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The entrepreneuring family : A new paradigm for family business research

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TLDR
Uhlaner et al. as discussed by the authors examined the intersection of entrepreneurship and family business, and more specifically the notion of the entrepreneuring family, and argued that strong family and entrepreneurial objectives can function side by side with one another.
Abstract
The purpose of this special issue is to examine the intersection of entrepreneurship and family business, and more specifically the notion of the entrepreneuring family. Despite a growing awareness of familyowned businesses and their contribution to the world’s developed and developing economies, the debate continues regarding their role in entrepreneurship. Family firms are commonly perceived as traditional, old-fashioned and stagnant. The term ‘‘family management’’ has been contrasted with ‘‘professional management.’’ Early family firm research put family and business objectives at opposite poles—as family first versus business first (Ward 1997). A more recent model proposes that business-owning families characterized by a strong family orientation (e.g., interdependence, security, stability, tradition and loyalty) may create a tension that actually pulls the business (and the businessowning family) away from an entrepreneurial orientation (e.g., autonomy, risk-taking propensity, innovativeness, proactiveness, etc.; Martin et al. 2006). Such research enforces the public and academic perception of the entrepreneuring family as an oxymoron—that is, a contradiction in terms. However, recent empirical research by Leenders and Waarts (2003) supports an alternative paradigm, i.e., a view that strong family and entrepreneurial objectives can function side by side with one another (Lumpkin et al. 2008). Based on the papers presented in this special issue, we argue that it is time to explore this new paradigm more fully, i.e., one that reflects the entrepreneurial behaviors of many family-owned and/or -managed firms. We want to discover why some businessowning families embrace dynasty building through L. M. Uhlaner (&) Center for Entrepreneurship, Nyenrode Business Universiteit, P.O. Box 130, 3620 AC Breukelen, The Netherlands e-mail: l.uhlaner@nyenrode.nl

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Journal ArticleDOI

From Longevity of Firms to Transgenerational Entrepreneurship of Families: Introducing Family Entrepreneurial Orientation

TL;DR: This article investigated transgenerational entrepreneurship of families and found evidence for their argument in that such a level shift reveals extended entrepreneurial activity, which is missed when focusing exclusively on the firm level.
Posted Content

Resource Orchestration in Family Firms: Investigating How Entrepreneurial Orientation, Generational Involvement, and Participative Strategy Affect Performance

TL;DR: In this article, the authors argue that a co-alignment of multiple factors is needed for family firms to increase performance through entrepreneurship, and they posit that entrepreneurial orientation provides the mobilizing vision to use the heterogeneous yet complementary knowledge and experiences offered by increased generational involvement toward entrepreneurship.
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The entrepreneurial orientation–performance relationship in private family firms: the moderating role of socioemotional wealth

TL;DR: Voordeckers et al. as discussed by the authors, W (reprint author), hasselt Univ, Kizok Res Ctr, Hasselt, Belgium, haveselt.
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The critical path to family firm success through entrepreneurial risk taking and image

TL;DR: In this article, the authors explore how family ownership and family expectations influence family firm image and entrepreneurial risk taking, and ultimately firm performance, and find support for a fully mediated model, utilizing a sample of 163 Swiss family firms.
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An Entrepreneurial Process Perspective on Succession in Family Firms

TL;DR: In this article, a three-step cluster analysis of 117 published articles on succession in family firms published between 1974 and 2010 is presented, where the authors identify gaps within each cluster and develop a set of research questions that may guide future research on succession as an entrepreneurial process.
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Clarifying the Entrepreneurial Orientation Construct and Linking It To Performance

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Defining International Entrepreneurship and Modeling the Speed of Internationalization

TL;DR: In this paper, a reformulated definition of international entrepreneurship is proposed and a model is presented of how the speed of entrepreneurial internationalization is influenced by various forces, such as enabling forces of technology, motivating forces of competition, mediating perceptions of entrepreneurs, and moderating forces of knowledge and networks.
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What is entrepreneurial family backgrounds?

Entrepreneuring families refer to business-owning families focused on entrepreneurial objectives or motives, working together to grow family wealth through business value creation.