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Frank Halter
Title
Dr.
Last Name
Halter
First name
Frank
Email
frank.halter@unisg.ch
Phone
+41 71 224 71 00
Homepage
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1 - 10 of 132
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PublicationThe Role of Information Asymmetry in the Choice of Entrepreneurial Exit Routes(Elsevier Science Publ., 2014-11-08)Our quantitative study investigates the determinants of internal versus external exit routes in family firms. Building on information asymmetry theory, we examine how an owner's inferior knowledge about the abilities of potential external entrants (in contrast to family internal successors) renders a family internal transfer more likely. This information asymmetry, however, can be mitigated by activities such as owners' screening and transfer candidates' signaling efforts to reveal the candidates' abilities. Our data exhibits a positive effect of signaling and an inverted U-shaped effect of screening on the probability of external exit routes. Firm age, as a driver of emotional attachment, weakens these effects.Type: journal articleJournal: Journal of Business VenturingVolume: 29Issue: 2
Scopus© Citations 85 -
PublicationInformationsasymmetrien zwischen Übergeber und Nachfolger : Herausforderungen und Lösungsmöglichkeiten am Beispiel des Management Buy Ins in Familienunternehmen(Duncker & Humblot, 2013-05-21)Wolter, Hans-JürgenType: journal articleJournal: Zeitschrift für KMU und Entrepreneurship (ZfKE)Volume: 61Issue: 1-2
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PublicationShould I stay or should I go? Career choice intentions of students with family business backgroundPersonal and motivational patterns of intentional founders have been researched in great depth; however, antecedents to career choices of intentional successors have been conspicuously missing in entrepreneurship research. By drawing on theory of planned behavior, we investigate how intentional founders, successors, and employees differ in terms of locus of control and entrepreneurial self-efficacy as well as independence and innovation motives. We find that transitive likelihood of career intent depends on degree of entrepreneurial self-efficacy and the independence motive. Unexpectedly, we see that high levels of internal locus of control lead to a preference of employment, which challenges traditional entrepreneurship research and suggests that the feasibility of an entrepreneurial career path does not automatically make it desirable. Our findings suggests that students with family business background are pessimistic about being in control, but optimistic about their efficacy to pursue an entrepreneurial careerType: journal articleJournal: Journal of Business VenturingVolume: 26Issue: 5
Scopus© Citations 404 -
PublicationObstacles à l'entrepreneuriat chez les étudiants des hautes écoles en suisse : des différences régionales?Type: journal articleJournal: Revue Économique et Sociale: Bulletin de la Société d'Etudes Economiques et SocialesVolume: 67Issue: 3DOI: 10.5169/seals-142299
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PublicationGanzheitliche Unternehmensnachfolge : Operative Abwicklung steht nicht im ZentrumType: journal articleJournal: Der Schweizer TreuhänderVolume: 81Issue: 5
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PublicationUnternehmensnachfolge als Herausforderung auf unterschiedlicher EbeneType: journal articleJournal: Zeitschrift für KMU und Entrepreneurship (ZFKE)Volume: 53Issue: 4
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PublicationFamilienunternehmen in der Schweiz : Empirische Fakten zur Bedeutung und KontinuitätType: journal articleJournal: Der Schweizer TreuhänderVolume: 79Issue: 1-2
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PublicationUnternehmertum im universitären UmfeldType: journal articleJournal: Zeitschrift für Klein- und MittelunternehmenVolume: 52Issue: 1
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PublicationKreditvergabe und Bankenrating in der SchweizType: journal articleJournal: Zeitschrift für Klein- und MittelunternehmenVolume: 51Issue: 2
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PublicationThe Role of Information Asymmetry for the Choice between Family External and Internal Exit Routes(IFERA c/o College of Business & Management, 2012-06-26)Durst, SusanneIn our quantitative study we investigate the antecedents of two distinct exit routes. Building on information asymmetry theory, we discuss that the owner's inferior knowledge about the ability of potential family external (in contrast to family internal) successors renders a family internal transition more likely. However, this information asymmetry can be mitigated by activities such as owners' screening and successors' signaling efforts to unveil the successor's ability. Our data exhibits a positive effect of signaling and an inverted u-shaped effect of screening on the probability of an external succession. Socioemotional wealth, generated by long ownership duration, moderates these effects.Type: conference paper