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Learning Bad Habits Across Generations: How Negative Imprints Affect Human Resource Management in the Family Firm

Resource type
Authors/contributors
Title
Learning Bad Habits Across Generations: How Negative Imprints Affect Human Resource Management in the Family Firm
Abstract
Organizational learning can be a key shared value that perpetuates the family's and the family firm's culture across generations. Imprinting theory helps to explain the impact that lessons learned and transmitted can have on the development of human resources in the family firm. However, the results of imprinting may not necessarily be positive, particularly when imprinting manifests itself in negative processes and expectations. Whereas imprinting and organizational learning are often associated with a “positive halo effect,” they have the potential to result in negative behaviors and deleterious firm-level outcomes. Employing imprinting theory as a framework, we highlight the potential dark side of imprinting within the family firm context and how it can damage human resource efforts and threaten company performance and firm survival. Finally, we suggest how bad habits may be broken and replaced with more effective routines so as to ensure the family firm's continuity and success.
Publication
Human Resource Management Review
Volume
28
Issue
1
Pages
5-17
Date
2018
Language
English
ISSN
10534822
Short Title
Learning Bad Habits Across Generations
Accessed
7/30/18, 1:24 AM
Library Catalog
Crossref
Citation
Kidwell, R. E., Eddleston, K. A., & Kellermanns, F. W. (2018). Learning Bad Habits Across Generations: How Negative Imprints Affect Human Resource Management in the Family Firm. Human Resource Management Review, 28(1), 5–17. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.hrmr.2017.05.002