Soft Issues in Family Firms: A Study About Content And Process Advisors

Background: Family firms have a strong impact on the world’s well-being, in terms of social stability, international wealth creation, and global development. Advisors appear essential to ensure the family firms’ prosperity and success, representing a potential source of advantage. There are several...

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Main Authors: Bau, Marina, Trümmel, Peter
Format: Others
Language:English
Published: Högskolan i Jönköping, Internationella Handelshögskolan 2018
Subjects:
Online Access:http://urn.kb.se/resolve?urn=urn:nbn:se:hj:diva-39649
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spelling ndltd-UPSALLA1-oai-DiVA.org-hj-396492018-06-20T05:56:29ZSoft Issues in Family Firms: A Study About Content And Process AdvisorsengBau, MarinaTrümmel, PeterHögskolan i Jönköping, Internationella HandelshögskolanHögskolan i Jönköping, Internationella Handelshögskolan2018Family BusinessConsultingSoft IssuesProcess AdvisorsContent AdvisorsAccountantsFamily Business AdvisorsBusiness AdministrationFöretagsekonomiBackground: Family firms have a strong impact on the world’s well-being, in terms of social stability, international wealth creation, and global development. Advisors appear essential to ensure the family firms’ prosperity and success, representing a potential source of advantage. There are several types of advisors working for family firms. Our study focuses on formal advisors (i.e. professionals, legally hired and paid by family firms), that either provide process or content advisory. Process advisors focus more on family dynamics and processes (e.g. relational and emotional aspect), while content advisors provide strategic services and specialized knowledge. Research Purpose: To understand how the approaches of advising family firms differ among formal business advisors.Research Problem: When advising family firms, two main type of issues can emerge. Soft issues regard personal and relational features, like emotions, while hard issues are emitted from the business, and are related to profitability and finance. In our critical literature review, we identify a gap in the existing knowledge regarding how advisors deal with soft issues when advising family firms. Although the unique characteristics and issues of family firms lead them to seek for specialized advice, they seem to be dissatisfied with the advisors’ ability to address soft issues. On the other side, content advisors show frustration in dealing with them. Research Questions: (1) How do content advisors perceive and address family firms’ soft issues? (2) How do process advisors perceive and address family firms’ soft issues? Method: Ontology – Relativism; Epistemology – Social constructionism; Methodology –Exploratory Qualitative Interview-based Study; Data collection – In-depth Interviews; Sampling – Two Purposive Criterion Samples of Content (i.e. accountants) and Process Advisors (i.e. family business advisors) (seven respondents each one); Data Analysis – Content Analysis (creation of a tree-diagram based on codes, sub-categories, categories, main categories)Conclusion: We develop a model describing how content and process advisors perceive and address soft issues, pointing out the identified differences in their approaches. Furthermore, our results suggest the existence of two level of soft issues, which adds new insights to the existing academic knowledge. Managerial Implications: We develop six main managerial implications for both content and process advisors, which we recommend as inputs facilitating the advisors’ work with family firms. Student thesisinfo:eu-repo/semantics/bachelorThesistexthttp://urn.kb.se/resolve?urn=urn:nbn:se:hj:diva-39649application/pdfinfo:eu-repo/semantics/openAccess
collection NDLTD
language English
format Others
sources NDLTD
topic Family Business
Consulting
Soft Issues
Process Advisors
Content Advisors
Accountants
Family Business Advisors
Business Administration
Företagsekonomi
spellingShingle Family Business
Consulting
Soft Issues
Process Advisors
Content Advisors
Accountants
Family Business Advisors
Business Administration
Företagsekonomi
Bau, Marina
Trümmel, Peter
Soft Issues in Family Firms: A Study About Content And Process Advisors
description Background: Family firms have a strong impact on the world’s well-being, in terms of social stability, international wealth creation, and global development. Advisors appear essential to ensure the family firms’ prosperity and success, representing a potential source of advantage. There are several types of advisors working for family firms. Our study focuses on formal advisors (i.e. professionals, legally hired and paid by family firms), that either provide process or content advisory. Process advisors focus more on family dynamics and processes (e.g. relational and emotional aspect), while content advisors provide strategic services and specialized knowledge. Research Purpose: To understand how the approaches of advising family firms differ among formal business advisors.Research Problem: When advising family firms, two main type of issues can emerge. Soft issues regard personal and relational features, like emotions, while hard issues are emitted from the business, and are related to profitability and finance. In our critical literature review, we identify a gap in the existing knowledge regarding how advisors deal with soft issues when advising family firms. Although the unique characteristics and issues of family firms lead them to seek for specialized advice, they seem to be dissatisfied with the advisors’ ability to address soft issues. On the other side, content advisors show frustration in dealing with them. Research Questions: (1) How do content advisors perceive and address family firms’ soft issues? (2) How do process advisors perceive and address family firms’ soft issues? Method: Ontology – Relativism; Epistemology – Social constructionism; Methodology –Exploratory Qualitative Interview-based Study; Data collection – In-depth Interviews; Sampling – Two Purposive Criterion Samples of Content (i.e. accountants) and Process Advisors (i.e. family business advisors) (seven respondents each one); Data Analysis – Content Analysis (creation of a tree-diagram based on codes, sub-categories, categories, main categories)Conclusion: We develop a model describing how content and process advisors perceive and address soft issues, pointing out the identified differences in their approaches. Furthermore, our results suggest the existence of two level of soft issues, which adds new insights to the existing academic knowledge. Managerial Implications: We develop six main managerial implications for both content and process advisors, which we recommend as inputs facilitating the advisors’ work with family firms.
author Bau, Marina
Trümmel, Peter
author_facet Bau, Marina
Trümmel, Peter
author_sort Bau, Marina
title Soft Issues in Family Firms: A Study About Content And Process Advisors
title_short Soft Issues in Family Firms: A Study About Content And Process Advisors
title_full Soft Issues in Family Firms: A Study About Content And Process Advisors
title_fullStr Soft Issues in Family Firms: A Study About Content And Process Advisors
title_full_unstemmed Soft Issues in Family Firms: A Study About Content And Process Advisors
title_sort soft issues in family firms: a study about content and process advisors
publisher Högskolan i Jönköping, Internationella Handelshögskolan
publishDate 2018
url http://urn.kb.se/resolve?urn=urn:nbn:se:hj:diva-39649
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