This study examines family firms’ propensity to protect their intellectual property through patents. Building on the mixed gamble logic of the behavioral agency model, we theorize that family ownership has a U-shaped relationship with firm propensity to patent. Specifically, we argue that family firms’ desire to prevent losses of current socioemotional wealth inhibits their propensity to patent until a threshold level of family ownership, beyond which the family’s socioemotional wealth is secured and a greater focus on prospective financial gains attainable through patents is possible. We also suggest that environmental munificence moderates this nonlinear relationship such that a low-munificent environment accentuates the potentially detri...
Background: Absorptive capacity concept has its roots dated back around 30 years ago when ...
There has been much debate concerning the innovative output of family-owned and non-family-owned com...
The increasing importance of patents for firm strategy goes beyond the protection of inventions from...
This study examines family firms’ propensity to protect their intellectual property through patents....
This study examines family firms’ propensity to protect their intellectual property through patents....
This paper provides new evidence of innovation processes in family firms by investigating their atti...
This paper analyses the patenting activities of family businesses compared to non-family ones. First...
Research was largely consistent in predicting a negative relationship between family ownership and r...
Research was largely consistent in predicting a negative relationship between family ownership and r...
Research was largely consistent in predicting a negative relationship between family ownership and r...
Elaborating the innovation behavior of family-owned businesses, prior research primary focused on th...
The purpose of this study was to examine how family involvement affects the environmental innovation...
Societal pressures for greater sustainability can encourage firms to target part of their innovation...
AbstractThis paper explores whether family and non‐family firms differ in terms of their capability ...
Societal pressures for greater sustainability can encourage firms to target part of their innovation...
Background: Absorptive capacity concept has its roots dated back around 30 years ago when ...
There has been much debate concerning the innovative output of family-owned and non-family-owned com...
The increasing importance of patents for firm strategy goes beyond the protection of inventions from...
This study examines family firms’ propensity to protect their intellectual property through patents....
This study examines family firms’ propensity to protect their intellectual property through patents....
This paper provides new evidence of innovation processes in family firms by investigating their atti...
This paper analyses the patenting activities of family businesses compared to non-family ones. First...
Research was largely consistent in predicting a negative relationship between family ownership and r...
Research was largely consistent in predicting a negative relationship between family ownership and r...
Research was largely consistent in predicting a negative relationship between family ownership and r...
Elaborating the innovation behavior of family-owned businesses, prior research primary focused on th...
The purpose of this study was to examine how family involvement affects the environmental innovation...
Societal pressures for greater sustainability can encourage firms to target part of their innovation...
AbstractThis paper explores whether family and non‐family firms differ in terms of their capability ...
Societal pressures for greater sustainability can encourage firms to target part of their innovation...
Background: Absorptive capacity concept has its roots dated back around 30 years ago when ...
There has been much debate concerning the innovative output of family-owned and non-family-owned com...
The increasing importance of patents for firm strategy goes beyond the protection of inventions from...