Crisis management in family firms: do religion and secularization of family decision-makers’ matter?

IF 3.6 Q2 MANAGEMENT
Johannes Thaller, Stefan Mayr, Birgit Feldbauer-Durstmüller
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Abstract

Purpose The unique dynamics of family firms (FFs) shape the management of financial crises. Religious and secular reasons, as a defining characteristic of this type of firm, provide a reference system for key management decisions. This paper aims to explore the under-researched topic of differences in FFs' crisis management between religious and secular family decision-makers (FDMs), considering secularization in developed countries. Design/methodology/approach The paper draws on a qualitative-empirical study of 14 large FFs from the DACH region (Germany, Austria and Switzerland), through both a media analysis and semi-structured interviews with FDMs who have significant influence on key management decisions. Findings Despite secularization, religion continues to influence managerial decisions such as crisis management in the DACH region. The findings show that crisis management differs across religious and secular FDMs, demonstrating the substantial impact of religious and secular reasons on operational and financial measures. Thus, religious and secular reasons may partially explain the complex and ambivalent crisis management of FFs. This indicates that religion shapes FF's key management decisions in the increasingly secularized DACH region. Religious FDMs are accountable to both the firm and to God, which fosters their own personal and financial resources during crisis management. Originality/value This paper contributes to the existing literature by exploring the impact of religion and secularization within developed countries. Further, it offers deeper insights into FF's crisis management and is one of the first studies to assess the impact of religion and secularization on operational and financial measures. This research derives five propositions for further research and discusses a broad range of original implications for theory and practice.
家族企业的危机管理:家族决策者的宗教信仰与世俗化有关系吗?
家族企业(FFs)的独特动态塑造了金融危机的管理。宗教和世俗原因,作为这类公司的一个决定性特征,为关键的管理决策提供了一个参考系统。考虑到发达国家的世俗化,本文旨在探讨宗教家庭决策者和世俗家庭决策者(fdm)在家庭危机管理方面的差异。本文通过媒体分析和对关键管理决策有重大影响的fdm的半结构化访谈,对DACH地区(德国、奥地利和瑞士)的14家大型fdm进行了定性实证研究。尽管世俗化,宗教继续影响管理决策,如危机管理在DACH地区。研究结果表明,不同宗教和世俗的fdm在危机管理方面存在差异,表明宗教和世俗原因对业务和财务措施的重大影响。因此,宗教和世俗原因可以部分解释FFs的复杂和矛盾的危机管理。这表明,在日益世俗化的DACH地区,宗教影响着FF的关键管理决策。宗教fdm对公司和上帝都负责,这在危机管理中培养了他们自己的个人和财务资源。本文通过探讨发达国家宗教与世俗化的影响,对现有文献有所贡献。此外,它为FF的危机管理提供了更深入的见解,并且是评估宗教和世俗化对运营和财务措施影响的首批研究之一。本研究提出了五个有待进一步研究的命题,并讨论了广泛的理论和实践的原始含义。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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来源期刊
CiteScore
5.50
自引率
33.30%
发文量
51
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