posted on 2021-04-21, 08:17authored byLouise Scholes, Mathew Hughes, Mike Wright, Alfredo De Massis, Josip Kotlar
Drawing on agency and stewardship theories, we examine how two dimensions of family governance influence family firm innovation strategy. Specifically, we differentiate between the effects of Family Management (family CEO, family managerial involvement, and next-generation involvement in the business) and Family Guardianship (trustees and family council) and study their effects on explorative and exploitative modes of innovation strategy. Our analysis of unique survey data from 328 UK private family firms shows that specific dimensions of Family Management (next-generation involvement) and Family Guardianship (the existence of a family council) are significantly positively associated with exploration. Exploitation, however, is positively associated with next-generation involvement only. These findings answer calls to theorize and empirically examine the heterogeneity of family firms’ innovation modes. These findings further respond to calls to better understand the relationship between governance and behavior, advancing scholarly debate at the intersection of agency and stewardship, family governance, and innovation.
This paper was accepted for publication in the journal Journal of Family Business Strategy and the definitive published version is available at https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jfbs.2020.100389.
Acceptance date
2020-09-19
Publication date
2021-04-09
Copyright date
2020
Notes
The authors thank the Institute for Family Business (IFB) in the United Kingdom for generously sponsoring the research study underpinning this paper through its IFB Research Foundation. This project led to a comprehensive report into family business entrepreneurship available on the IFB website: https://www.ifb.org.uk/media/1874/ifbrf-entrepreneurship-report.pdf. We would also like to thank our friend and esteemed colleague Mike Wright, who sadly passed away as the present work was going through the blind review process, and celebrate his life and huge contribution to academia.