Two relatives, one family firm — one keeps launching new ventures, the other plays it safe. New research argues the difference is rarely about personality. It comes down to where each person sits at the crossroads of family and business, and what that position does to their appetite for risk.
Family firms carry a split reputation. They get celebrated as dynasties that reinvent themselves across a century, and they get dismissed as cautious, slow, allergic to risk. Both pictures are accurate somewhere. The awkward part is that they describe the same kind of business.
This article, which opens a special issue of the Journal of Family Business Strategy, offers a way past the contradiction. Its authors argue that "the family firm" is the wrong unit to attach the entrepreneurship question to. Entrepreneurial energy sits in people, not in firms — and inside a single business family, different people occupy very different places. A founder's daughter running the original company is not embedded the way a cousin managing a side venture is, or the way a hired executive with no family ties is. Where each person stands shapes how willing they are to innovate, to gamble, and to move before the market forces their hand.
This is a conceptual paper, not a fresh empirical study. It introduces a special issue assembled after the 2019 IFERA conference in Bergamo, and it builds on roughly two decades of work on the family embeddedness perspective — the argument, traced to Aldrich and Cliff (2003), that entrepreneurial behaviour depends on the resources, norms, and transitions of the family a person is embedded in.
The authors push that idea in one direction: they treat embeddedness as multilevel. A person is rarely embedded in only one system. They are at once a family member — daughter, cousin, in-law — and an organisational actor — owner, chief executive, manager, worker. The paper's central device is a grid that crosses three distinctions: family versus non-family member; the core firm versus a peripheral firm in the family's portfolio; and a top-management role versus an employee role. Cross those and you get eight positions a single person might occupy.
The outcome they track is Individual Entrepreneurial Orientation, or IEO — a person's measurable leaning toward three things: innovativeness, risk-taking, and proactiveness. The claim is that IEO is the missing link between the family and entrepreneurship at the level of the whole firm. If you want to know why one family business keeps launching new things while another sits still, the authors say, look first at the people and where they are positioned.
Four empirical studies in the special issue give the framework texture. A multi-case study of ten small artisan family firms finds that equal levels of entrepreneurial orientation can arise from quite different blends of firm factors (how decisions get made, how conflict is handled) and family factors (relationships and values). A multi-country, multi-generational sample shows that a family's commitment to the business — loyalty, pride, willingness to put in extra effort — builds the human, social, and financial resources that in turn feed firm innovativeness. A dyadic study of owner-managers and non-family employees in nine German firms examines what drives non-family staff to act entrepreneurially. And a study of 109 German-speaking families running single-family offices shows that whether the original core business is still in family hands changes how the office invests.
Belonging to the family is not a single condition. The framework's eight positions make that concrete: a family member who leads the core company faces a different mix of expectations, resources, and freedom than a family member working inside a smaller venture, and both differ again from a non-family manager. The same family can produce an aggressive risk-taker and a cautious steward, and the difference is largely structural rather than a matter of temperament.
For owners, this reframes a familiar worry. If a successor seems risk-averse, the cause may be the seat rather than the person — the weight of the core business, or a role with little discretion, can quietly suppress the very orientation the family hoped to see.
This is the part of the paper worth reading slowly. The authors trace three mechanisms that link a person's position to their IEO, and each one runs in both directions.
Learning and socialisation. Growing up around the business, or working inside the core firm, transfers knowledge and confidence that can raise innovativeness. The same deep immersion breeds groupthink and path dependency that lower it.
Power and access to resources. A seat on the top team, or in the core firm, brings authority and capital that make bold moves possible. Yet a large endowment also sharpens the fear of losing it, and fear pushes people toward caution. Family financial support, as Sieger and Minola memorably put it, can be a "poisoned gift."
Normative support and legitimacy. Strong identification with the family legacy can hand a person courage and a sense of mandate. It can just as easily lock them into defending what already exists.
This double-edged logic is the most useful idea in the paper, and it is easy to miss. It explains why simply adding more resources, more heritage, or more family involvement does not reliably make a person more entrepreneurial. Past a certain point, each can do the opposite.
One of the special-issue studies, on nine German firms, shows that non-family employees — though they sit outside the enterprising family — are still shaped by its norms and values, transmitted through the business. Their motivation to act entrepreneurially inside the firm is influenced by a family they do not belong to. The line between "family" and "non-family" turns out to be far more porous than it looks on an org chart.
Why insist on the individual at all? Because, as the authors note, macro-level predictions built without micro-foundations tend to be wrong or incomplete. Corporate entrepreneurship rarely runs deep unless people throughout the organisation carry the orientation themselves — not just the founder, and not just the top floor. IEO is where family embeddedness becomes visible in behaviour, and eventually in what the firm actually does.
The framework is abstract, but it converts into a few practical habits for owners, successors, and advisors.
Stop grading "the firm" on entrepreneurship. Ask instead who in the business is positioned to push forward and who is positioned to protect. Both roles are needed; trouble starts when the wrong people sit in the wrong seats.
Read resources as double-edged. When a venture or a successor enjoys abundant family backing, watch for the conservative pull that comes with having a lot to lose — not only the freedom the funding was meant to buy.
Use peripheral ventures deliberately. Side businesses, further from the family's core identity and its heaviest expectations, are often where autonomy and risk-taking have the most room to grow. Treat them as proving grounds, not afterthoughts.
The paper closes by opening three lines of inquiry, and two of them carry a sharper edge than a typical research agenda.
The first is about individual cognition — how a person's position shapes what they notice, what they feel they must protect, and how they define themselves in the space between family and firm. This ties the framework to research on socioemotional wealth and on family business identity.
The second is a pointed challenge to the field's own habits. The authors observe that scholars tend to take the "enterprising family" for granted as a cultural category worth preserving, even as the economic reality has shifted: families are now marginal players beside investor-owned giants, and mobilising the capital to start and grow a business is harder than it was decades ago. They press researchers to make that inherited script explicit rather than assume it, and to ask which historical conditions actually kept particular family firms alive.
The third is more hopeful. Drawing on the idea of the family as a "common ground" — a shared store of beliefs, language, and knowledge — they suggest the enterprising family can be a launchpad for creating new markets, not merely spotting existing ones. A family that already trusts one another and speaks a common language can imagine a product as if its market were already there, develop it together, and back the experiment long enough to find out whether it is.

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.

Aldrich, H. E., Alvarez, S. A., Brumana, M., Campopiano, G., & Minola, T. (2023). Entrepreneurship in family firms: What's next? Multilevel embeddedness and individuals' cognition. Journal of Family Business Strategy, 14(3), Article 100583. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jfbs.2023.100583
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jfbs.2023.100583

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.

Aldrich, H. E., Alvarez, S. A., Brumana, M., Campopiano, G., & Minola, T. (2023). Entrepreneurship in family firms: What's next? Multilevel embeddedness and individuals' cognition. Journal of Family Business Strategy, 14(3), Article 100583. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jfbs.2023.100583
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jfbs.2023.100583

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.