We explore how family-owned small and medium-sized enterprises (SMEs) control their investments abroad: through full ownership (wholly owned subsidiaries) or sharing the ownership with other partners (joint ventures). Focusing on the role of family control (family members as CEO and/or board chair) and three dimensions of distance (cultural, geographic, and institutional) to explain this choice, we analyze 1475 foreign subsidiaries owned by 701 family SMEs and find that cultural, geographic, and institutional distance affect the choice of ownership mode in different ways. Moreover, family control moderates the relationship between distance and foreign ownership mode in the case of cultural and institutional distance, but not in that of geog...
In contrast to widespread assessments that family enterprises lack sufficient resources and capabili...
Purpose – The purpose of this paper is to investigate how psychic distance affects the international...
We examine the effects of family control on entry mode choice by integrating Transaction Costs Econo...
In much of the developing world, families represent the dominant form of firm ownership. This study ...
Research on family firms’ internationalization is growing, but empirical findings are mixed. To reco...
The prevalent view among family-firm internationalization scholars is that family management discour...
SMEs are important to world business and the majority of SMEs are family firms. Yet some family SMEs...
Research on factors affecting the internationalization of SMEs is attracting growing interest. Howev...
A key question in international corporate governance is why certain in ownership types are prevalent...
In one of the most influential studies on family firm internationalization, Sciascia et al. (2012) a...
Previous studies often associated a specific type of ownership mode with the extent of control a par...
Purpose: The purpose of this paper is to increase understanding of the internationalization of famil...
In contrast to widespread assessments that family enterprises lack sufficient resources and capabili...
Purpose – The purpose of this paper is to investigate how psychic distance affects the international...
We examine the effects of family control on entry mode choice by integrating Transaction Costs Econo...
In much of the developing world, families represent the dominant form of firm ownership. This study ...
Research on family firms’ internationalization is growing, but empirical findings are mixed. To reco...
The prevalent view among family-firm internationalization scholars is that family management discour...
SMEs are important to world business and the majority of SMEs are family firms. Yet some family SMEs...
Research on factors affecting the internationalization of SMEs is attracting growing interest. Howev...
A key question in international corporate governance is why certain in ownership types are prevalent...
In one of the most influential studies on family firm internationalization, Sciascia et al. (2012) a...
Previous studies often associated a specific type of ownership mode with the extent of control a par...
Purpose: The purpose of this paper is to increase understanding of the internationalization of famil...
In contrast to widespread assessments that family enterprises lack sufficient resources and capabili...
Purpose – The purpose of this paper is to investigate how psychic distance affects the international...
We examine the effects of family control on entry mode choice by integrating Transaction Costs Econo...