Dear Faculty and Fellow Ph.D. Students,
I cordially invite you to attend my dissertation defense scheduled for Friday, April 18th, from 10:00 am to 12:00 pm EST in Room 314, Scheller College of Business.
You are also welcome to join remotely via Zoom: https://gatech.zoom.us/j/97788778854.
An overview is included below, and copies of the dissertation are available upon request.
Best regards,
Thien Dong
Thien Dong
Ph.D. Candidate in Strategy and Innovation
Georgia Institute of Technology | Scheller College of Business
Area: Strategy
Committee Members: Dr. Peter Thompson (co-chair), Dr. Alexander Oettl (co-chair), Dr. Astrid Marinoni, Dr. Annamaria Conti (IE Business School), Dr. Manpreet Hora
Title: Navigating New Frontiers: Corporate Venture Capital, Legal Dynamics, and the Generative Artificial Intelligence Revolution in Startups
Dissertation Overview:
This dissertation examines the impacts of corporate venture capital (CVC) investments and the emerging influence of Generative AI on the financial and human capital dimensions of startups. In the first chapter, I investigate how CVC investments affect startup performance, emphasizing the competitive dynamics between ventures and their parent corporations in product and technology markets. My findings reveal that ventures experience reduced funding and innovation outcomes as technological similarity with their corporate investors increases. However, this negative impact is mitigated when the startup introduces new use cases for the parent firm's proprietary technologies. Building on these insights, the second chapter explores the consequences of litigation initiated by startups against their CVC investors. Contrary to expectations, such litigation results in increased CVC investments within the litigated domains. Specifically, corporate investors shift their strategies from repeated investments toward entirely new ventures and increase syndication efforts with other investors. The third chapter transitions from financial to human capital, investigating how Generative AI influences the composition of startup founding teams. Drawing upon the imprinting literature and recent research on AI's occupational exposure, I construct a measure of AI exposure at the career level among founding teams. The analysis suggests that Generative AI may lead startups toward smaller founding teams that are demographically heterogeneous yet exhibit greater homogeneity in terms of AI exposure. Overall, this dissertation illuminates the interplay between technological advancements, corporate venture strategies, and human capital dynamics in startups. The theoretical insights and empirical findings provide valuable guidance for stakeholders aiming to foster economic growth through entrepreneurial innovation.