Martin Lukeš
University of Economics, Prague
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Publication
Featured researches published by Martin Lukeš.
International Journal of Entrepreneurial Behaviour & Research | 2017
Martin Lukeš; Ute Stephan
Purpose - The paper develops a model of employee innovative behavior conceptualizing it as distinct from innovation outputs and as a multi-faceted behavior rather than a simple count of ‘innovative acts’ by employees. It understands individual employee innovative behaviors as a micro-foundation of firm intrapreneurship that is embedded in and influenced by contextual factors such as managerial, organizational and cultural support for innovation. Building from a review of existing employee innovative behavior scales and theoretical considerations we develop and validate the Innovative Behavior Inventory (IBI) and the Innovation Support Inventory (ISI). Design/methodology/approach – Two pilot studies, a third validation study in the Czech Republic and a fourth cross-cultural validation study using population representative samples from Switzerland, Germany, Italy and the Czech Republic (n=2,812 employees and 450 entrepreneurs) were conducted. Findings - Both inventories were reliable and showed factorial, criterion, convergent and discriminant validity as well as cross-cultural equivalence. Employee innovative behavior was supported as comprising of idea generation, idea search, idea communication, implementation starting activities, involving others and overcoming obstacles. Managerial support was the most proximal contextual influence on innovative behavior and mediated the effect of organizational support and national culture. Originality/value - The paper advances our understanding of employee innovative behavior as a multi-faceted phenomenon and the contextual factors influencing it. Where past research typically focuses on convenience samples within a particular country, we offer first robust evidence that our model of employee innovative behavior generalizes across cultures and types of samples. Our model and the IBI and ISI inventories enable researchers to build a deeper understanding of the important micro-foundation underpinning intrapreneurial behavior in organizations and allow practitioners to identify their organizations’ strengths and weaknesses related to intrapreneurship.
European Journal of Innovation Management | 2018
Ondřej Dvouletý; Maria Cristina Longo; Ivana Blažková; Martin Lukeš; Michal Andera
Even in established economies, empirical studies on the relationship between business incubation and firm performance do not show unequivocally positive results. The purpose of this paper is to contribute to this debate based on the empirical evidence from the under-researched Central and Eastern European region in which no similar study has been conducted before. Due to the shorter experience with the management of business incubators and less developed institutions, business incubators may not be so effective in supporting their tenants in this region.,The authors utilise firm-level data from incubated Czech enterprises (n=205) founded after 2003 and compare them with those that have not received support from incubators. The authors implement three matching techniques to pair incubated and non-incubated companies. The outcome variables measured sales, price-cost margin, assets turnover, value added, size of total assets and size of personnel costs.,Compared to the control group, incubated firms reported on average lower values of the above-mentioned indicators. Presented study shows that Czech incubators have not been successful in supporting growth of incubated firms.,The study suggests that there is a clear room for improvements. Incubators should improve in attracting and selecting high potentials and in providing more effective support focussed on tenants’ growth, whereas policymakers should exercise stricter control regarding the money spent and effectiveness of incubators.,The empirical analysis was conducted based on the research gap in the studies related to the impact of business incubation in the under-researched Central and Eastern European region. It also shows that positive results from similar studies done in established economies cannot be taken for granted as they depend on the quality of institutions in a particular country.
Archive | 2017
Martin Lukeš
This chapter illustrates the actual state and development trends of entrepreneurship in the Czech Republic. It utilizes outputs of previous studies on entrepreneurship conducted in the Czech Republic as well as various available datasets that are analyzed and compiled in a comprehensive framework that enables the reader to understand the state of entrepreneurship in the Czech Republic and its specific features. The chapter starts with quick description of the specific history of entrepreneurship in the Czech Republic in the last 100 years and then moves to a description of recent development. It focuses on the sectors of the economy in which entrepreneurial activity is the most prevalent. It further discusses entrepreneurship in academia both in terms of entrepreneurship education and entrepreneurship research and proceeds to a description of the entrepreneurial ecosystem, entrepreneurial culture, and the role of government. The chapter finishes with a description of future trends and detailed policy recommendations.
Archive | 2012
Martin Lukeš; Ute Stephan
Prague Economic Papers | 2013
Martin Lukeš
Politicka Ekonomie | 2013
Martin Lukeš; Jan Zouhar; Martina Jakl; Petr Očko
Prague Economic Papers | 2016
Martin Lukeš; Jan Zouhar
Ekonomický časopis (Journal of Economics) | 2013
Martin Lukeš; Jan Zouhar
Archive | 2007
Ute Stephan; Martin Lukeš; D. Dej; P.G. Richter
Wirtschaftspsychologie | 2005
Ute Stephan; Martin Lukeš; D. Dej; P.G. Richter