New research from Gies Business suggests that founders with academic backgrounds may engage problems differently from their industry peers thanks to a mindset shaped not by product-market fit, but by intellectual curiosity.

What if a startup's biggest advantage wasn't its product, but rather the kinds of questions its founders asked at the start? In one version of a
startup origin story, a team builds the perfect tool for a very specific
problem. In another, they build something that solves an entire category of
problems, including ones that haven't been imagined yet. Which path a startup
is on can depend on who's doing the work. New research from Gies Business
suggests that founders with academic backgrounds may engage problems differently
from their industry peers thanks to a mindset shaped not by product-market fit,
but by intellectual curiosity.
That question—how a founder's background shapes the reach of
their technology—drives a study published in the Strategic Management
Journal by Gies Assistant Professor
of Business Administration Shinjinee Chattopadhyay with
coauthors Florence Honoré (Wisconsin School of
Business, University of Wisconsin-Madison) and Shinjae
Won (School of Labor and Employment Relations, University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign).
In Free range startups? Market scope, academic founders, and the
role of general knowledge of AI, the team assembled
a dataset of 988 AI ventures to capture team backgrounds, patent and
publication data, and breadth of market applicability across industry
verticals. The researchers found that academic startups had, on average, 12%
greater market applicability (usefulness across multiple industries) than
those without. The findings are based on team-led ventures, and while academic
founders are a minority, their influence on breadth was measurable and
consistent. In other words, academic entrepreneurs are more likely to build
technologies that can stretch across more industries, serve more customers, and
solve more potential use cases.
The Academic Advantage
The difference, Chattopadhyay says, begins
early, often before the project even starts.
"The idea of this project originated from
conversations with my academic friends who are also entrepreneurs. Through many
conversations about how they work, I realized that academics develop their
startup technologies quite differently than their non-academic peers. And that
starts with idea selection. The ideas that academics are drawn to, and consider
worth pursuing, are inherently quite different from those of non-academics. As
a result, the technologies that get incubated within their startups are also quite
different."
For ventures in early stages, broader market
applicability—the range of distinct market segments a product can serve—can
offer a serious edge. Technologies that stretch across sectors give startups
more paths to traction and more resilience when any one vertical stalls, but
this breadth also comes with execution challenges that may appear during
scaling.
“Targeting a larger number of markets can offer certain
advantages, such as having access to more customers or reduced risk,”
Chattopadhyay explained. But that breadth doesn’t come free: “It’s
typically more challenging for startups to target a wide range of market niches
because of the resources required to successfully address the needs of
customers in multiple market segments.”
What Sets Academic Founders Apart?
Differences in idea selection aren't just
philosophical; they shape how academics approach problems from the ground up.
“Academics are trained to think in abstract ways and are
attracted to the most general versions of problems,” Chattopadhyay said. “They
like to classify problems by their commonalities and then find a solution that
solves the entire category of problems.”
Imagine trying to build a robot that can
navigate a maze. A non-academic founder might design a solution tailored to
that specific maze—its known turns, its walls, its end points. An academic, by
contrast, is more likely to create a system that can solve any maze,
regardless of layout.
That tendency toward generalization doesn’t
just shape what academic startups build, it reflects a way of approaching
problems. That same orientation drives Chattopadhyay’s work with the Illinois
Strategic Organizations Initiative, a research
collective at Gies that brings scholars together to advance world-class studies
and thought leadership in organizational behavior and strategy.
She points to companies like Covariant, which builds AI-powered robotics systems for warehouse automation
across multiple industries, and DeepMind, whose early
breakthroughs in AI were designed to solve foundational problems with
implications across fields as varied as biology and logistics. In both cases,
it's not just the technology that's expansive, it's the thinking behind it.
"The patents and publications from
academic startups tend to be more general, meaning that they are cited by many
more fields," said Chattopadhyay. "Non-academic startups’ patents
and publications tend to be narrower, applicable to fewer fields, more focused
on serving specific needs within the market. Because academic startups tend to
develop more general-purpose technologies, they are able to target more markets
than non-academics.
Scaling Smart
But generality isn't always advantageous in the
long term. While broader applicability helps academic startups secure early
success, Chattopadhyay adds that breadth can become a constraint as ventures
scale.
"As startups mature, investors may expect
them to be focused on narrower customer segments, where their product or
technology is targeted towards solving very specific needs," she said.
"Academic entrepreneurs may find that they are advised to narrow down and
settle on fewer market segments as they mature. They will then need to think
about potentially adapting their product or technology to satisfy investor
expectations and scale successfully.”
What Founders and Funders Should Know
For academic entrepreneurs, the message is
clear: breadth alone doesn't scale. As your venture matures, be ready to refine
your scope, align with investor expectations, and adapt your solution for more
defined customer needs. For investors, the message may be just as valuable.
Startups that begin with wide market applicability often reflect deeper
technical thinking and intellectual range. But long-term success still depends
on whether that range can translate into targeted traction.
In the end, the best startup ideas may not
begin with a product at all—but with a question that’s
been asked the right way.