Kammerlander, NadineNadineKammerlanderDessi, CinziaCinziaDessiBird, MiriamMiriamBirdFloris, MichelaMichelaFloris2023-04-132023-04-132015-01https://www.alexandria.unisg.ch/handle/20.500.14171/10685510.5465/AMBPP.2015.66The founder’s values and beliefs are often determinant for family business’ later organizational path and as such affect the organization’s level of innovation. Building on recent research that has identified storytelling as an important means to imprint the founder’s values and beliefs, we apply a multi-case research design to investigate how different foci of those stories affect a family firm’s level of innovation. We suggest that founder-centered stories entail a focus on decisions that match with the founder’s values, hierarchical decision-making, and destructive conflicts, which ultimately lead to low levels of innovation. To the contrary, family-centered stories free family members in their decision-making and entail a collaborative decision-making characterized by low levels of conflicts. As a result, those firms have higher levels of innovation as compared to firms with founder-centered stories. We summarize our findings in a model of path creation in family firms.enThe Impact of Storytelling on Innovation: a Multi Case Studyjournal article