20 research outputs found

    Gender, family situation and the exit event: reassessing the opportunity-costs of business ownership

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    Previous research into entrepreneurial exit has examined exit from a firm perspective focusing upon performance as the primary determinant of exit; however, new research is emerging which suggests that other variables (e.g. entrepreneurial human capital) may impact the exit decision over and above that accounted for by firm performance. Our research adopts a gender and family embeddedness perspective to examine the impact that gender and family situation (marital status, number of children, running a family business) have on voluntary exit decisions over and above that attributed to firm performance.Gender

    La influencia del género y entorno familiar en el éxito y fracaso de las iniciativas emprendedoras

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    Tesis doctoral inédita. Universidad Autónoma de Madrid, Departamento de Estructura Económica y Economía del Desarrollo. Fecha de lectura: 17-9-0

    Participando en un Nuevo Campo: La Aproximación Diferencial de las Familias Propietarias de Empresas a la Inversión de Impacto

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    We develop a theoretical framework explaining why and how business-owning families engage in impact investing. Despite its exponential growth, the burgeoning field of impact investing is still subject to competing interpretations and varying practices. Building on the framework proposed by Nason et al. (2019b), we argue that a business-owning families’s frame of reference (backward vs. forward-looking and internally vs. externally oriented) constitutes a relevant heterogeneity that triggers a unique driver for engaging in impact investing and a distinct set of practices to do so.Desarrollamos un marco teórico que explica por qué y cómo las familias propietarias de negocios participan en inversiones de impacto. A pesar de su crecimiento exponencial, el campo de estudio sobre inversiones de impacto está todavía sujeto a interpretaciones contrapuestas y prácticas variables. Sobre la base del marco propuesto por Nason et al. (2019b), argumentamos que el marco de referencia de las familias propietarias de negocios (retrospectivo vs prospectivo y orientado internamente vs externamente) mantiene una alta heterogeneidad,  lo que determina la singularidad  de su participación en  inversiones de impacto y también en un conjunto distintivo de prácticas para llevarlas a cabo

    Entrepreneurs´ perceptions of success: examining differences across gender and family status

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    Our study examines to what extent female and male entrepreneurs differ in the way they perceive and assess entrepreneurial success, measured by extrinsic or intrinsic dimensions. Our results indicate a number of similarities between men and women entrepreneurs but also reveal interesting gender-based differences related to family status. Rather than assuming that women entrepreneurs are a homogeneous group, we found that family factors, and especially parental status, play a key role in shaping fundamentally different perceptions of entrepreneurial success amongst different types of women entrepreneurs.Entrepreneur, Gender, Children, Perception of success

    Family involvement and firm performance: a family embeddedness perspective

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    This paper uses family embeddedness (Cliff and Aldrich, 2003) and Work Family Interface (WFI) (Jennings and McDougald, 2007) to analyze the effect of gender and income on the relationship between family employment and firm performance in the context of micro and small family enterprises. Our results indicate that family employment contributed to increase sales but was negatively related to firm´s profitability. Moreover, the results indicate that when the business is the main source of household income the family employee´s positive impact on performance is reduced, and that the positive relationship between family employment and firm performance is stronger in woman run firms.Family firms, Gender

    Mecca‐Cola: message in a bottle

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    Born to Compete? Sibling Rivalry and Self-Employment

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    Drawing on Social comparison and resource dilution theories, this study posits that sibling rivalry affects peoples’ decisions to enter self-employment through two mechanisms. First, sibling rivalry fosters individual competitiveness, which triggers people to choose occupations that involve competitive behaviors such as self- employment. Second, by diluting parental resources, sibling rivalry negatively influences educational attainment. This, in turn, can affect self-employment in a non-linear fashion; people with lower education may lack the cognitive ability needed for self-employment, while those with higher education may find it more economically attractive to pursue wage jobs. We also argue that these two mechanisms–educational attainment and nurturing competitiveness–are moderated by the gender of the focal individual as well as by the gender composition of her siblings. We find evidence for these mechanisms by analyzing data from a survey of 4,086 individuals in China.
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