Abstract:
The purpose of this study was to establish the effect of managerial interpersonal
competencies, performance management and agency relationships on the
performance of family and non-family owned small-to-medium enterprises in South
Africa. The often reported problem of low survival and poor performance rates by
these enterprises, which have been attributed among many other reasons, to the
lack of or poor managerial interpersonal competencies of the owner/managers, poor
people management skills and lack of attention to agency relationships that are
naturally found in family and non-family enterprises, gave impetus to this
investigation. Despite such attributions and the growth of literature on managerial
competencies and performance management, most previous researches have
studied managerial interpersonal competencies in isolation, with little effort to
appreciate their interplay with specific human resource management practices, such
as performance management and the varying agency relationships obtaining in
family and non-family enterprises. To close this gap in literature, a structural model
relating managerial interpersonal competencies, performance appraisal, agency
relationships and performance was proposed, based on reviewed literature and
three predominant theoretical perspectives - agency theory, stewardship theory and
the resource-based view.
The study adopted a positivist epistemological and objectivist ontological stances,
which made use of the quantitative approach. Due to lack of comprehensive
sampling frames for both family and non-family owned small-to-medium enterprises
in the province, convenience sampling was deemed most appropriate. The final
sample comprised 210 SME owner/managers in Gauteng Province. The structured
questionnaire containing closed-ended items was the only instrument used for data
collection. Using Structural Equation Modelling, the study developed and tested a
model that can be used to explain the effect of managerial interpersonal
competencies, performance management and agency relationships on the
performance of family and non-family owned small-to-medium enterprises in South
Africa. Group difference analyses were conducted on AMOS version 24 to check whether
there were statistical differences in the structural models for family and non-family
owned small-to-medium enterprises. It was established that more significant
relationships existed in the context of family owned small-to-medium enterprises
when compared to their other counterparts. The main findings of the study indicated
that owner/managers’ interpersonal competencies affected both employee
innovation and profitability as measured by return on investment in both types of
enterprises, and that although the quality of agency relationships in both types of
small-to-medium enterprises had no effect on innovation and profitability, they were
affected by owner/managers’ interpersonal competencies. Furthermore, the way
employee performance was appraised affected the quality of agency relationships
which in turn affected profitability only in family owned small-to-medium enterprises.
Having validated the structural model, and after submitting both theoretical and
practical contributions to the fledgling discipline of HR in entrepreneurial
organisations, recommendations to guide practice, policy and further research were
proffered.