“…Entrepreneurs with prior exposure to more elaborated HRM, typically gained in larger firms during prior employment, may be more likely to elaborate HRM in their own small firms (Bacon, Ackers, Storey, & Coates, 1996;Davila, 2005;Keating & Olivares, 2007;Klaas & Klimchak, 2006). Even if the entrepreneur did not formerly work in an HR department or particularly like how HRM functioned in prior settings, the prior experiences with HRM activities would tend to inform the entrepreneurs schema of what HRM is and looks like in a workplace, and would tend to teach the entrepreneur what HRM problems are acute enough to require attention and related elaboration (Greer, Carr, & Hipp, 2016;Harris, 1994;Tocher & Rutherford, 2009). Tocher and Rutherford found that more experience was associated with small-firm managers likelihood of perceiving HRM problems as acute, presumably because the prior experience sensitized them to both the symptoms and the threat of HRM problems.…”