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Michael Frese

Researcher at University of Canberra

Publications -  399
Citations -  41698

Michael Frese is an academic researcher from University of Canberra. The author has contributed to research in topics: Entrepreneurship & Virus. The author has an hindex of 97, co-authored 384 publications receiving 37375 citations. Previous affiliations of Michael Frese include University of Zurich & University of Giessen.

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Entrepreneurial Orientation and Business Performance: An Assessment of Past Research and Suggestions for the Future

TL;DR: In this paper, a cumulative body of knowledge about entrepreneurship orientation has been collected and used in the context of entrepreneurship research, with the focus on entrepreneurship orientation (EO) being one of the few areas in entrepreneurship research where a cumulative knowledge base is available.
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Human capital and entrepreneurial success: A meta-analytical review

TL;DR: In this article, a meta-analytically integrated results from three decades of human capital research in entrepreneurship were found to have a significant but small relationship between human capital and success.
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Let's put the person back into entrepreneurship research: A meta-analysis on the relationship between business owners' personality traits, business creation, and success

TL;DR: This article conducted a meta-analysis of personality traits and found that traits matched to the task of running a business produced higher effect sizes with business creation than traits that were not matched to running an enterprise.
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Innovation is not enough: climates for initiative and psychological safety, process innovations, and firm performance

TL;DR: In this paper, a study of 47 mid-sized German companies examines the relation between process innovations, climates for initiative and psychological safety, and firm performance and concludes that climate for initiative is positively related to two measures of firm performance.
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Culture specific and cross-culturally generalizable implicit leadership theories: Are attributes of charismatic/transformational leadership universally endorsed?

Deanne N. Den Hartog, +143 more
- 01 Jun 1999 - 
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors focus on culturally endorsed implicit theories of leadership (CLTs) and show that attributes associated with charismatic/transformational leadership will be universally endorsed as contributing to outstanding leadership.