FRIENDS, ACQUAINTANCES, STRANGERS: GENDER DIFFERENCES IN THE STRUCTURE OF ENTREPRENEURIAL NETWORKS
Abstract
The importance of social networks in the entrepreneurial process is generally recognized, but systematic empirical research on the structural properties of entrepreneurial networks has been sparse. In this paper, gender differences in the density and diversity of the personal networks of 124 small business owners in the Maritime provinces are studied. The key findings are that women's networks are wider, have a higher proportion of strangers in them and include a higher proportion of cross-sex ties.