Children of business owners often try entrepreneurship before deciding whether to join the family firm. A study of 8,274 potential successors in Sweden shows that founding a venture first makes them more likely to take over, but only up to a point. When their own business thrives, the family firm starts to look like the smaller prize.
Most family business research treats a child's early career as preparation: a good degree, a few years learning the ropes elsewhere, then a seasoned return. Founding a company of their own rarely fits that script, and when it does, it tends to read as a goodbye rather than a detour. This study makes the opposite case. Drawing on the entire Swedish population of family firms, it shows that starting a venture early can be one of the strongest routes back into the family business, not a path away from it.
The catch is that the same experience cuts both ways. Running your own company teaches you how to own, lead, and decide under pressure, which is exactly what parents look for in a successor. It also shows you what life outside the family firm can offer, which can make coming home less appealing. Succession is never a one-sided decision. It happens only when parents want the child and the child wants the firm, and the authors call this a dual-agency process. Early-career entrepreneurship is where its tensions surface most sharply, because it strengthens a child's case for succession and widens their options at the same time.
The evidence comes from Sweden, and the scale is unusual. Statistics Sweden keeps administrative records on every company, resident, and worker in the country, which let the authors follow entire families and their firms across three decades. From this population they identified parent–child ownership transfers between 2001 and 2019, real handovers where parents stepped back and one or more children took control. They kept only families with more than one child, so that siblings effectively competed for the successor role.
Offspring who become entrepreneurs are not a random bunch. They differ from their siblings in ways that could easily distort a naive comparison, so the authors used coarsened exact matching, pairing each entrepreneurial child with a comparable non-entrepreneurial one of the same age, gender, education, region, family size, and succession year. That produced a balanced sample of 8,274 potential successors, half with venture experience and half without. Outcomes were modelled with survival analysis, which estimates not just whether someone becomes a successor but how the odds shift with each factor. Once a child took over, the authors stopped observing that family, since the firm was no longer at risk of a handover.
Two further details give the findings weight. Because a child might found a business precisely because they already expect to inherit, the authors ran an instrumental-variable correction, using how entrepreneurial a child's home municipality was to separate the effect of venturing from any hidden succession plan. The effect held. And as a sign of how fine-grained the data are, the sample even picks up the 2004 abolition of Sweden's inheritance tax as a visible spike in handovers that year. Sweden is a deliberate choice too: its individualistic, low-power-distance culture gives children genuine say over their careers, which is the condition the dual-agency argument needs.
The study tests one main effect and a set of conditions around it. The main effect is clear and strong. The conditions are where the dual-agency tension becomes visible, and where the results turn out more mixed than the authors first expected.
The headline result is large. Offspring with entrepreneurship experience were roughly 83 per cent more likely to become successors than otherwise comparable siblings without it. The effect survived controls for the credentials families usually prize most, including formal education, years spent working inside the firm, and years spent working outside it. From the parents' side, this is the selection mechanism at work: an entrepreneurial child is simply a more credible heir.
A quiet robustness check is what makes this convincing. When the authors replaced entrepreneurship experience with years of education and re-ran the analysis, education showed no comparable effect. What moves the needle is not schooling or a generic CV; it is the specific experience of having owned and run something. That experience builds what the authors call entrepreneurial human capital, the mix of ownership, leadership, and decision-making skills the successor role actually demands and that conventional jobs rarely teach.
Among children who had founded ventures, the better their company performed, the less likely they were to return. Each percentage point by which a venture beat its industry peers on return on assets cut the child's succession likelihood by about a quarter. The mechanism is opportunity cost. A successful founder has more to give up, including income, autonomy, reputation, and the proof that they can build something themselves, and the family firm has to compete with all of it. Even a venture that has since closed leaves a mark, because past success reshapes how a founder reads their own market value.
This is the most practical finding in the paper, and the most uncomfortable: the more impressive a child's own business, the harder they are to bring home. A modest venture, by contrast, leaves the family firm looking like the safer and more rewarding place to put those skills to work.
Not every expected pattern held, and the authors are candid about it. Whether a child's venture sat in a fast-moving, innovative industry had no effect on succession by itself. It mattered only in combination with the family firm's own performance. When the family business was doing well, children who had built their ventures in dynamic industries became markedly more willing to join; when it was doing badly, they stayed away. A strong family firm appears to signal that entrepreneurial energy will have room to be used.
The mirror-image idea, that a family firm in a dynamic industry would draw entrepreneurial children back, did not show up in the data. Rather than bury the null result, the authors read it as evidence that opportunity costs are context-dependent rather than mechanical. It is the honest interpretation, even if a fully confirmed model would have been neater.
For families, the first lesson is to stop reading a child's start-up as a defection. On average it does the reverse: it raises the odds they eventually take over, and it prepares them better for the job when they do. The harder task is reading the signals correctly as a venture matures.
A few points follow directly from the evidence:
Part of the contribution is to settle an old framing. A run of well-known studies asked whether next-generation members would found or succeed, with titles like 'Should I stay or should I go?' and 'Fly away from the nest?' quietly assuming the two paths exclude one another. This paper shows they do not. For many families, founding is the road home.
It also links two bodies of work that usually run in parallel: family business succession and transgenerational entrepreneurship. Ventures launched by the next generation, even ones well outside the core business, turn out to feed the long-term renewal of the firm rather than drain talent from it. That recasts a child's side venture as an investment in the family's entrepreneurial capacity, not a break with it.
For owners, advisors, and educators, a handful of concrete steps follow:

CeFEO counts more than 50 scholars and 30 affiliated researchers. Several studies and reports have consistently identified CeFEO as a leading research environment worldwide in the area of ownership and family business studies.
This research project, has been co-authored by the following CeFEO Members.
Spotlight highlights research-based findings only. If you’re interested in exploring this project further or delving into the theoretical and methodological details, we encourage you to contact the authors or read the full article for a comprehensive understanding.

Sieger, P., Brinkerink, J., Baù, M., Karlsson, J., & De Massis, A. (2026). Fly solo, then return home? Offspring's entrepreneurship experience and their future as family business successors. Journal of Management Studies. https://doi.org/10.1111/joms.70114
https://doi.org/10.1111/joms.70114

Spotlight is an innovative online family business magazine designed to bridge the gap between cutting-edge research and the real-world needs of practitioners, owners, and policymakers. Drawing on the latest findings from the Centre for Family Entrepreneurship and Ownership (CeFEO) at Jönköping International Business School, Spotlight delivers insightful, accessible summaries of key research topics. Our mission is to keep the family business community informed and empowered by offering actionable insights, expert analyses, and forward-thinking strategies that enhance business leadership and ownership practices for long-term success.
Spotlight is generously supported by the WIFU Foundation, which promotes research, education, and dialogue in the field of family business. This partnership enables us to continue bridging academic insights and real-world practice for the advancement of responsible family entrepreneurship and ownership.

CeFEO counts more than 50 scholars and 30 affiliated researchers. Several studies and reports have consistently identified CeFEO as a leading research environment worldwide in the area of ownership and family business studies. This research project, has been co-authored by the following CeFEO Members.
Spotlight highlights research-based findings only. If you’re interested in exploring this project further or delving into the theoretical and methodological details, we encourage you to contact the authors or read the full article for a comprehensive understanding.

Sieger, P., Brinkerink, J., Baù, M., Karlsson, J., & De Massis, A. (2026). Fly solo, then return home? Offspring's entrepreneurship experience and their future as family business successors. Journal of Management Studies. https://doi.org/10.1111/joms.70114
https://doi.org/10.1111/joms.70114

Spotlight is an innovative, AI-powered, online family business magazine designed to bridge the gap between cutting-edge research and the real-world needs of practitioners, owners, and policymakers. Drawing on the latest findings from the Centre for Family Entrepreneurship and Ownership (CeFEO) at Jönköping International Business School, Spotlight delivers insightful, accessible summaries of key research topics. Our mission is to keep the family business community informed and empowered by offering actionable insights, expert analyses, and forward-thinking strategies that enhance business leadership and ownership practices for long-term success.
Spotlight is generously supported by the WIFU Foundation, which promotes research, education, and dialogue in the field of family business. This partnership enables us to continue bridging academic insights and real-world practice for the advancement of responsible family entrepreneurship and ownership.