Affiliation:
1. Assistant professor of strategic management at the Ohio State University College of Business.
2. Associate professor in the Department of Management at the Indiana University Graduate School of Business.
Abstract
The literature applying agency theory to management has focused on the performance advantages to be gained when ownership and control of the firm are aligned. This article investigates that premise by comparing family-owned and -managed and professionally managed firms. The article presents the results of a field survey that examined the extent to which family-owned and -managed firms differ across structural, process, and performance dimensions from their professionally managed counterparts. Significant differences exist between these two groups on both structural and process dimensions, and there is evidence that family-owned and -managed firms exhibit performance advantages as a result of the unification of ownership and control.
Subject
Finance,Business, Management and Accounting (miscellaneous)
Cited by
491 articles.
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