While research in family businesses has focused on familiness as a resource with potential to generate competitive advantage, a gap exists in understanding how such value can be extended to wider business relationships. We contribute to an increased understanding of how familiness can influence the development of relational capability in entrepreneurial family firms. Using a business relational and family embedded perspective, we advance a conceptualisation of the link between familiness and relational capability based on an analysis of the extant literature and qualitative case research. The critical role of the family identity emerges through the empirical study. As such, we find six relational processes across family identity which link ...
To date studies have mainly focused on "How" familiness is generated and "What" is familiness. Scars...
Family businesses are and have been vital in the European’s socioeconomic contexts. Notwithstanding ...
Family businesses dominate in a majority of economies (Astrachan and Shanker, 2003; Chrisman, Chua, ...
While research in family businesses has focused on familiness as a resource with potential to genera...
D.Phil.In both developed and under-developed countries, family businesses are the most prevalent, be...
While the family may serve as a resource for entrepreneurs, it has been studied separately in differ...
The study reviews three main models of the familiness after defining family business and estimating ...
The aim of the thesis is to analyse the effects of family co-occurrence and past familial relationsh...
In the search for ways in which the family firm context is unique to organizational science, the con...
For family businesses, entering into inter-firm cooperation with another family business can be a fr...
Using the family business succession, resource-based view of firms, familiness, and organizational c...
The interest of family businesses and the research within the topic is gaining momentum.A relatively...
How can family firms unlock their innovation potential? Despite the recent growth in research on fam...
The aim of this paper is to shed light on how organizational relationships contribute to entrepreneu...
Abstract – This study aims to understand the family orientation concept for assessing the interactio...
To date studies have mainly focused on "How" familiness is generated and "What" is familiness. Scars...
Family businesses are and have been vital in the European’s socioeconomic contexts. Notwithstanding ...
Family businesses dominate in a majority of economies (Astrachan and Shanker, 2003; Chrisman, Chua, ...
While research in family businesses has focused on familiness as a resource with potential to genera...
D.Phil.In both developed and under-developed countries, family businesses are the most prevalent, be...
While the family may serve as a resource for entrepreneurs, it has been studied separately in differ...
The study reviews three main models of the familiness after defining family business and estimating ...
The aim of the thesis is to analyse the effects of family co-occurrence and past familial relationsh...
In the search for ways in which the family firm context is unique to organizational science, the con...
For family businesses, entering into inter-firm cooperation with another family business can be a fr...
Using the family business succession, resource-based view of firms, familiness, and organizational c...
The interest of family businesses and the research within the topic is gaining momentum.A relatively...
How can family firms unlock their innovation potential? Despite the recent growth in research on fam...
The aim of this paper is to shed light on how organizational relationships contribute to entrepreneu...
Abstract – This study aims to understand the family orientation concept for assessing the interactio...
To date studies have mainly focused on "How" familiness is generated and "What" is familiness. Scars...
Family businesses are and have been vital in the European’s socioeconomic contexts. Notwithstanding ...
Family businesses dominate in a majority of economies (Astrachan and Shanker, 2003; Chrisman, Chua, ...