2016
DOI: 10.1177/0149206316671583
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Managerial Risk Taking

Abstract: Managerial risk taking is a critical aspect of strategic management. To improve competitive advantage and performance, managers need to take risks, often in an uncertain environment. Formal economic assumptions of risk taking suggest that if the expected values for two strategies are similar but one is a greater gamble (uncertain), managers will choose the strategy with a more certain outcome. Based on these assumptions, agency theory assumes that top managers should be compensated or monitored to achieve bett… Show more

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Cited by 279 publications
(158 citation statements)
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References 335 publications
(524 reference statements)
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“…Second, unlike prior studies that use the SEW construct in an "all or nothing" fashion (Hoskisson et al, 2017), our theory and results suggest that while all the SEW stock is completely lost in the case of firm sale or liquidation, some SEW flow can be preserved by family owners (Chua et al, 2015) in the case of a merger, rendering this option the preferred choice when business exit is unavoidable. Faced with a tradeoff between avoiding financial losses and preserving non-economic wealth, family owners are likely to choose a mode of exit that mitigates financial losses and ensures the future option of continuing to extract some SEW from the firm.…”
Section: Future Research and Limitationscontrasting
confidence: 75%
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“…Second, unlike prior studies that use the SEW construct in an "all or nothing" fashion (Hoskisson et al, 2017), our theory and results suggest that while all the SEW stock is completely lost in the case of firm sale or liquidation, some SEW flow can be preserved by family owners (Chua et al, 2015) in the case of a merger, rendering this option the preferred choice when business exit is unavoidable. Faced with a tradeoff between avoiding financial losses and preserving non-economic wealth, family owners are likely to choose a mode of exit that mitigates financial losses and ensures the future option of continuing to extract some SEW from the firm.…”
Section: Future Research and Limitationscontrasting
confidence: 75%
“…That is, "family firms are willing to trade risk reduction for SEW conservation when performance hazard is higher" (Gómez-Mejía et al, 2010: 232). Our theory extends this logic by suggesting that the SEW preservation motive becomes stronger, not weaker (Gómez-Mejía et al, 2011;Hoskisson et al, 2017), when paired with greater performance hazards. Under duress, family owners do not make strategic choices that result in increased financial benefits but tend to increasingly prioritize socioemotional objectives in deciding whether to exit or continue the business.…”
Section: Contributionssupporting
confidence: 60%
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“…Researchers have extensively modeled how risk preferences vary depending on the probabilities (besides 50-50 gambles) and the amounts involved (Hoskisson et al, 2017;Tversky & Kahneman, 1981). Beyond gain or loss, the magnitudes of the payoffs matter as well.…”
Section: Losses Loom Larger Than Gainsmentioning
confidence: 99%