Results 241 to 250 of about 5,368,089 (300)
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Capturing Family Firm Heterogeneity: How Taxonomies and Typologies Can Help the Field Move Forward
Family Business Review, 2019As the field of family business continues to mature, it is not surprising that there is a growing recognition of the degree of heterogeneity among family firms.
Donald O. Neubaum +2 more
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Brand Importance in Family Firms: The Role of Family Identification with the Firm
2021This study explores the importance of external audiences for family firm brand and its relationship with firm performance. Drawing on text mining and social network analysis, we use the Semantic Brand Score to measure family firm brand importance – by combining its three constitutive dimensions of brand prevalence, diversity, and connectivity.
Carlotta Benedetti +3 more
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Why the family business brand matters: Brand authenticity and the family firm trust inference
Journal of business research, 2018Studying branding strategies of family firms gives rise to a striking observation: an increasing number of family firms nowadays communicate the “family” nature of their organizations.
Maximilian Lude, Reinhard Prügl
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Family Succession and Firm Performance: Evidence from Italian Family Firms [PDF]
This article contributes to the growing empirical literature on family firms by studying the impact of the founder-chief executive officer (CEO) succession in a sample of Italian firms. We contrast firms that continue to be managed within the family by the heirs to the founders with firms in which the management is passed on to outsiders.
Marco Cucculelli, Giacinto Micucci
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The Journal of Family Business Strategy, 2019
Prior research suggests that a distinct family firm reputation could be related to positive stakeholder perceptions. One underlying, yet untested, assumption is that a stronger presence of the enterprising family (for example in the media) supports the ...
A. Santiago +2 more
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Prior research suggests that a distinct family firm reputation could be related to positive stakeholder perceptions. One underlying, yet untested, assumption is that a stronger presence of the enterprising family (for example in the media) supports the ...
A. Santiago +2 more
semanticscholar +1 more source
A Configurational Approach to Family Firm Innovation
Family Business Review, 2019This article develops an integrated framework for the examination of innovation drivers in small and privately owned family firms. Drawing from the family-driven innovation model, we study how factors at the family, the firm, and the environment level ...
V. Kosmidou, Manju K. Ahuja
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Can non-family firms be more like family firms? Comparing SEW in family and non- family firms.
Academy of Management Proceedings, 2017While much of the family-firm literature has been based on the assumption that all family firms are rich in socio-emotional wealth (SEW) and that they aim to preserve this SEW, most studies have considered family firms as a whole, and have ignored the fact that they may differ to a great extent while possessing different levels of SEW.
Inés Herrero +2 more
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Do Nonfamily Managers Enhance Family Firm Performance?
Small Business Economics, 2021H. Fang +3 more
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Risky Decisions and the Family Firm Bias: An Experimental Study Based on Prospect Theory
Entrepreneurship: Theory & Practice, 2018In this article, we look at how a family firm signal affects decision making of nonprofessional investors. Grounded in prospect theory and supported by empirical evidence from a choice-based experimental study (N = 418) backed by a qualitative study, we ...
Maximilian Lude, Reinhard Prügl
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2018
This thesis is concerned with the cultural politics of the contemporary British monarchy. It examines media representations of the monarchy from Elizabeth II’s 1953 coronation to the present day, and draws on the intellectual legacies of British Cultural Studies, in particular Stuart Hall, to examine the role of media culture in
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This thesis is concerned with the cultural politics of the contemporary British monarchy. It examines media representations of the monarchy from Elizabeth II’s 1953 coronation to the present day, and draws on the intellectual legacies of British Cultural Studies, in particular Stuart Hall, to examine the role of media culture in
openaire +1 more source

