
Ownership Control Eats Strategy and Culture for Lunch: The Case for Future Ownership Development Prior to Ownership Transition
Author(s) -
Ernesto Poza-Valle
Publication year - 2021
Publication title -
european journal of family business
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
eISSN - 2444-8788
pISSN - 2444-877X
DOI - 10.24310/ejfbejfb.v11i1.12026
Subject(s) - control (management) , statutory law , business , perspective (graphical) , face (sociological concept) , market economy , economics , political science , management , sociology , social science , artificial intelligence , computer science , law
A review of the academic research and practitioner best practices literature highlights how little we still know about the role that ownership control plays in the continuity of founder-controlled and family-controlled firms. Founder-controlled firms have been shown to financially outperform other firms. Allowing for more nuanced findings given the heterogeneity of family businesses, a similar advantage has been found in family-controlled firms around the world when their performance is contrasted with that of management-controlled firms. Research points to generational and family participation effects that may contribute to a gradual decline in this advantage over the generations. Still, controlling families of family firms face the prospect of leading a family-controlled firm across generations that continues to derive the financial and noneconomic benefits of such control or to squander that opportunity by not having ownership control be a fundamental consideration in their owners’ strategy when facing a generational transition. Statutory ownership control, psychological ownership and family unity approaches are all considered in an exploration of a future ownership development perspective and approaches that controlling families can take to preserve ownership control and the resulting comparative advantage evidenced in higher financial and noneconomic returns over generations.