Female CEOs facing challenges during Covid-19 pandemic: Differences in family and non-family firms

Authors

  • Barbara Sveva Magnanelli John Cabot University, Department of Business Administration, Rome, Italy
  • Mirella Ciaburri Roma Tre University, Faculty of Business Economics, Rome (RM), Italy
  • Luigi Nasta John Cabot University, Department of Business Administration, Rome, Italy
  • Riccardo Tiscini Universitas Mercatorum, Faculty of Economics, Rome, Italy

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.33422/womensconf.v1i1.21

Keywords:

COVID-19, family firms, female leadership, resilience

Abstract

The COVID-19 pandemic has been a disruptive unexpected event that hit firms worldwide. It is necessary starting to investigate on the features of the firms which better allowed companies to face and react to this critical situation. The present study aims at investigating as first whether firm performance is affected by the presence of a female CEO during unexpected critical events, and then by exploring the effects of being a family firm during a crisis period. Moreover, the study aims at exploring also the impact of having a female CEO in case the firm is a family one. In fact, given the rising importance of gender in top managerial levels, more research has been focusing on female leadership. However, still little research exists on female leadership in family firms. An empirical analysis was conducted on a sample of Italian listed firms over a three-year period (2018–2020), which means data were collected and analyzed through the COVID-19 pandemic. The results show that female leadership during the pandemic has a positive effect on firm performance. Likewise, family firms are able to outperform non-family firms during the occurrence of an unexpected critical event.

Additional Files

Published

2023-05-11

How to Cite

Sveva Magnanelli, B., Ciaburri, M., Nasta, L., & Tiscini, R. (2023). Female CEOs facing challenges during Covid-19 pandemic: Differences in family and non-family firms. Proceedings of The Global Conference on Women’s Studies, 1(1), 39–59. https://doi.org/10.33422/womensconf.v1i1.21