What Students Need to Survive
the Entrepreneurial Learning Curve

"Unsurprisingly, family support and previous experience matter, but so do things educators can influence."

In a nutshell

Entrepreneurial learning works best when students have the inner resources to stay steady through uncertainty, hopeful through setbacks, and confident enough to try again.

In a Bigger Nutshell

Every entrepreneurship educator eventually notices the same thing: two students can take the exact same course, face the same uncertainty, and walk out with entirely different levels of confidence, motivation, and momentum. The thing is, what distinguishes these two rarely comes down to talent or ideas, but rather the psychological resources students carry with them into the learning process. This paper helps clarify what those resources actually are. It pulls together what we know about Psychological Capital (PsyCap), a bundle of four internal resources that students draw on during entrepreneurial work: self-efficacy (I believe I can do this), hope (there’s a way forward), optimism (the future might actually turn out alright), and resilience (I can recover when it doesn’t).

What makes this review especially useful is that it doesn’t treat these as four separate traits. It looks at them as a single, interacting “inner toolkit” – the psychological fuel students rely on when the work gets uncertain, messy, or emotionally demanding. This helped the researchers to spot a few valuable patterns. Firstly, students with higher PsyCap are better at spotting opportunities, making decisions under uncertainty, bouncing back from setbacks, and staying engaged in the messy middle of entrepreneurial work. They are also less likely to burn out or become overwhelmed when the emotional turbulence inevitably kicks in.

Secondly, PsyCap doesn’t flourish in a vacuum – it responds to context. Supportive climates, good peer dynamics, constructive feedback, and psychologically safe classrooms all help students build and sustain these internal resources. Unsurprisingly, family support and previous experience also matter, but so do things educators can influence: mentoring structures, learning design, reflection routines, and how we frame failure.

Publication Date: October 2025

Authors: Michela Loi, Sara Martínez-Gregorio, Barbara Barbieri, Alain J.-C. Fayolle

Institutions: University of Cagliari, Italy; University of Valencia, Spain; IDRAC Lyon, France

Study Type: Systematic literature review (PRISMA-guided)

Sample Size: 61 empirical and conceptual studies on psychological capital in entrepreneurship

Research Focus: Understanding the combined role of self-efficacy, hope, optimism, and resilience throughout the entrepreneurial process.

Research Methodology: Multi-database search, structured screening, and thematic synthesis

Main Findings: PsyCap boosts opportunity recognition, learning, motivation, and well-being. It strengthens organisational climates and can influence resource attraction. It is especially valuable in uncertain or disadvantaged contexts and can be developed through education, mentoring, social support, and contextual factors. Little is known about how PsyCap develops over time or when it might have downsides.

Citation: Loi M, Martínez-Gregorio S, Barbieri B, Fayolle AJ (2025;), “Psychological capital in entrepreneurship: a systematic literature review to take stock and move knowledge forward”. Journal of Small Business and Enterprise Development, Vol. ahead-of-print No. ahead-of-print. Link

The third insight is that PsyCap is malleable. It’s not a personality trait students either have or don’t have. It grows through experience, practice, and the emotional tone of the learning environment. This means that course design isn’t just about teaching creativity tools or opportunity lenses – it’s also about creating conditions where students have the psychological fuel to use them.

Another pattern the review highlights is that PsyCap doesn’t stay neatly inside the individual: it leaks outward. In entrepreneurial settings, people with higher PsyCap tend to create more positive climates around them – they communicate more clearly, collaborate more openly, and are generally read by others as trustworthy and capable. This matters because so much of entrepreneurial learning is social. Students work in teams, pitch to mentors, ask for help, negotiate resources, and navigate group dynamics. According to the reviewed studies, PsyCap makes those interactions smoother: peers are more willing to cooperate, mentors respond more constructively, and students are more likely to attract support rather than withdraw from it. In other words, PsyCap shapes not only how students handle uncertainty, but also how the people around them respond to their efforts.

Lastly, the review reminds us that even good things have limits. Overconfidence and unrealistic optimism can push students into decisions they’re not ready for, while realistic confidence and grounded optimism appear to be powerful drivers of learning and persistence.

If we as educators want students to engage fully with entrepreneurial learning, including the uncertainty, the setbacks, the improvisation, and the reflection, then we also need to understand and support the psychological resources that make that possible. PsyCap doesn’t replace skills or knowledge, but it makes them usable – and it’s something we can actively nurture in the way we teach.

For more on how students build confidence and navigate uncertainty, see The Skill of Seeing What Others Miss
and Making Entrepreneurship Feel Doable.

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