[gap height=”15″]
There’s no such thing as a family business without conflict. If you Google “family business feud,” you’ll get roughly 1.2 million hits in less than a second . And that, of course, is the tiniest fraction of the number of family business disputes that do NOT show up in the Google search engines.
[gap height=”15″]
At its worst, a quarrel in the family business can become a threat to everything the family business holds dear, including relationships, wealth, and position in the community. Seventy percent of family-owned businesses won’t make it to the next generation, and the biggest reason for this sad fact is family quarrels.
[gap height=”15″]
Since every family is going to have conflict, the fundamental question is, how do you deal with these quarrels so that they don’t cause lasting damage?
[gap height=”15″][gap height=”15″]
Develop a Covenant Culture
[gap height=”15″]
An answer that has worked for many family businesses is to create a covenant culture. Do it long before it’s needed.
[gap height=”15″]
In a family business, this means that family members covenant with each other that while they have a right to air their disagreements, when a decision is made, they come together. They agree ahead of time to close ranks and move on.
[gap height=”15″]
Part of a covenant culture is that everyone gets to be heard. Participants agree to listen to all sides, and to value robust discussion.
[gap height=”15″]
Another essential element – possibly the most important – is a commitment to resolving issues within the group. The reason for this is, in cases where members of a family business go to the media or get into litigation to resolve a conflict, they are likely to unleash an uncontrollable chain of events that predictably will endanger the entire family enterprise.
[gap height=”15″]
By the time a family business member exposes a conflict to the press or initiates litigation, there’s usually no turning back. The chances of reconciliation are so slim that many family business professionals will not take on as a client a family business that has reached this stage.
[gap height=”15″]
At this stage, when the family is in litigation or dueling it out in the press, chances are that family business is on its way to joining the 70% of family-run businesses that don’t make it to the next generation. What’s all-important is preventing conflicts from reaching this stage.
[gap height=”15″][gap height=”15″]
Ways to Prevent Out-of-Control Family Business Conflict
[gap height=”15″]
Since conflicts are inevitable, what can members of a family business do to support having a culture that commits to keeping quarrels within the family?
[gap height=”15″]
The answer: the business family needs to consciously work on developing a culture for resolving conflict. Culture is, “How we do things,” and if the important work of developing a strong, supportive culture is left to chance, members of the family business may never learn key attitudes that they’ll need to keep disputes from escalating. Without ways to keep conflicts from escalating, a covenant culture is not possible.
[gap height=”15″]
Developing a positive family business-friendly culture requires time together, discussions, and above all, role modeling. To prevent disputes from getting out-of-hand, practice these six attitudes and techniques.
[gap height=”15″][gap height=”15″]
1. Take a moral stand that it’s wrong to move disagreements outside the family.
[gap height=”15″]
The experience of many thousands of family businesses shows that once a family starts down the road of a public dispute or litigation, the usual end result is the end of the family business. Positions harden, reason goes out the window, and it’s a rarity for any members of any family business to change course. The usual endpoint is either severe weakening of the business or its complete destruction. Members of business families need to know that it is morally wrong to be the cause of this.
[gap height=”15″][gap height=”15″]
2. Let family members know that this isn’t just about their wishes.
[gap height=”15″]
Because any public acrimony in a family business so often leads to the company’s failing, it threatens the well-being of innocent bystanders including the company’s employees, stockholders, lenders, and even the tax base of the community. Members of family businesses need to know they have a responsibility to large numbers of people beyond themselves.
[gap height=”15″][gap height=”15″]
3. Emphasize the concept of “Family First.”
[gap height=”15″]
Family businesses are unlike regular families, because in the tug of war between individualism and being a member of the group, there needs to be a different balance. Members of a family business have a different level of responsibility because their actions influence all the stakeholders involved.
[gap height=”15″][gap height=”15″]
4. Put relationships ahead of ego.
[gap height=”15″]
Members of family businesses need to know that there are times when they have a choice between getting their way and having a relationship. Being a member of a family business at times means sacrifice, and for the business to continue, this can mean giving up the ego gratification of getting their way. However, in return, they’ll get something of vastly greater importance – the chance for the family legacy to continue and thrive.
[gap height=”15″][gap height=”15″]
5. Compromise is key.
[gap height=”15″]
Members of a family business need to learn to listen to each other and they need to avoid the temptation to “stand on principle.” In the context of a family business, “standing on principle” is a synonym for “being stubborn.” It means, “I’m not going to listen to you.” It also tends to shut down discussion, because virtue signaling can shut down the give and take that’s essential for compromise.
[gap height=”15″][gap height=”15″]
6. Be careful of what is said in anger.
[gap height=”15″]
Angry words can be self-fulfilling, such as disparaging someone’s competence or expressing preference for a sibling. A person may say something in momentary anger, but the person hearing what was said may remember those words for a lifetime. Garbage can come out of Pandora’s Box that can’t be stuffed back in again.
[gap height=”15″]
Done right, the family and all its benefits will endure. Done wrong, the family business blows up. By considering and practicing these six attitudes and techniques, you can quell any family business dissent before it jeopardizes the health of the company as a whole.
[gap height=”15″]
Seventy percent of family-owned businesses won’t make it to the next generation, and the biggest reason for this sad fact is family quarrels.