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Does family involvement matter post IPO? Adding value through advertising in family firms

Atanas Nik Nikolov (Department of Marketing, Walker College of Business, Appalachian State University, Boone, North Carolina, USA) (Carson College of Business, Washington State University, Pullman, Washington, USA)
Yuan Wen (Department of Marketing, Walker College of Business, Appalachian State University, Boone, North Carolina, USA) (Carson College of Business, Washington State University, Pullman, Washington, USA)

Journal of Family Business Management

ISSN: 2043-6238

Article publication date: 7 August 2018

Issue publication date: 18 September 2018

748

Abstract

Purpose

This paper brings together research on advertising, family business, and the resource-based view (RBV) of the firm to examine performance differences between publicly traded US family vs non-family firms. The purpose of this paper is to understand the heterogeneity of family vs non-family firm advertising after such firms become publicly traded.

Design/methodology/approach

The authors draw on the RBV of the firm, as well as on extensive empirical literature in family business and advertising research to empirically examine the differences between family and non-family firms in terms of performance.

Findings

Using panel data from over 2,000 companies across ten years, this research demonstrates that family businesses have higher advertising intensity than competitors, and achieve higher performance returns on their advertising investments, relative to non-family competitors. The results suggest that the “familiness” of public family firms is an intangible resource that, when combined with their advertising investments, affords family businesses a relative advantage compared to non-family businesses.

Research limitations/implications

Family involvement in publicly traded firms may contribute toward a richer resource endowment and result in creating synergistic effects between firm “familiness” and the public status of the firm. The paper contributes toward the RBV of the firm and the advertising literature. Limitations include the lack of qualitative data to ground the findings and potential moderating effects.

Practical implications

Understanding how family firms’ advertising spending influences their consequent performance provides new information to family firms’ owners and management, as well as investors. The authors suggest that the “familiness” of public family firms may provide a significant advantage over their non-family-owned competitors.

Social implications

The implications for society include that the family firm as an organizational form does not need to be relegated to a second-class citizen status in the business world: indeed, combining family firms’ characteristics within a publicly traded platform may provide firm performance benefits which benefit the founding family and other stakeholders.

Originality/value

This study contributes by highlighting the important influence of family involvement on advertising investment in the public family firm, a topic which has received limited attention. Second, it also integrates public ownership in family firms with the family involvement–advertising–firm performance relationship. As such, it uncovers a new pathway through which the family effect is leveraged to increase firm performance. Third, this study also contributes to the advertising and resource building literatures by identifying advertising as an additional resource which magnifies the impact of the bundle of resources available to the public family firm. Fourth, the use of an extensive panel data set allows for a more complex empirical investigation of the inherently dynamic relationships in the data and thus provides a contribution to the empirical stream of research in family business.

Keywords

Citation

Nikolov, A.N. and Wen, Y. (2018), "Does family involvement matter post IPO? Adding value through advertising in family firms", Journal of Family Business Management, Vol. 8 No. 3, pp. 218-234. https://doi.org/10.1108/JFBM-01-2018-0002

Publisher

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Emerald Publishing Limited

Copyright © 2018, Emerald Publishing Limited

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