valentine's advice: "to show that you’re marriage material ... we suggest that men should... ask their Valentine out with 40 traditional red roses, and arrive on time to take her to a nice conventional romantic dinner."

Wednesday, January 19, 2011

Are More Conscientious Entrepreneurs More Likely to Fail?

Which Big-Five personality traits drive entrepreneurial failure in highly innovative firms?

Sebastian Wilfling
Friedrich Schiller University Jena, Department of Economics
Uwe Cantner
Friedrich Schiller University Jena, Department of Economics
Rainer K. Silbereisen
Friedrich Schiller University Jena, Institute of Psychology

Abstract:
The relation between the comprehensive personality of highly innovative entrepreneurs and their disposition to fail is still strongly underinvestigated. Therefore in this paper a dataset consisting of 423 entrepreneurs from the German federal state of Thuringia is employed in order to examine the relationship between the Big-Five personality traits (conscientiousness, extraversion, agreeableness, openness, neuroticism) and entrepreneurial failure in highly innovative industries. Correspondingly, we identify seemingly successful discontinuances as far as possible with the help of a credit rating. We find evidence that higher agreeable entrepreneurs have a lower probability to fail at all ages, while a higher level of conscientiousness increases the hazard rate at the time of entry, even if this effect diminishes over time. In contrast, neuroticism, openness, and extraversion are seemingly not related to the hazard of entrepreneurial failure.