Not what you expected to see? Obesity stereotypes, expectancy violations, and angel investment decisions

Torben Antretter, Henrik Wesemann Lekkas, Djordje Djokovic, Vangelis Souitaris*, Joakim Wincent

*Corresponding author for this work

Research output: Contribution to journalArticleScientificpeer-review

2 Citations (Scopus)

Abstract

This article investigates the impact of obesity stereotypes on angel investment decisions. Drawing from the stereotype literature and expectancy violation theory, we propose that angel investors tend to evaluate founders with obesity worse because they perceive them as high in warmth but low in competence (and competence matters more for angel investors' evaluations). However, we also suggest that founders with obesity who violate low-competence stereotypes through high-competence displays can offset negative obesity stereotypes without affecting positive ones, leading to overall higher evaluations. The results from two field studies show that angel investors penalize founders with obesity but that the effect is ameliorated for those presenting high-tech ventures. A follow-up experiment using AI-generated, photorealistic manipulations of founders' body types identifies perceived competence and warmth as mechanisms that explain the effects. Collectively, these findings contribute to the literature streams on appearance in entrepreneurial finance, stereotypes and their violations, and entrepreneurial research methods.

Original languageEnglish
Article number106510
Peer-reviewed scientific journalJournal of Business Venturing
Volume40
Issue number5
ISSN0883-9026
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 03.07.2025
MoE publication typeA1 Journal article - refereed

Keywords

  • 512 Business and Management
  • angel investments
  • artificial intelligence
  • expectancy violations
  • negative stereotypes
  • obesity

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