We are family

Five strategies to ensure family business success.

Nonfamily businesses can learn a lot from family businesses, says Henry Hutcheson, a certified family business advisor and founder of Family Business USA, a Chapel Hill, North Carolina-based consultancy.

“Family businesses outperformed nonfamily businesses during the boom years leading up to the 2008 recession and during the 2001 and 2008 recession years,” he says, citing a recent Harvard Business Review study.

Hutcheson, author of the new book, Dirty Little Secrets of Family Business, (http://dirtylittlesecretsoffamilybusiness.com), says family businesses were less likely to lay off workers during the lean times and more likely to maintain their emphasis on socially responsible programs.

But that’s just the businesses that survived.

“Many closed their doors,” he adds.

With 25 years of business management and family business consulting experience, Hutcheson says he’s seen the patterns that can lead to major problems; they are almost always preventable.

The next generation

In 2012, PwC (PricewaterhouseCoopers) interviewed more than 200 next-generation family business leaders in 21 countries, looking primarily at business succession.

According to PwC, “The next generation is ambitious, with 86 percent wanting to do something significant and special.” Of those surveyed, 80 percent indicate having big ideas for change and growth, but 88 percent say they must work harder than other employees to “prove themselves.”

Other key findings from the survey are:

  • Managing succession well is important for family businesses, with 41 percent of participants saying they wanted to hand the business over in the next five years.
  • Family businesses must bridge three gaps to manage the transition process effectively: the generation gap, the credibility gap and the communications gap.
  • Seventy-three percent of those likely to take over the business say they’re looking forward to doing this, but only 35 percent say they thought it was definite, and 29 percent thought it fairly likely.
  • Many of the next generation say they see the need to “professionalize” the business by introducing better governance and more rigorous processes in areas such as finance.
  • Twenty-two percent of millennials say they are concerned about working with family members and understanding the family dynamic.
  • Eighty-seven percent of the next-generation respondents say their parents have confidence in them, but as many as 64 percent say the current generation will find it difficult to let go.

According to PwC, “The key is clarity of roles and responsibilities and openness in communication, especially in relation to succession planning, where an independent mediator can help bridge the gap and ensure the next generation are prepared to succeed.”

The PwC survey results can be downloaded at www.pwc.com/gx/en/pwc-family-business-survey/next-gen/assets/nextgen-survey.pdf.

“The factor that enables family businesses to rise to the top is trust: Family members can potentially trust one another far more than nonfamily members,” he says. “But trust can erode—when a family member can’t or won’t perform at the necessary level, when there’s a sense of entitlement, drug abuse, laziness. And that can have serious, business-killing consequences.

“If the business is professionalized, there will be a way to deal with those issues,” he continues. “But too often, safeguards are not in place.”
 

Hutcheson offers these five top success strategies for family businesses:
 

1. Keep the lines of communication open. Schedule regular family meetings to discuss issues of concern and topics such as business transition, business performance and responsibilities. Include all of the family members, no matter where in the hierarchy their jobs fall—exclusion creates animosity. Create a family manual that lays out the ground rules for how the meetings will take place to ensure everyone gets a chance to be heard and impediments to communication are left at the door.
 

2. Assign clear roles and responsibilities. As a family member, it’s natural to feel that everything is “my” business. However, not everything is every family member’s responsibility. Job definitions prevent everyone from jumping in to tackle the same problem and help ensure the business runs smoothly.
 

3. Keep good financial data. The downfall of many small businesses and family businesses is not having solid data. Have a single point of contact to manage the finances. If you’re small enough, you can rely on a family member. Otherwise, you’ll need to bring in a qualified accountant.

You may cringe at the anticipated cost of hiring an accountant for your family business, but the difference between a good accountant and a bad one is the difference between knowing exactly where you are on the road and trying to drive with a mud-covered windshield.
 

4. Avoid overpaying family members. Market-based compensation is fundamental and essential. Parents in family businesses tend to overpay the next generation or to pay everyone equally despite differing levels of responsibility; both are bad practices. The longer unfair compensation practices continue, the messier it will be to clean up when it blows up.
 

5. Don’t hire relatives if they’re unqualified. Competence is key. Family businesses are a conundrum: The family aspect generates unqualified love, while the business side cares about profits. Thus, family members will be hired to provide them with a job, even though they’re not qualified. The remedy is to get them trained, move them to a role that matches their skills or have them leave.

“More than 70 percent of all businesses are family businesses—they account for a significant number of new jobs and a large portion of the GDP (gross domestic product),” Hutcheson says. “But that’s not the only reason they’re so important.

“They’re motivated by profits but also by other important considerations: pride in the family name, building something for future generations, philanthropy,” he continues. “For those reasons, they contribute in tremendous ways to social stability. They make our communities better.”

 


Henry Hutcheson is president of Family Business USA, Chapel Hill, North Carolina, and specializes in helping family and privately held businesses successfully manage transition, maintain harmony and improve operations. His newest book is Dirty Little Secrets of Family Business: How to Successfully Navigate Family Business Conflict and Transition (http://dirtylittlesecretsoffamilybusiness.com). Hutcheson studied psychology and has an MBA from Columbia Business School. He is a speaker at professional, university and corporate events.

January 2015
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