Learning to be entrepreneurial: Do family firms gain more from female leadership than nonfamily firms?

Author:

Hernández‐Linares Remedios1ORCID,López‐Fernández María Concepción2ORCID,Eddleston Kimberly A.3ORCID,Kellermanns Franz45ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Departamento de Economía Financiera y Contabilidad Universidad de Extremadura Badajoz Spain

2. Departamento de Administración de Empresas Universidad de Cantabria, Santander Cantabria Spain

3. Entrepreneurship & Innovation Group D'Amore‐McKim School of Business, Northeastern University Boston Massachusetts USA

4. Department of Management University of North Carolina at Charlotte Charlotte North Carolina USA

5. WHU (Otto Beisheim School of Management) Vallendar Germany

Abstract

AbstractResearch SummaryWe integrate social learning theory with gender role congruity theory to propose that family firms gain more from female leadership than nonfamily firms due to the congruence of female communal values with those of a family business. Results of our empirical study, based on a sample of 322 Spanish small‐ and medium‐sized enterprises (SMEs), show that while all three dimensions of learning orientation (commitment to learning, shared vision, and open‐mindedness) are positively related to an entrepreneurial orientation, significant differences exist based on the CEO's gender and whether the SME is a family or nonfamily firm. Strongest differences were found between female‐led family and nonfamily SMEs whereby the entrepreneurial orientation of female‐led family SMEs benefited significantly more from their firm's commitment to learning and open‐mindedness.Managerial SummaryTo cultivate entrepreneurship, a small‐ and medium‐sized enterprise (SME) leader must create an organization that fosters learning. Yet, surprisingly, we know little about male and female leaders' ability to translate their SME's learning into entrepreneurship. Our study reveals that in comparison to nonfamily firms, family firms offer an environment that is more conducive to supporting women leaders, which allows their female leaders to direct their SME's learning more effectively toward entrepreneurship. However, while female‐led family SMEs were as effective as male‐led family‐ and nonfamily‐led SMEs in directing learning toward entrepreneurship, female‐led nonfamily SMEs struggled. Our study therefore suggests that while women have an advantage leading family SMEs, gender biases hamper female leaders' ability to transform learning into greater entrepreneurial orientation in nonfamily SMEs.

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

Strategy and Management,Economics and Econometrics,Business and International Management

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