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Family commitment and performance in private family firms: moderating effect of professionalization

Mohammad Rezaur Razzak (Department of Management, Sultan Qaboos University, Muscat, Oman)
Suaad Jassem (Al Zahra College for Women, Muscat, Oman)
Alima Akter (School of Business and Economics, North South University, Dhaka, Bangladesh)
Syed Abdulla Al Mamun (Credit Rating and Information Services Limited, Dhaka, Bangladesh)

Journal of Small Business and Enterprise Development

ISSN: 1462-6004

Article publication date: 29 April 2021

Issue publication date: 9 August 2021

533

Abstract

Purpose

The purpose of this research is to examine the interplay between family commitment as a family-centric resource and professionalization of the organization as a firm-centric resource to determine how the two phenomenon come together to enhance business performance in the context of privately held family firms.

Design/methodology/approach

Deploying the theoretical lens offered by the resource-based view, a conceptual link is developed between family commitment to the firm and firm performance with the potential moderating influence of firm professionalization. The hypotheses are tested using data collected from 357 privately held medium-to-large family-owned manufacturing companies in Bangladesh. The data are analyzed through structural equation modeling using SmartPLS (v.3.2).

Findings

The data analysis suggests that in absence of the moderator; professionalization, family commitment has a positive and significant association with firm performance. While in the presence of the moderator the above relationship is substantially stronger. The findings indicate that when family-specific resources and firm-specific resources are synchronized, it enhances performance of the family firm and puts it on a strong economic footing toward a more sustainable future.

Research limitations/implications

Cross-sectional nature of the study exposes it to the specter of common method bias despite the fact that procedural remedies were initiated to minimize the impact of such occurrence. Furthermore, data were collected from a single individual in each organization. Therefore, a longitudinal study with data obtained from multiple individuals at different levels of the organization would possibly yield more robust findings.

Practical implications

Leaders of family firms may find pertinent clues from the outcome of this study. Particularly, the confluence of family commitment to the firm as a family-specific resource and professionalization as a firm-specific resource can be valuable, rare, difficult to imitate and substitute source of competitive advantage for the family business organization.

Social implications

Survival of family businesses is vital to the global economy as one of the primary drivers of global gross domestic product growth and source of new employment. Policymakers can benefit from the findings of this study to customize policies to nurture growth of family enterprises and incentivize family firms to adopt professionalization through better governance and transparent managerial procedures.

Originality/value

A nuanced understanding of how family commitment and firm professionalization combine to significantly improve performance of family firms has not been dominant in the literature. Therefore, findings of this study carry special theoretical implications, because it suggests that both family-specific features and firm-specific features are necessary for enhanced levels of firm-centric business outcomes such as economic performance.

Keywords

Citation

Razzak, M.R., Jassem, S., Akter, A. and Mamun, S.A.A. (2021), "Family commitment and performance in private family firms: moderating effect of professionalization", Journal of Small Business and Enterprise Development, Vol. 28 No. 5, pp. 669-689. https://doi.org/10.1108/JSBED-05-2019-0165

Publisher

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Emerald Publishing Limited

Copyright © 2021, Emerald Publishing Limited

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