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Where Family Businesses are Particularly Vulnerable
This
Where Family Businesses are Particularly Vulnerable
Research at the center and at Arthur Andersen
survey1
(.pdf 178Kb)
*Acrobat
reveals surprising aspects about family businesses:
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CEOs remain 6 times longer in family businesses than in public companies
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90% of the CEOs are related to the founding family and change
is not anticipated in 90% of these cases
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55% of boards meet only once or twice a year; 20% NEVER meet
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70% have NO written strategic plan
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90% rate growth in net profit as the most important financial
measure
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35% of the companies have no debt; another 35% have debt less than 25% of equity
Based on these aspects, family businesses are likely to develop attributes that may be more negatively prevalent in them:
Possible Psychological Reasons:
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Paternalism fosters loyalty, dependence and uni-dimensional
thinking.
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Heritage imposes guilt on successors trying new things—dynasty
wins over business rationale.
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Past success breeds self-satisfaction and hence denial of new realities.
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Loyalty promoted by paternalism and confidence in past business models generates a homogenous, in-grown management team.
Recommendations to Correct These
Attributes—Focused on Externalization:
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Install an independent, challenging board and have it meet!
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Use outsiders in key management roles.
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Find room for some creative, even abrasive people (mix 'out-of-the
box' thinkers with problem solvers).
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Compel managers to seek outside stimuli.
Take Away
Family Businesses have additional problems in
implementing innovative change: these can be attacked in a methodical way.