Individual innovation behavior and firm-level exploration and exploitation: how family firms make the most of their managers

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Abstract

This study investigates the influence of top managers’ individual innovation behavior on firm-level innovation activities, specifically on exploration and exploitation. The influence of individual actions depends on managerial discretion, which is dependent on the ownership context of a business. Thus, this study explores how family ownership moderates the relationships between a top manager’s individual innovation behavior and firm-level exploration and exploitation. Based on a sample of 195 firms, of which 120 are family firms, our findings depict highly significant relationships between managers’ individual innovation behavior and firm-level exploration and exploitation innovation. Furthermore, we find differences regarding these relationships between family firms and their non-family counterparts. We contribute to literature showing that family firms provide a unique context for leveraging a top manager’s individual innovation behavior into firm-level exploration activities.

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Strobl, A., Matzler, K., Nketia, B. A., & Veider, V. (2020). Individual innovation behavior and firm-level exploration and exploitation: how family firms make the most of their managers. Review of Managerial Science, 14(4), 809–844. https://doi.org/10.1007/s11846-018-0309-9

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