A new study by Turner College MISM professor Insung Hwang and Lehigh University's Andreea Kiss, Naomi Rothman and Willy Das investigates the effects of entrepreneurial subjective ambivalence on a form of adaptive action referred to as venture idea revision. Building on the affect-as-information perspective, Hwang and his co-authors propose that entrepreneurial subjective ambivalence will increase venture idea revision by increasing information search behaviors. The results of a longitudinal, repeated-measures field study based on 175 entrepreneurs in a top incubator program demonstrate that when entrepreneurs experience higher subjective ambivalence (compared to lower ambivalence) in response to mentor feedback about their new ventures, they engage in higher levels of venture idea revision. Hwang et al. theorize and find that this increase in venture idea revision arises because subjective ambivalence is positively associated with more intense and broader information search behav...
TSYS School alum Kaylee Dodson is building a career protecting what matters most in today’s digital world: data. As an information governance analyst at Aflac, she plays a key role in safeguarding sensitive information and helping her organization stay secure in an increasingly complex cyber landscape. Her path to this role was not traditional, but it was shaped by determination, mentorship, and the opportunities she found at CSU. When Dodson enrolled at CSU, she initially planned to study finance until she found a direction that felt right. That changed when she was introduced to the university’s Cybersecurity Nexus Program. With no prior background in technology, stepping into cybersecurity required a steep learning curve that she called “a complete culture shock, and my brain kind of melted at first.” Her path between high school in her native Fayetteville, Georgia, and college wasn’t a straight one. She took a break from school after starting her college studies to work...