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Corporate Venturing in Family Business: A Developmental Approach of the Enterprising Family

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Corporate Venturing in Family Business: A Developmental Approach of the Enterprising Family. / Minola, Tommaso; Brumana, Mara; Campopiano, Giovanna et al.
In: Strategic Entrepreneurship Journal, Vol. 10, No. 4, 01.12.2016, p. 395-412.

Research output: Contribution to Journal/MagazineJournal articlepeer-review

Harvard

Minola, T, Brumana, M, Campopiano, G, Garrett, RP & Cassia, L 2016, 'Corporate Venturing in Family Business: A Developmental Approach of the Enterprising Family', Strategic Entrepreneurship Journal, vol. 10, no. 4, pp. 395-412. https://doi.org/10.1002/sej.1236

APA

Minola, T., Brumana, M., Campopiano, G., Garrett, R. P., & Cassia, L. (2016). Corporate Venturing in Family Business: A Developmental Approach of the Enterprising Family. Strategic Entrepreneurship Journal, 10(4), 395-412. https://doi.org/10.1002/sej.1236

Vancouver

Minola T, Brumana M, Campopiano G, Garrett RP, Cassia L. Corporate Venturing in Family Business: A Developmental Approach of the Enterprising Family. Strategic Entrepreneurship Journal. 2016 Dec 1;10(4):395-412. Epub 2016 Nov 21. doi: 10.1002/sej.1236

Author

Minola, Tommaso ; Brumana, Mara ; Campopiano, Giovanna et al. / Corporate Venturing in Family Business : A Developmental Approach of the Enterprising Family. In: Strategic Entrepreneurship Journal. 2016 ; Vol. 10, No. 4. pp. 395-412.

Bibtex

@article{3dada7039736441e82e54be29b005a71,
title = "Corporate Venturing in Family Business: A Developmental Approach of the Enterprising Family",
abstract = "Research summary: This conceptual article discusses when and why family firms are motivated to engage in entrepreneurial activities. Drawing on family development theory, we offer midrange reasoning about the impact of enterprising family dynamics—such as the birth of a child or children leaving home—on the motivation for corporate venturing and its changes over time. Moreover, our model also accounts for the contingent effect of ownership and business developmental dimensions. Finally, we predict that motivation for corporate venturing can, in turn, spur the development of the enterprising family. Managerial summary: Overcoming the idea that family firms are either very or minimally entrepreneurial, we focus on the enterprising family and consider its development to explain the motivation toward corporate venturing. We look at the evolution of the roles and norms of family members over time and predict that motivation for venturing increases with family growth until the moment in which a succession takes place and the younger generation receives the baton. We also consider how changes in the ownership structure and business growth influence the relationship between family development and motivation for venturing. The latter, in turn, can trigger the development of the enterprising family itself, with its structure and norms. Our work, in sum, depicts the enterprising family as a springboard for repeated acts of entrepreneurship across generations.",
keywords = "corporate venturing, enterprising family, family business developmental model, family development theory",
author = "Tommaso Minola and Mara Brumana and Giovanna Campopiano and Garrett, {Robert Paul} and Lucio Cassia",
year = "2016",
month = dec,
day = "1",
doi = "10.1002/sej.1236",
language = "English",
volume = "10",
pages = "395--412",
journal = "Strategic Entrepreneurship Journal",
issn = "1932-4391",
publisher = "John Wiley and Sons Inc.",
number = "4",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Corporate Venturing in Family Business

T2 - A Developmental Approach of the Enterprising Family

AU - Minola, Tommaso

AU - Brumana, Mara

AU - Campopiano, Giovanna

AU - Garrett, Robert Paul

AU - Cassia, Lucio

PY - 2016/12/1

Y1 - 2016/12/1

N2 - Research summary: This conceptual article discusses when and why family firms are motivated to engage in entrepreneurial activities. Drawing on family development theory, we offer midrange reasoning about the impact of enterprising family dynamics—such as the birth of a child or children leaving home—on the motivation for corporate venturing and its changes over time. Moreover, our model also accounts for the contingent effect of ownership and business developmental dimensions. Finally, we predict that motivation for corporate venturing can, in turn, spur the development of the enterprising family. Managerial summary: Overcoming the idea that family firms are either very or minimally entrepreneurial, we focus on the enterprising family and consider its development to explain the motivation toward corporate venturing. We look at the evolution of the roles and norms of family members over time and predict that motivation for venturing increases with family growth until the moment in which a succession takes place and the younger generation receives the baton. We also consider how changes in the ownership structure and business growth influence the relationship between family development and motivation for venturing. The latter, in turn, can trigger the development of the enterprising family itself, with its structure and norms. Our work, in sum, depicts the enterprising family as a springboard for repeated acts of entrepreneurship across generations.

AB - Research summary: This conceptual article discusses when and why family firms are motivated to engage in entrepreneurial activities. Drawing on family development theory, we offer midrange reasoning about the impact of enterprising family dynamics—such as the birth of a child or children leaving home—on the motivation for corporate venturing and its changes over time. Moreover, our model also accounts for the contingent effect of ownership and business developmental dimensions. Finally, we predict that motivation for corporate venturing can, in turn, spur the development of the enterprising family. Managerial summary: Overcoming the idea that family firms are either very or minimally entrepreneurial, we focus on the enterprising family and consider its development to explain the motivation toward corporate venturing. We look at the evolution of the roles and norms of family members over time and predict that motivation for venturing increases with family growth until the moment in which a succession takes place and the younger generation receives the baton. We also consider how changes in the ownership structure and business growth influence the relationship between family development and motivation for venturing. The latter, in turn, can trigger the development of the enterprising family itself, with its structure and norms. Our work, in sum, depicts the enterprising family as a springboard for repeated acts of entrepreneurship across generations.

KW - corporate venturing

KW - enterprising family

KW - family business developmental model

KW - family development theory

U2 - 10.1002/sej.1236

DO - 10.1002/sej.1236

M3 - Journal article

AN - SCOPUS:84988032068

VL - 10

SP - 395

EP - 412

JO - Strategic Entrepreneurship Journal

JF - Strategic Entrepreneurship Journal

SN - 1932-4391

IS - 4

ER -