INTRODUCTION
Social science research and personal anecdotes offer many answers to the question of who entrepreneurs turn to during significant events in the history of their business: There are professional stories: turn to the most recognized or most experienced experts. There are social stories: turn to the best people available at a good price, such as family professionals or trusted friends who owe a favor. There are contingency stories: turn to people most appropriate to the specific opportunity or issue now presenting. Take the question to China around the turn of the century, and the answers become more complex as rapidly changing organizational needs during the life-cycle of a firm coincide with dynamic change in the firm's surroundings and institutional environment.
What constitutes a ‘significant’ event in the eyes of the entrepreneurs who built their businesses during China's ongoing market reforms can therefore vary over time. After all, private companies have only recently attained full legal rights and constitutional equality with public ownership firms, and continue to experience limited access to scarce resources such as credit, land use rights, and skilled human capital (Nee & Opper, Reference Nee and Opper2012). Similarly, the pool of accessible experts to whom entrepreneurs can turn for help and support could have changed considerably over time. Who was even willing to help entrepreneurs starting up new organizations in the absence of fully developed institutional support for private enterprise? Are family relations offering the most reliable source of support for entrepreneurial success in China (Huang, Reference Huang1990)? Should one involve prominent people such as party or government officials to gain regulatory protection and access to state-controlled resources (Li, Meng, Wang, & Zhou, Reference Li, Meng, Wang and Zhou2008; Nee & Opper, Reference Nee and Opper2010; Peng & Luo, Reference Peng and Luo2000)? Or should one rather abstain from their involvement? Equally important: Should one turn to the same trusted individuals again and again, or turn to a broader set of people? And if contact variation matters, should new contacts be embedded in the emergent network or does the inclusion of distant ties isolated from the emergent cluster of trusted contacts offer advantages for building the business?
To date, there have not been network data from which authoritative answers could be derived on the role of early business events, contacts involved, and their influence on future business success. This is in spite of the apparent influence of early events and related event contacts on the further development of business networks. What is needed to explore the underlying dynamics is a fine-grained account documenting not only current contacts, but also incorporating the entrepreneur's history of contacts, that have been crucial in the company development over time and may or may not continue to be an active source of support. Such approach would also be helpful to test the more general assumption that acting on network advantage cumulates over time as individuals learn to identify rewarding opportunities and how to bring them to fruition (Burt, Reference Burt1992).
To explore how early network experience shapes the evolving process of network emergence and advantage, this study employs novel data – combining both current contacts with historic event data – describing the social networks around 700 Chinese entrepreneurs whose businesses are a stratified random sample of private enterprises in three provinces surrounding the Yangtze River Delta: China's financial center, Shanghai, with Nanjing the capital of Jiangsu Province to the north, and Hangzhou the capital of Zhejiang Province to the south. The sample entrepreneurs founded their businesses around the turn of the century (specifically, year 2000.2 on average), and the 2012 survey sample is a continuation of samples surveyed in 2006 and 2009 by Nee and Opper (Reference Nee and Opper2012). All of the sample firms are entrepreneurial ventures, but 79% of them are in 2012 mature ventures in the sense that they had survived more than eight years. The three provinces account in 2013 for 20.2% of China's gross domestic product, and 31.9% of China's imports and exports. We begin with a quick introduction to our data on networks.
NETWORK DATA
Figure 1 is an example of the kind of network data we have on each entrepreneur. The respondent (large square in the center of the figure) founded his business 13 years ago in Zhejiang province, and grew it to 467 employees by the time of the survey. He named nine contacts, largely interconnected by close relations (thin line) with a few especially close relations (bold lines). Two contacts are close together in the figure to the extent that the relation between them is strong, and their relations with others are similar (spring embedding, Borgatti, Reference Borgatti2002).
Our network data were obtained with name generator and name interpreter items. Such items are routine in network survey research (Marsden, Reference Marsden, Scott and Carrington2011), in network surveys of management populations in particular (Burt, Reference Burt2010: 281ff.), and have precedent in China (Batjargal, Hitt, Tsui, Arregle, Webb, & Miller, Reference Batjargal, Hitt, Tsui, Arregle, Webb and Miller2013; Bian & Li, Reference Bian and Li2012; Ruan, Reference Ruan1998; Xiao & Tsui, Reference Xiao and Tsui2007). The survey instrument and materials are available in the original English (see NOTES below).
Name generators are survey questions that elicit the names of individuals with whom the respondent has specified kinds of relationships. We used the six name generators listed to the left in Table 1. For example, each respondent was asked to name the ‘three or four people who have been most valuable to your business activities this year’. To stretch the network data back into a respondent's history, we asked about contacts associated with significant events back to the firm's founding. We do not provide an objective definition of what makes an event ‘significant’. We want to capture what the respondent deems significant, not what we deem significant. However, we do limit significance to events important in the overall ‘history of the company development’. An example timeline in the questionnaire further clarifies that we are looking for milestone events in the company's development. The idea is to create a time line of concrete events, and then ask for the names of contacts who were most valued during each event. In response to the first two name generators in Table 1, all respondents named a contact most valuable when the business was founded, then most named five subsequent events, and a person most valued for help during the event. People named in association with significant events we reference as ‘event contacts’. We refer to people named on any of the other four name generators in Table 1 as ‘current contacts’, which are the usual focus of business network research. A contact can be cited on more than one name generator, so it is often the case that a current contact is also an event contact (contacts 5 and 6 in Figure 1).
Notes: Name generators, listed in order asked in interview, identify respondent contacts (number of cited contacts in parentheses). In total, 4,464 different contacts are cited. Name interpreters flesh out relationships with each cited contact, and define connections among the contacts. The name generators are asked first in the interview, followed by the name interpreters.
Significant events cited during the interview with the Figure 1 entrepreneur are listed on a time line to the upper-left in the figure. Contact 1 was cited as the most valued person in founding the business. Securing the first overseas customer was a significant event in the second year of the business, and person 2 was cited as most valued through that event. Significant events continue across the time line, each event eliciting the name of a person most valued during the event. Some respondents cite the same people again and again (especially family), but the respondent in Figure 1 named a different person for each event.Footnote [1] As most valued current contacts, most valued employee, and most difficult person, the respondent cited the five people indicated by dark dots in Figure 1.
Name interpreters are questions that ask the respondent to describe relations with and among the cited contacts. We used the seven name interpreters listed to the right in Table 1. We asked respondents how long they had known each contact, how often they met with each contact, and so on. Trust was measured by asking the respondent to rate his or her trust in each contact.Footnote [2] To scale relations, we asked respondents whether their relation with each contact was ‘especially close’, ‘close’, ‘less close’, or ‘distant’, and asked them to describe whether the connection between each named contact was ‘especially close’, ‘distant’, or something in between (‘neither distant nor especially close’). With each connection in a respondent's network scaled from 0 to 1, we computed network metrics often used in studies of trust and achievement (e.g., Burt, Kilduff, & Tasselli, Reference Burt, Kilduff and Tasselli2013, for quick review). The nine contacts in Figure 1 form a network slightly larger and less dense than the sample average (respective z-scores of 1.77 and –0.72). Size adjusted for density shows the effective size of the network is broader than average (5.86 nonredundant contacts, 1.53 z-score) and the network constrains the respondent less than is average in the sample (.371 network constraint, −1.38 z-score).
EVENT CONTACTS
The entrepreneurs cite a total of 4,464 contacts. Figure 2 shows that current contacts exclude many people valued in significant events. About half of current contacts are people cited as most valued during significant events in the history of the business (1,564 of 3,123). The current network excludes, for the average entrepreneur, about two contacts who were only valued during significant events in the history of the business. Those two excluded contacts are a 43% extension on current contacts (1,341 divided by 3,123).
The balance of event and current contacts in Figure 2 is confounded by question order. The Chinese entrepreneurs were presented with event name generators before being asked about current contacts, so they were primed to think about the history of the business when naming contacts significant in this year's business activities.Footnote [3] Therefore, the ratio of event-only contacts to current contacts is probably higher than displayed in Figure 2.
Event contacts are cited in association with the history of the business, so it could seem reasonable to discuss them as contacts from an entrepreneur's past, but more than half of them are currently met daily. We measured the strength of relations with event and current contacts in terms of emotional closeness, duration, frequency, and trust (Table 1). Table 2 shows that the entrepreneurs have trust in event contacts higher than they have in contacts only in their current network, are more likely to cite event contacts as ‘especially close’, and have known event contacts for more than a dozen years on average, versus the five and half for which they have known contacts only in their current network. Regardless, event contacts continue to be a feature in current networks. About half of event-only contacts are met daily (43.65%), which is about the same as current-only contacts (45.48%). Rather than saying event contacts are stronger ties than current contacts, it is more accurate to say that people cited as both event and current contacts are stronger ties than people cited for either one alone.
Notes: Trust is measured on a five-point scale (test statistic with fixed respondent effects for no difference between rows: F(2,3762) = 1170.81, P < .001). Especially close contacts are distinguished from close, less close, and distant (test statistic with fixed respondent effects for no difference between the rows: 207.18 chi-square, 2 d.f., P < .001). Years known are significantly different across the rows (test statistic with fixed respondent effects for no difference: F(2,3762) = 829.96, P < .001). Contact frequency is significantly different across the rows (244.06 chi-square, 2 d.f., P < .001, for an ordinal logit predicting frequency categories from the rows). Percentage of row contacts at each level of frequency is given in parentheses.
Kinds of Events by Content
Respondents gave a brief description of each event they cited. A Mainland Chinese graduate student coded the descriptions on two characteristics (with the coding reviewed by the coauthor fluent in Chinese): What is the broad substantive content of the event, and is the event about a loss to the business, or an opportunity for gain?
We began with 14 content categories of events. Some were combined because of low frequency. Some were combined to remove unreliable distinctions. The final nine are listed in Table 3 with example respondent descriptions. The first kind of event is founding, about which each respondent was asked directly (name generator is given in the first row of Table 3). Event categories are listed in Table 3 in the order of when they occurred on average. There is one founding event per respondent, which defines year one. The next significant event tends to be one of three kinds, clustered around the fifth year of business: There is a problem with a supplier. The business gets its first big customer contract, domestic or overseas. There is a financial problem.
Notes: Number of events cited is in parentheses, followed by percent of events that are about loss (versus growth), then year on average in which the row category of events occur. A total of 4,163 events are cited, which is more than the 2,905 contacts in Figure 2 cited for events because some people are cited for more than one event. Categories six and eight are events inside the business.
The next significant events, a couple years later, tend to be inside and outside the business. Outside the business, there is an award or affiliation with a business association, or a significant exchange with the government (e.g., preferential treatment regarding tax or land, certification for broader class of business, sometimes imposition of a fine or restriction). The more often-cited kinds of events are inside the business. Most concern management issues, but a substantial minority concern technology adopted to improve efficiency or sell new products, so technology events are broken out as a separate kind of event. The business is up and running by year eight, when general market conditions are the last cited events.
Most of the cited events concern growth – big contracts, expanded production, secure revenue or supplies. The two exceptions are finance, which is often an explanation for the business losing money (46% concern loss) and market forces (92% concern loss). The frequent concern for loss associated with market development events is likely a result of the survey timing, which coincided with the global economic crisis.
Kinds of Events by Timing
The average year in which a kind of event occurs varies between businesses, and of course varies with the age of a business. A business founded four years ago cannot yet have an event in year eight. Table 4 shows how events differ by the order in which they are reported (columns) and the year in which they occur (rows). The totals in the bottom row of Table 4 show one founding event for each respondent (700 events), one first significant event per respondent (700 events), and so on, down to the 675 respondents who cited a fifth significant event. The ‘Founding’ column shows all 700 founding events in year one. The first significant event tends to occur in the first or second year of a business (276 plus 255 constitute 76% of the 700 first significant events), but timing varies: Six respondents said their first significant event occurred after they had been in business for a decade or more.
There is no objective standard defining an event significant. We focus on the order of events because respondents are free to define what constitutes a significant event, and they typically selected events across the life of their business. The longer the business has been in operation, the more spread out the events.Footnote [4] The pattern is only slightly different with business age held constant.Footnote [5]
Figure 3 is a guide to more and less strong connections associated with events. Event timing is measured on the horizontal axes: the order in which an event is cited, the year in which the event occurs, then the point in the history of a business in which the event occurs (event year divided by firm age, to control for newer versus older businesses). We combine events occurring more than 10 years after founding because strength of tie measures does not change much after the first decade. To simplify the third graph, portions of business history are rounded to the closest lower decimal. For example, percentages over the ‘0.0’ score are averages across all events that happened between founding and before the business reached 10% of its current age.
The vertical axes measure in four ways the strength of the respondent's relation with the person cited as most valued during an event – average number of years known as of the survey in 2012 (left axis), then percent cited for the highest level of trust, percent ‘especially close’ to the respondent, and percent who are members of the respondent's family (right axis). Years known, and family can be assumed to predate the event for which a person is cited as helpful, but trust and emotional closeness are recorded for 2012, during the survey interview, so they are likely to have been affected by the contact's help during the cited event, rather than vice versa.
There are two patterns in Figure 3. First, founding is a special event unto itself. Founding is when family is most likely to be cited for help, and founding is associated with the highest levels of trust and emotional closeness with people the entrepreneur has known for many years. Second, the first significant event is more like founding than are any of the subsequent events. Strength of tie to the person cited for help during the first significant event after founding is discernibly weaker than the tie to the person cited in association with founding, but the first-event tie is also discernably stronger than ties with people cited in association with later events. The results in Figure 3 are well aligned with research on trust. Beneficiaries of pro-social or cooperative behavior are typically more inclined to trust the other than those who have not experienced such a critical test (Kollock, Reference Kollock1994). Experience of fair, and potentially advantageous, behavior can solidify trust towards the other (Hardin, Reference Hardin and Zeckhauser1991). Such effects can be pronounced when help is in short supply and therefore most valuable. The early stages of firm development, typically characterized by weak organizational legitimacy (Suchman, Reference Suchman1995), standard problems of the liability of newness (Stinchcombe, Reference Stinchombe and March1965) and – in the case of China – weak institutional support providing necessary access to key resources (Nee & Opper, Reference Nee and Opper2012; Peng & Luo, Reference Peng and Luo2000; Xin & Pierce, Reference Xin and Pearce1996), could therefore present key stages of network formation.
Kinds of Events in Broader Context
We broaden the frame of reference in Figure 4, which is a classical multidimensional scaling of relationship characteristics. Two characteristics are close together in Figure 4 to the extent that they often occur in the same relationships.Footnote [6] Included are the kind of event cited, the year it was cited, the kind of person cited, and categories of relationship strength in terms of frequency, years known, trust, and emotional closeness. The figure would be cluttered if verbal descriptions were included for each of the 48 characteristics, but we display a few to make it easier to make sense of the space.
The entrepreneurs most differentiate their relations from positive to negative, which is the horizontal axis in Figure 4. Four broad categories of relationships are distinguished by the vertical axis cutting across the horizontal, with more personal relations at the top of Figure 4, and less personal at the bottom. The two dimensions, positive-negative versus personal-work, have also been reported in American and French management populations (Burt, Reference Burt2005: 52; Reference Burt2010: 287).
Relations in the upper-right of Figure 4 define the entrepreneur's core network, his or her ‘guanxi circle’ (Luo, Cheng, & Zhang, Reference Luo, Cheng and Zhang2016). Guanxi ties are distinguished by three simultaneous qualities: (1) familiarity, intimacy, (2) trust, and (3) mutual obligation (Bian, Reference Bian1997; see Bian, Forthcoming, for analytical review of the literature; see Luo, Huang, & Wang, Reference Luo, Huang and Wang2011, for meta-analysis; and Chen, Chen, & Huang, Reference Chen, Chen and Huang2013, for broader review). In the upper-right quadrant of Figure 4, are contacts from the respondent's family (item 28), people ‘especially close’ to the respondent (item 40), people in whom respondents have the highest trust (item 36), and importantly, the people cited as most valued during the business founding and the first significant event in the history of the business. Burt and Burzynska (Reference Burt and Burzynska2017: Table 6) show that relations with the people cited as most valued during the business founding can be treated as guanxi ties. None of the event categories listed in Table 3 is close to the founding and first event in Figure 4, which means that the businesses have diverse beginnings — no one kind of event is characteristically the first significant event.
The lower-right quadrant of Figure 4 contains positive work ties. Kinds of events are clustered around the second, third, fourth, and fifth significant events in the history of the business. We shaded an area surrounding the cluster. Kinds of events in the cluster are management events (item 11), technology events (item 13, production improvements and new products), and customer events (item 8, largely achievements by the sales department). Also near is the entrepreneur's most valued employee (item 24), indicating that the valued employee is often cited on Events 2, 3, 4, and 5. Further down in the lower-right quadrant are people valued in this year's business activities (item 22), people met daily (item 41), people with whom the respondent is emotionally close, but not especially close (item 39), and people in whom the respondent has high trust, but not the highest level (item 35).
The lower-left quadrant contains suspect ties, relations with people of whom the respondent is wary. Here is the person cited for creating the most difficulty for the respondent this year (item 23), people in whom the respondent has the lowest level of trust (item 33), people from whom the respondent feels emotionally ‘distant’ (item 37), people met less than monthly (item 37), and people the respondent has known for the shortest period of time (item 45).
The upper-left quadrant of Figure 4 contains less-close personal ties. These are positive relations, but they are less intimate than the guanxi ties to the further right. Here are people known since childhood (item 26), neighbors (item 31), members of the Communist Party (item 32), and so on. Here too are events related to supplier issues (item 7), financial issues (item 9), collaboration with other businesses (item 12), dealing with the government (item 10), and general market issues (item 14). We shaded the area around the events to highlight the cluster, which combines events concerning the world outside the business and sets the type of contacts (less close personal ties) clearly apart from the contacts involved in internal affairs (work ties) and those crucial at the founding stage (guanxi ties).
Family Versus Long-Standing Relationships
Given numerous texts emphasizing the central role of family in Chinese life, and the family-like qualities ascribed to guanxi ties in particular (see above references on the meaning of guanxi ties), it is tempting to expect a network process in which entrepreneurs rely on family to get the business going, then turn to less-close friends and acquaintances, for help with subsequent events (e.g., Guo & Miller, Reference Guo and Miller2010). Consistent with that image, Figure 3 and 4 show that family often helped in founding the businesses. Thirty-one percent of entrepreneurs in Figure 3 cite a family member as the most valued contact in founding the business, and family is most likely to be cited as a valued contact during the first couple years of a business. Family, founding contact, and contact most valued in the first significant event are together in the upper-right guanxi quadrant of Figure 4.
While it is correct to say that when family is cited as a valued contact, it is cited early in the history of a business, it is not correct to say that the entrepreneurs typically turned to family when founding their business. Thirty-one percent of entrepreneurs citing family as founding contacts means that a large majority, 69%, of entrepreneurs cite non-family members as their most valued contact in founding the business. As much as family members are a resource on whom the entrepreneur can legitimately make a claim, they are also people to whom the entrepreneur has a social responsibility. Entrepreneurship is by definition a risky venture, all the more so in China at the turn of the century under a legal system inexperienced with private enterprise and protecting property rights. Many of the respondents are cautious not to tie up all family resources in the same venture in order to hedge their risks in an uncertain environment. The network structure confirms this view. The majority of entrepreneurs found help outside the family, indeed outside the usually-suspected sources of social support in China, such as childhood friends, classmates, neighbors, or connections to other institutions such as the military or the Communist Party.
In fact, the best predictor of who an entrepreneur cites as most helpful in founding the business is not a social category or an institution; it is how long the entrepreneur and contact have known each other. Table 5 contains a logit equation predicting which of an entrepreneur's contacts is cited for help in founding the business. The equation is estimated with respondent fixed effects, so respondent differences such as network size and business age are held constant to focus on the identity of contacts cited for help in founding the business. Founding contacts tend to be people still met often at the time of the survey (-3.21 test statistic for days between meetings), and people beyond the interconnected current contacts (−2.66 test statistic for structural embedding). None of the seven kinds of contacts distinguished have any association with a contact being helpful at founding. Particularly noteworthy are the irrelevance of characteristics often discussed as guanxi – childhood friends, classmates, and family (test statistics of −1.62, 0.62, and 0.93 respectively). The dominant predictor of who gets cited as a founding contact is duration – the number of years for which the respondent and contact have known each other (16.87 test statistic).
Notes: This is a logit regression with respondent fixed effects predicting which of a respondent's contacts is cited for help in founding the business (N = 4,464 relationships, chi-square = 1609.32, 11 d.f., P << 0.001). Categories of contact frequency are entered in days (1 for ‘daily’, 7 for ‘weekly’, 30 for ‘monthly’, and 90 for ‘less often’). Number of third parties (structural embedding) is increased by one and logged to capture the nonlinear association to be displayed in Figure 5 (but means here are counts of third parties). Contacts could be cited for multiple roles (e.g., contact could be a ‘neighbor’ and a ‘classmate’). ‘None of the Above’ is 1 if contact is none of the seven kinds of contacts listed. ** P < 0.01 *** P < 0.001
The image of family is so central to the concept of guanxi relations that it is easy to focus on the zero-order evidence of family importance in Figures 3 and 4, ignoring the Table 5 evidence of family and other familiar institutions being irrelevant to founding when network structure is held constant. In Figure 5, we focus on three key variables in Table 5 to clearly integrate the two bits of evidence.
There is a strong zero-order tendency to turn to family for help in founding the business. The solid bars in Figure 5 show the number of people cited as founding contacts and the white bars show the number cited for other reasons. Across the solid bars, family is 31.4% of founding contacts (220 divided by 700), as reported in Table 5, and people beyond the seven roles distinguished in Table 5 are 44.4% of founding contacts (311 ‘no role’ contacts). The logit regression predicting who gets cited for help in founding the business shows a strong tendency to turn to family (5.4 test statistic), and a tendency to avoid no-role contacts (−16.2 test statistic). No-role contacts are more often cited than family as founding contacts, but the entrepreneurs so often turn to no-role contacts for other reasons that no-role contacts have a negative association with founding (no-role solid bars in Figure 5 are dwarfed by no-role white bars).
The association between founding and family is complicated by the fact that family contacts tend to be people known for many years, and years known is the stronger predictor of who an entrepreneur turns to for help in founding the business. Within each entrepreneur's network, we distinguish ‘long-standing connections’ as people the entrepreneur has known for longer than the average for his or her cited contacts. Contacts known for fewer years are treated as ‘new connections’. Most of the family contacts cited for founding are long-standing connections. Only 26 family contacts are new connections, and most of them are not cited as founding contacts. Assuming some amount of age homophily in each network, family contacts who are new connections are likely to be children, nieces, and nephews, who are not typically cited as most valued in founding the business. The same pattern is true for people who are one of the other six role categories in Table 5, and for contacts beyond the seven roles in Table 5 – the people cited as founding contacts tend to be people known for a long time. Corresponding to the logistic equation in Table 5, the logistic equation in Figure 5 predicting who gets cited for help in founding the business shows no tendency to turn to family once years known are held constant (1.2 test statistic), and a strong tendency to turn to people known for many years (17.7 test statistic). There is still in Figure 5 a tendency to avoid no-role people, but the tendency disappears when we hold constant the other network predictors in Table 5 (−3.1 test statistic in Figure 5 drops to −0.7 in Table 5). We get the same results when we run the logistic equations in Figure 5 to predict who gets cited as most valued in any of the significant events: family is often cited when years known are not held constant (6.5 test statistic), but is negligible when years known are held constant (1.2 test statistic). In short, entrepreneurs often turned to family for help in founding their business, but more precisely, they turned to all kinds of people with whom they had long-standing relationships.Footnote [7]
TRUST AND EVENT CONTACTS
Closed networks facilitate trust by creating a credible reputation cost for bad behavior, so trust is more likely in relationships embedded in a closed network (Burt, Reference Burt2005: Chps. 3–4, for review), and the trust association with network closure around the Chinese entrepreneurs is similar to the association reported in research on manager networks in the West (Burt & Burzynska, Reference Burt and Burzynska2017: Figure 4). The key difference in the Chinese networks is that a large proportion of relations have developed to a level that provides trust independent of surrounding network structure. Trust between an entrepreneur and certain colleagues does not depend on the threat of reputation cost, at least not reputation cost measured by mutual friends before whom bad behavior would be humiliating. Rather, the entrepreneur and colleague know one another so well that they trust independent of the surrounding network structure.
Burt and Burzynska (Reference Burt and Burzynska2017) propose that such relations correspond to what is often discussed in Chinese society as guanxi. Figure 6 displays their analytical framework to distinguish guanxi ties. The trust expected in a relationship (T, the vertical axis), is predicted by the extent to which the relationship is embedded in a closed network, measured by the number of third parties connecting the two people in the relationship (TP, horizontal axis). Such embedding can be measured in various ways by strength of connection through third parties, but we get the same results with more sophisticated measures, so we discuss closure simply in terms of the number of mutual contacts connecting two people within the respondent's network.
The dashed line in Figure 6 describes the level of trust a respondent has in the current contacts not cited in association with a significant event in the history of the business. Here, trust is associated with closure around relations with nonevent contacts. The contact most valued in founding the business, in contrast, enjoys high trust independent of the surrounding network, as illustrated with the solid line. The equation and computed parameters show that relationships with founding contacts are a kind of guanxi tie. Trust within relations with founding contacts is higher on average than is trust within relations with nonevent contacts (γ = 2.874). The strong trust association with closure for nonevent contacts (β = 1.170) is sharply decreased, indeed virtually eliminated, for relations with founding contacts (λ = −1.011, making the slope of the bold line 1.170 – 1.011, or 0.159). In short, trust within relations with founding contacts is high and relatively independent of the surrounding network structure, making them guanxi ties.
The parameters in the Figure 6 equation should be estimated with controls for context and respondent differences. When we add controls for frequency, duration, and respondent fixed effects, the estimates are smaller, but still statistically significant (0.761 for slope β [14.85 t-test], 2.294 for level adjustment γ [16.04 t-test], and −0.727 for slope adjustment λ [-7.58 t-test]). When we run the estimation with G equal to 1 if a contact is family, we get similar results showing – not surprisingly – that family is a guanxi tie (1.593 for slope β [29.60 t-test], 2.651 for level adjustment γ [8.32 t-test], and –0.892 for slope adjustment λ [-3.80 t-test]).Footnote [8]
By the argument illustrated in Figure 6, we conclude that the entrepreneurs see all of their relations with event contacts as guanxi ties. The general pattern is illustrated in Figure 7. Trust in relations with founding contacts is the bold line at the top of the graph. Trust in relations with nonevent contacts is the heavy dashed line at the bottom of the graph. Between the top and bottom lines, trust in event contacts is indicated by thin lines distinguished by the order of the event with which they are associated. The thicket of interwoven thin lines show that trust in all event contacts is higher than trust within relations with nonevent contacts, and – similar to the founding contact – is relatively independent of closure in the surrounding network structure. Regression coefficients in supplement Table S1 show that trust with all event contacts is higher, and less associated with closure (see acknowledgment for supplements). Event contacts could be named on multiple events, and Figure 3 shows higher trust in relations with contacts named in association with earlier events, so we tried in Table S2 ordering by the first event on which a contact is named. Founding contact includes all contacts cited in association with founding, as in Table S1. The dummy variable distinguishing contacts named on the first significant event, however, excludes contacts already named in association with founding, and so on. The results in Table S2 show trust with all event contacts is higher, and less associated with closure.
Figure 8 shows a similar pattern for the kind of event with which a contact is associated. Kinds of events are numbered as in Table 3. As in Figure 7, there is a thicket of interwoven lines for kinds of events in Figure 8. Statistical tests in supplement Table S3 show that trust in event contacts is usually higher, and less associated with closure for each kind of event. The more kinds of events distinguished, the less reliable the distinctions, so, just to be sure about our results with nine kinds of events, we aggregate to three kinds in Table S4: founding, ‘inside’ events (shaded cluster to the lower-right in Figure 4), and ‘outside’ events (Figure 4 shaded cluster to the left). The test statistics in Table S4 show the same pattern of trust significantly higher with all event contacts, and significantly less associated with closure around the relationship.Footnote [9]
We conclude that the trust attributed to guanxi ties is behavioral in that trust is high and relatively independent of closure for all contacts who have proven themselves by helping the respondent through a significant event. We find no trust differences between kinds of events – with one exception: Founding stands above the other eight kinds of events in Table 3. Trust is least associated with closure, and reaches its highest average levels in relationships with the contacts who helped an entrepreneur found his or her business. Again, these findings resonate well with trust research showing higher levels of trust, once trustor and trustee have experienced a ‘critical test’ in exchanging and receiving a unilateral favor (Kollock, Reference Kollock1994).Footnote [10]
BUSINESS SUCCESS, BROKERAGE, AND EVENT CONTACTS
The network association with business success by the Chinese entrepreneurs is similar to the association reported in research on manager networks in the West (Burt & Burzynska, Reference Burt and Burzynska2017: Figure 3). The theoretical argument is that the large, open networks around ‘network brokers’ provide information breadth, timing, and arbitrage advantages in detecting and developing good ideas, so success and achievement are more likely in large, open networks (Burt, Reference Burt2005: Chaps. 1–2; Burt, Kilduff, & Tasselli, Reference Burt, Kilduff and Tasselli2013, for review). Figure 9 shows two network associations with success for the Chinese entrepreneurs. Across the horizontal axis, constraint is a network metric measuring the extent to which a person's network is small and closed (Burt, Reference Burt1992; Burt, Kilduff, & Tasselli, Reference Burt, Kilduff and Tasselli2013). Intuitively, network constraint increases from zero to one with the proportion of person's network time and energy consumed by one group. Constraint decreases with the extent to which the person has many contacts (size), increases with the extent to which the person's network is closed by strong connections among contacts (density), and increases with the extent to which the person's network is closed by a partner strongly connected with all contacts (hierarchy). Large, open networks are to the left in Figure 9. Small, closed networks are to the right. As predicted by theory, the solid regression line through the solid dots in the graph shows success decreasing with the extent to which an entrepreneur is embedded in a small, closed network. And as reported by Burt and Burzynska (Reference Burt and Burzynska2017: Table 3), the strong network association with success disappears when event contacts not cited as current are excluded from an entrepreneur's network (dashed line through hollow dots in Figure 9). We want to know whether the network association with success comes back when contacts made in certain kinds of events are returned to an entrepreneur's network, which will tell us whether certain kinds of event contacts matter more than others in predicting future business success.
We use Burt and Burzynska's (Reference Burt and Burzynska2017) measure of success. This is success as an entrepreneur can be argued to experience it. A self-made man is a success to the extent that his business lets him be a big man to the people around him – making it so that (1) a lot of money passes through his hands, (2) jobs can be found for deserving friends, new contacts, or members of their families, and (3) the company signals its technological sophistication by holding its own patents. Business success in Figure 9 is a z-score defined by the principal component of all three indicators (first principal component describes 65% of variance in the three indicators, and Burt and Burzynska, Reference Burt and Burzynska2017: Table 1, report the network association with each of the three success indicators individually).Footnote [11]
We extend the original specification to control for the success a business had in place when it was registered as a private enterprise.Footnote [12] Business success at founding is a principal component extracted from number of full-time employees and annual sales at founding. The principal component describes 86% of variance in the two indicators. Table 6 shows the baseline model for the network association with success. Beyond controls for industry differences, the age of a business, and level of success when initially registered as a business, the primary predictors of success are whether the founder is still running the business (negative association with success), whether the business has a research and development (R&D) department (positive association with success), and the extent to which there is a small, closed network around the person running the business (negative association with high-constraint networks).Footnote [13]
Notes: OLS regression predicting business success (vertical axis in Figure 8) from row variables. Success is a z-score first principal component combining employees, sales, and patents (describes 65% of variance in the three indicators, see text). Success at founding is a similar z-score (see footnote 12). Network constraint is measured as the log of 100 times constraint (horizontal axis in Figure 9). Firm age is 2012 minus the year in which the business was founded. ** P < 0.01 *** P < 0.001
Number and Kind of Event Contacts
The central concern in this analysis is to uncover the role of event contacts in the network association with success. Table 7 shows what would have happened if the entrepreneurs had been asked for fewer event contacts. For each row, we delete certain contacts and re-assemble the network around each of the 700 entrepreneurs. We compute network constraint for the new networks, and re-estimate the model in Table 6 with the new measure of network constraint. The first row of Table 7 corresponds to what would have happened if we did not ask the event questions. We remove from each entrepreneur's network any contact that was not cited on one of the three current contact name generators: Who have been your most valued contacts during business activities this year? Who is your most valued employee? Who has made it most difficult for you in your business activities this year? The average entrepreneur named four and a half current contacts (3,123 contacts in the first row of Table 7 divided by 700 respondents equals 4.46). The smallest network is composed of two contacts. The largest composed of eight. The regression coefficient and test statistic in the first row of Table 7 show that the structure of current contact networks has no association with success, which is the point in Burt and Burzynska's (Reference Burt and Burzynska2017: Table 3) cautionary analysis. Even with question-order priming possibly increasing the number of event contacts cited as current contacts, the first row of Table 7 shows that current contacts alone do not capture the network association with business success.
Notes: Each row is the estimated regression coefficient predicting business success from log network constraint using the model in Table 6, but with networks limited to the row contacts. Networks in the top row exclude all contacts not cited as current. Networks in the bottom row include all current and all event contacts, which are the networks used to get the estimates in Table 6. * P < 0.05 ** P < 0.01 *** P < 0.001
The second row of Table 7 shows what happens when we include people named as most valued during the founding of the business. Of the 700 people named, 379 are also named as current contacts, so they are already included in the first row of Table 7. The remaining 321 founding contacts not named as current are added to the networks in the second row. Row two shows the largest increase in network association with business success (−0.026 regression coefficient increases to −0.339). The association continues to strengthen when additional event contacts are included in the networks.Footnote [14] The bottom row of the table shows the strong association when all current and event contacts are included, which corresponds to the association in Table 6.
We draw two conclusions from Table 7. First, it would be wise to include at least two event name generators in future studies of entrepreneur networks, one asking for the contact most valued in founding the business, and a second asking for the contact most valued in the first significant event in the business history. People named on those two generators are sufficient to get a strong network association with success. Our prior analysis identified the same two contacts as discernably different from others, best described as guanxi ties (Figure 4) that are especially close and highly trusted (Figure 3), independent of social embeddedness and the nature and content of the specific event with which they are associated (Figure 8). Second, more is better. The network association with success is strongest when all event contacts are included, and strengthens when the networks are expanded from the fourth to the fifth event. The implication is that the association might be stronger still if the entrepreneurs had been asked for more event contacts.
What about kinds of events? Perhaps the network association with success varies with the kinds of events through which contacts are valued? Perhaps the contact that helped secure the first big customer contract is key? Perhaps having a contact that helped with financing is key? These questions are answered by the results in Table 8. We begin with the current contacts around an entrepreneur, then add contacts named for each kind of event distinguished in Table 3. The network association with success is statistically negligible for each of the eight kinds of events in Table 3. We also tried combining kinds of events as they are clustered in the two shaded areas in Figure 4 as events inside or outside the business. The network association with success is statistically significant when contacts named for inside events are added to current contacts, but those are also the largest number of contacts added (746 in second role of Table 8). In fact, the coefficient measuring the network association with success increases systematically with the number of contacts added by an event category (0.75 R2 across the 10 event categories in Table 8; the coefficient strengthens by −0.040 for every 100 contacts added). These results correspond well with the lack of differentiation between different kinds of events in predicting trust (Figure 8). If particular kinds of event contacts were decisive for the overall business success, we would see more pronounced differentiation across contacts in Table 8. Given the lack of differentiation in Table 8, we conclude that the key to an entrepreneur's network association with success is the diversity of his or her contacts in dealing with events, not the substantive nature of the events deemed significant.Footnote [15]
Notes: Each row is the estimated regression coefficient predicting business success from log network constraint using the model in Table 6, but with networks limited to the row contacts. Current contacts include 1,564 event contacts who were cited as current. In contrast to Table 7, these networks are not cumulative down the rows. Event categories are numbered as in Table 3. ** P < 0.01 *** P < 0.001
Current Contacts Underestimate Brokers
Networks defined by current contacts poorly predict success in the first row of Table 7 and Table 8 because the networks typically underestimate a person's access to structural holes. Current-contact networks contain fewer non-redundant contacts, and pose higher levels of network constraint (2.7 contacts and 70.0 points of constraint, on average). Adding event contacts broadens the diversity of contacts (3.7 non-redundant contacts on average, and 56.6 points of network constraint). There is more here than just a higher level of closure among current contacts. A higher level of closure alone would affect the intercept coefficient predicting business success in Table 7 and Table 8, but need not eliminate the association between success and network structure. The problem is that closure is not uniformly higher for networks limited to current contacts. Closure is particularly overstated by current contacts in open networks.
Consider Figure 10. The 700 entrepreneurs are ordered on the horizontal axis by the level of network constraint on them from current and event contacts. The horizontal axis in Figure 10 is the horizontal axis in Figure 9, and the network predictor of business success in Table 6. The vertical axis in Figure 10 is the difference between network constraint defined by current contacts minus constraint defined by all contacts. High on the vertical axis are people whose network of current contacts is more closed than their full network of current and event contacts. The solid dots in the figure are people for whom network constraint is about the same whether or not event contacts are included in their network.
Three points are illustrated. First, most observations are above zero on the vertical axis, illustrating the tendency for current-contact networks to be more closed than networks with event contacts included. Second, large differences between networks with and without event contacts are concentrated to the left of the graph, over the large, open networks around network brokers. If a person's current and event contacts are densely connected, so network constraint is high to the right in Figure 10, then constraint is still high when the network is limited to current contacts.
Third, error in capturing broker networks correctly is associated with business success. Three categories of entrepreneurs are distinguished in Figure 10. One hundred and sixty-one entrepreneurs have a network constraint score about the same with or without event contacts. These are the solid dots in Figure 10.
Below the solid dots, a few entrepreneurs have networks more closed when event contacts are included. The table to the right in Figure 10 shows that these 38 people were most likely to turn to family for help when founding their businesses (57.9% cited a family member as most valued at founding), and ended up less successful with their businesses (−0.26 average z-score success). For these entrepreneurs below the solid dots in Figure 10, event contacts improve success prediction by capturing the lower success associated with dependence on a closed network of contacts.
Above the solid dots, the majority of networks are more open when event contacts are included. The table in Figure 10 shows these 501 people were least likely to rely on family when founding their business (26.8% cited a family member as most valued at founding), and ended up more successful in building their business (0.04 z-score success). In other words, for the entrepreneurs above the solid dots in Figure 10, event contacts improve success prediction by better capturing the diversity of their contacts, which is associated with more successful businesses.Footnote [16]
Early Diversity Is Particularly Important
To study contact diversity more closely, we looked at the entrepreneur networks as a tournament based on citing new contacts for each subsequent event. Left to right in Figure 11 is a tournament in which entrepreneurs are removed at each step if they cite a contact for the current event that they already cited for a previous event. The 700 entrepreneurs sort on the first event into 339 who drop out and 361 who continue. The 339 drop outs cite the same contact for the first event that they cited for founding. The remaining 361 continue by citing a contact on the first event who is different from the contact cited for founding. Of the 361 continuing entrepreneurs, 266 cite a contact on the second event different from the two contacts cited on event one and founding. The tournament continues to the last 67 entrepreneurs who cite a contact on Event 5 different from any contact they cited previously.
The lines in Figure 11 show how average business success and network constraint change as entrepreneurs are winnowed in the tournament. The person cited on the first significant event is particularly noteworthy. There is a large difference in success between entrepreneurs who return to their founding contact versus entrepreneurs who turn to a new contact for the first event (0.09 z-score increase). Turning to another new contact for the second event does not produce as large a difference (0.04 z-score increase). Similarly, turning to a new contact for the first event is associated with a large decrease in network constraint (10 point decrease from 62 to 52), relative to the decrease associated with turning to a new contact for the second event (2 point decrease from 52 to 50). There are also large differences associated with citing a unique contact for the fifth event, but at that point, only 67 of the initial 700 entrepreneurs remain in the tournament.
To test whether the changes visible in Figure 11 matter when other factors are held constant, we add in Table 9 three sequence variables to the base model in Table 6: Is the Event 1 contact different from the founding contact? Is the Event 2 contact different from the Event 1 contact? Is the Event 5 contact different from the Event 4 contact? Differences in success have a statistically significant association only with the transition from founding to Event 1 (2.00 t-test in Model A), which also explains some of the success association with overall network constraint (−2.53 t-test for constraint in Model A is lower than the −3.54 in Table 6).
Notes: OLS regression predicting z-score business success (vertical axis in Figure 9) from row variables in Table 6 (t-test in parentheses), plus certain event-contact combinations. Event 1 contact is a ‘positive move’ when it is in one of the shaded cells in Table 10. * P < 0.05 ** P < 0.01 *** P < 0.001
Successful transition from founding to the first significant event is more subtle than simply finding a new contact to help with the first event. Switching to a new person for the first event increases diversity, but not if the person contacted is closely connected to the founding contact, and close connection turns out to be important. The rows of Table 10 distinguish three levels of connection between an entrepreneur's founding contact and Event 1 contact: The highest level, in row one, is that the two contacts are the same person. The next level is that they are different people who are especially close. The third level is that they are not especially close. Levels two and three are the people in Figure 11 turning to a new contact for Event 1. Business success in Table 10 is low on average for entrepreneurs who turn to their founding contact for Event 1, but even lower for entrepreneurs who turn to a different person on Event 1 who is not especially close with their founding contact. The highest success is associated with entrepreneurs who turn to a different person on Event 1 who is especially close to the founding contact. Even better if the especially close contact is family. The highest success in the table is for entrepreneurs who turn to family on the first event – but not a family member cited for help in founding the business.
Notes: Mean z-score business success with number of observations in parentheses. Shaded cells are the ones discussed in text as ‘positive moves’ on event 1.
We term the shaded cells in Table 10 ‘positive moves’ because later success is positive in all three cells. We do not claim that the entrepreneurs who made these moves were strategic in selecting the person to whom they turned for help on the first significant event. Rather, we believe that the entrepreneurs who made a positive move are entrepreneurs who had a strong core to the initial network with which they launched their business (cf. Ruef & Grigoryeva, Reference Ruef and Grigoryeva2017, on ethnic entrepreneurship more likely in neighborhoods containing only a few people of the entrepreneur's ethnicity). These entrepreneurs had two or more mutually supportive contacts in their core network, one helpful at founding and the other helpful with the first significant event. It is certainly possible that an especially close relation developed between the people after founding, but family pre-dates the founding and they are the Event 1 contacts for whom positive moves have the highest later business success. On the second and subsequent events, successful positive-move entrepreneurs cite diverse contacts: The transition from Event 1 to Event 2, and subsequent transitions show that the transition most associated with success is picking a new contact not especially close to contacts helpful on previous events.
Correlates of positive moves are illustrated in Figure 11. Success is higher on average for entrepreneurs who turn to multiple event contacts (increasing line through solid dots), but success is consistently higher than that for entrepreneurs who began their event sequence with a positive move (increasing line through hollow dots). At the bottom of Figure 11, network constraint is slightly higher at Event 1 since the second contact is especially close to the founding contact, but the positive-move entrepreneurs tend to select nonredundant contacts for subsequent events, which eliminates the constraint difference between positive-move and other entrepreneurs by the fifth event.
Testing statistical significance, results in Table 9 show that a positive move is associated with significantly higher business success (2.42 t-test in Model B), is little reduced when network constraint is held constant (2.44 t-test in Model C), and does little to erode the success association with aggregate network constraint (−3.22 t-test in Model C). In short, turning to a new person on Event 1 – family or anyone else especially close to the founding contact – creates advantage not evident in the later network.
We tested the stability of our results for time, event content, and geography. With respect to time, the average first event occurs a little more than a year after founding (1.14 years). Many first events occur within a year of founding (276), and many occur a year after founding (255). Then the frequency drops off over a long tail that extends up to 10 years after founding. We created a three-category variable distinguishing same year, one year, or longer and used it to add a level and slope adjustment to Model C in Table 10 to test for the success associated with a positive move being higher or lower in different years. The success association with a positive move is negligibly stronger for first events further from founding (F(2,687) = 1.25, P ~ 0.29). With respect to the kinds of events listed in Table 3, the first events are disproportionately about customers (42%) and management issues in the business (27%). The most common remaining kinds occur less than half as often as management issues (for the first event). We added a level and slope adjustment to Model C to test whether the success associated with a positive move is higher or lower for customer events. Both adjustments are negligible (F(2,687) = 0.68, P ~ 0.51). Adjustments for management events are similarly negligible (F(2,687) = 0.12, P ~ 0.89). With respect to geography, positive moves on Event 1 are more likely in Shanghai (43%) than in Jiangsu (32%) or Zhejiang (33%), but there are no statistically significant regional differences in the success association with positive moves (F(4,685) = 0.68, P ~ 0.61).
DISCUSSION
We traced the social networks around Chinese entrepreneurs back to their firm's founding stage to answer two questions: To whom do entrepreneurs turn during significant events, and what role do those contacts play in the current network? To answer these questions, we use name generator questions paired with career history questions to incorporate contacts missed by the usual focus on current business. People named for their value during significant events we discuss as ‘event contacts’, about which we draw four conclusions.
Event Name Generators
Event name generators add valuable information to the usual practice of asking about the current network around a manager. For one thing, relations with people named as event contacts, on average, have guanxi qualities of high trust relatively independent of the surrounding network (Figures 7 and 8). For another thing, the success association with large, open networks depends on event contacts for the Chinese entrepreneurs. Absent the people named as event contacts, there is no success association with network structure (Figure 9). Anchoring name generators on concrete events in the entrepreneur's past helps him or her recall key people beyond the immediate who helped build the business.
Kinds of Events
The substance of a significant event matters less than the fact that the entrepreneur deems it significant. We compared events for categories of substance (Table 3 and Figure 4), but did not find significant differences between categories in the trust or success associations with network structure (Figure 8 and Table 8). Event contacts matter for trust and success largely in terms of their order and the network structure around them.
Family Versus Duration
When family is turned to for support it is most likely at founding, but family is not the primary source of support at founding. Rather, entrepreneurs turn to people they have known for many years, typically people beyond the entrepreneur's family (Table 5 and Figure 5). Family never disappears. Family provides about one in ten contacts cited for help through significant events during the first decade of the business (Figure 3). For subsequent significant events as for founding, however, entrepreneurs turn less often to family than they turn to people outside the family, people with whom they have built up a long-standing relationship.
Critical Events
Two events are particularly consequential: the business founding, and the first event deemed significant by the entrepreneur. Asking about more events is valuable (Table 7), but the first two stand above the others. Relations with founding contacts are associated with the highest trust and least dependence on surrounding network structure (Figures 7 and 8), and, when added to current contacts, are sufficient to recover the success association with network structure (Table 7). Contacts valued during the first significant event strengthen the association with success (Table 7), but more importantly, the transition from founding to first event has implication for later business success (Figure 11 and Table 9). Entrepreneurs who turn for help on their first significant event to a person separate from, but especially close to, the founding contact are more successful in their business development (Table 10). That early ‘positive move’ is not visible in the final network around the entrepreneur (Figure 11). We do not claim that the entrepreneurs who made positive moves were strategic in selecting in the person to whom they turned for help on the first significant event. We suspect that the entrepreneurs who made positive moves are people who had a strong core to the initial network with which they launched their business. Those entrepreneurs had two or more mutually supportive contacts in their core network, one helpful at founding and the other helpful with the first significant event. At this point, we are speculating. If our results on the Chinese entrepreneurs generalize, there is much to be learned about later success from research on the role played by an entrepreneur's network right after founding. Specifically it will be interesting to explore the underlying mechanisms driving these results. Why are initial events more important than following events? Do these events stand out as learning moments shaping the later network emergence and cumulative success? Or does an entrepreneur's response to initial events simply reflect an innate preference or style of building exchange relations that is productive in the long run?
Limitations
We note four limitations to our analysis. The first is sampling. Our entrepreneurs come from provinces rich in entrepreneurs, and central in the emergent Chinese economy. All three provinces are fairly well developed institutionally. The IMD Global Competitiveness Index, for instance, ranked Zhejiang province 18th globally in terms of government efficiency in the year 2005 – closely following the US and ahead of Taiwan (IMD 2005: 51). Given the region's advanced development, we cannot be sure to find the same network results in China's less developed regions.
Second, we are limited by our survey data to surviving businesses. This limitation is generic to survey research, but particularly troubling for research on entrepreneurial ventures, which are prone to failure. While we acknowledge that our results are limited to variable levels of trust and success across surviving businesses, we also note that the limitation might not be as severe in China as in Western contexts because failure is often postponed or avoided by going dormant. Given a wide-spread emphasis on internal finance, reliance on short-term employment contracts and limited operation costs, entrepreneurs often go through periods of sharp decline by temporarily closing their business, rather than declaring it dead. A weakly enforced bankruptcy law makes this practice all the more viable. In our sample we find this practice confirmed with only 3 percent bankruptcies in the three years preceding the survey. This implies that relatively weak firms could survive to remain in our sample. Regardless, given the strong network association with success, and the importance of early contacts to that success, there is much to be learned from studying how early contacts are associated with early survival.
Third, we know that an event contact is seen as valuable during a significant event, but we do not know what the contact did that made him or her valuable. The contact could have provided emotional support, financial support, guanxi access to a third party who resolved the event, or something else. The strong trust and performance results associated with event contacts makes it promising to study contact behavior during the events.
Fourth, we focus on the network around each entrepreneur, giving little attention to cultural, and economic, and institutional events in the broader Chinese environment. We did not ignore the broader environment. Controlling for business age can absorb some trend variation in the environment, and we found the network association with business success consistent before and after private enterprise was put on an equal footing with state enterprise by the 2004 constitutional amendment (see footnote 13). In predicting trust, we use respondent fixed effects to remove environmental differences with respect to when a business was founded, and the substance of significant events did not matter in our analysis as much as the fact that the events were deemed significant by the entrepreneur. However, we wonder how the effects associated with event contacts vary with the broader Chinese environment. How much does it matter that the broader economy was doing well during the event, or doing badly, or going through a significant transition?