Discussion Report Part 3: Managerial Research II: Survey and Quantitative Analyses

Felix Thiele (HSBA Hamburg School of Business Administration, Hamburg, Germany, and Leuphana University, Lüneburg, Germany)

Family Firms and Family Constitution

ISBN: 978-1-83797-203-6, eISBN: 978-1-83797-200-5

Publication date: 14 December 2023

Citation

Thiele, F. (2023), "Discussion Report Part 3: Managerial Research II: Survey and Quantitative Analyses", Fleischer, H. and Prigge, S. (Ed.) Family Firms and Family Constitution (Law and Management of Family Firms), Emerald Publishing Limited, Leeds, pp. 175-176. https://doi.org/10.1108/978-1-83797-200-520231011

Publisher

:

Emerald Publishing Limited

Copyright © 2024 Felix Thiele

License

This work is published under the Creative Commons Attribution (CC BY 4.0) licence. Anyone may reproduce, distribute, translate and create derivative works of this book (for both commercial and non-commercial purposes), subject to full attribution to the original publication and authors. The full terms of this licence may be seen at http://creativecommons.org/licences/by/4.0/legalcode


Chris Graves/Donella Caspersz/Jill Thomas: An Examination of the Relationship between Governance Mechanisms and Performance: Evidence from the Australian Family Business Context1

A management scholar and consultant asked Graves who the respondents of the survey were. Graves clarified that there was only a single respondent per firm, ideally the CEO. The management scholar and consultant continued to consider whether that was not biased in those cases in which the CEO was not a family member. Graves answered that their primary goal was to ask key decision makers who did not have to be necessarily family members. He conceded that this was a limitation of the study. But he added that they only asked for the presence of a family constitution, which makes it less severe. A legal scholar wanted to know how Graves and his colleagues defined the term non-economic wealth. Graves explained that they defined it as well-being, particularly the non-financial objectives of well-being. Thus, it was similar to the objectives of the socioemotional wealth approach. A managerial scholar put forward two topics regarding the empirical study: First, whether it made sense to further differentiate between different conflict resolution mechanisms. Second, whether it was an option to place weights on different mechanisms. With respect to the first point, Graves said that he had to check the data again and think about it. Addressing the second point, Graves agreed that this could be an interesting idea, but neither Graves nor the scholar who raised the issue had any ad hoc suggestions for such a weighting scheme.

1

As the chapter by Ulrich and Speidel was not presented during the conference, it was not part of the discussions.

Prelims
Part 1: Legal and Managerial Foundations
Chapter 1: Family Companies and Family Constitutions: Historical and Comparative Perspectives
Chapter 2: Family Firms and Family Constitution – A Management Perspective
Chapter 3: Discussion Report Part 1: Legal and Managerial Foundations
Part 2: Managerial Research I: Conceptual and Qualitative Analyses
Chapter 4: A Receiver Approach to Governance in Family Firms: The Role of Justice Perceptions
Chapter 5: Family Governance in Practice: Lessons Learned from a 100-Year-Old Entrepreneurial Family Firm
Chapter 6: Managing Dispersed Ownership Within the Owning Family: The Role of Family Governance
Chapter 7: Analysis of Critical Incidents for the Design of the Governance System
Chapter 8: Discussion Report Part 2: Managerial Research I: Conceptual and Qualitative Analyses
Part 3: Managerial Research II: Survey and Quantitative Analyses
Chapter 9: An Examination of the Relationship Between Governance Mechanisms and Performance: Evidence from the Australian Family Business Context
Chapter 10: The Family Constitution as an Instrument of Corporate Governance in Family-Owned Companies
Chapter 11: Discussion Report Part 3: Managerial Research II: Survey and Quantitative Analyses
Part 4: Legal Research
Chapter 12: Facets of Family Constitutions: Conceptual Origins, Practical Approaches, and Legal Implications
Chapter 13: Discussion Report Part 4: Legal Research I
Chapter 14: Succession in Family Businesses – Legal Frameworks
Chapter 15: Family Firms and Family Constitutions in France – A General Overview
Chapter 16: Discussion Report Part 4: Legal Research II
Chapter 17: Family Constitutions and the Complexity of Family Businesses from a Counsel's Point of View
Chapter 18: Discussion Report Part 4: Legal Research III
Part 5: Conclusion
Chapter 19: Directions for Future Research
Index