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Priors, Experiments, Learning and Persuasion in (Bayesian) Entrepreneurial Finance

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  • Ramana Nanda

    (Harvard Business School)

Abstract

At the heart of entrepreneurial finance lies a persuasion challenge: regardless of the strength of an entrepreneur’s belief in the potential of their idea, they typically need to convince investors to provide the financial capital required for its commercialization. How should entrepreneurs approach this challenge in order to maximize the chance of raising the required external finance? Why does it appear harder to persuade venture capital investors to finance startups in certain industries and regions and in certain periods of time? Are there systematic frictions preventing entrepreneurs from effectively persuading investors in certain settings and if so, what can be done to reduce them? In this chapter, I discuss answers to these and other questions through a conceptual framework in which investors update their beliefs about a startup’s prospects through a sequence of investments over time.

Suggested Citation

  • Ramana Nanda, "undated". "Priors, Experiments, Learning and Persuasion in (Bayesian) Entrepreneurial Finance," Harvard Business School Working Papers 25-020, Harvard Business School.
  • Handle: RePEc:hbs:wpaper:25-020
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    References listed on IDEAS

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