×
ADVERTISEMENT
ADVERTISEMENT
ADVERTISEMENT

To join the family business or not?

Heirs to family businesses have to make tough choices - either to pursue the family business or to join work elsewhere
Last Updated 21 June 2015, 15:53 IST

Sharon Madison was enjoying a successful career in marketing and advertising at Verizon Communications when she took a leave of absence to work for her family’s business, United Building Maintenance. She joined her twin brother to help their father, who was ill. When their father died a few years later, she found herself running a company she had little interest in.

Jeffrey Wolf never worked anywhere other than his father’s company, which manufactured private-label suits in New York for stores like Macy’s, Jos A Banks Clothiers and Men’s Wearhouse. But at the end of 2010, finding it tougher to compete against companies abroad that made suits more cheaply, Wolf’s father decided to close the business. It took Wolf more than a year-and-a-half to find a job, at a far lower salary.

 Adam Brewster’s situation falls somewhere between Madison’s and Wolf’s. His parents’ business — which represents manufacturers of wood stoves, fireplaces and alternative fuels — is not as lucrative as it once was. Brewster, the oldest of three, is expected to take it over. At 37, he is not sure he wants it, but he also has no clear alternative for earning a living.

Founders of family businesses who are nearing the end of their run generally have two options: Sell it to someone or bring in family members to run it. While the first pays the founders for their work, it denies them the legacy of keeping it in the family.

Yet founders don’t always consider what their adult children might want. Is running the family business something they are interested in or would be good at? Should they join the business at a young age or be encouraged to find work elsewhere first and apply to the company later? And how can children who do not want to be in the family business tell their parents without seeming ungrateful for all that the business has afforded them, or worse, being shunned? “What amazes me is the number of families that get to the designation point and the person looks up and says, ‘I don't want it,’” said Stephen Salley, a partner at Banyan Family Business Advisors.

“Even the most successful of businesses have these blind spots. It’s shocking how many families don’t talk about this.”

There are consultants who advise families on their businesses, addressing, among other topics, how to have the open discussions. Their recommendations are sensible. The first step: talk early and often about the business. These conversations are not just about what parents do and what the businesses produce; they are about how founders think about the future of their businesses — what will happen after they retire — and about the roles, if any, children want or are suited for.

“The best-case scenario is parents say, ‘This business may or may not be an opportunity for you; you have to earn it and maybe come back after having been successful in another business,’” said Michael A Klein, a clinical psychologist who works with family businesses. “This is hard to do,” he added. “It can conflict with the parents’ needs or egos. Their identity is too wrapped up in the business.” Some families have these discussions and set parameters for children who want to be in the business as well as give reassurances to those who want to do something else. But then there are families that are not proactive.

“If you think about it, if you were my father and had raised me in a very affluent environment with a business that has our name on it and I say, ‘That’s the last thing I want to do,’ I look like an ingrate — and the father thinks, ‘I have been betrayed,’” Salley said. 

“If you think about that same conversation but five years earlier,” Salley added, “when the son says, ‘I’m not really interested in this; I’m interested in social work,’ the dad may be disappointed, but he has time to think about it.”

 Brewster says this is the situation he has found himself in with his father, who plans to retire next year and turn the business over to him. “If you’ve been the No. 2 guy at the company for a couple of years, finding a new No. 2 is not all that easy,” said Mark Elefante, a partner at the law firm Hemenway & Barnes.

“You need to be thoughtful and careful about how you extricate yourself from that situation.” Amy Zehnder, a strategic wealth coach with Ascent Private Capital Management, says she advises all family businesses, even well-functioning ones, to create a diagram that lays out everyone’s responsibilities and authority.

For Brewster, the toughest part now is being in limbo. He once briefly left his father’s company to work in the fitness industry before returning, and said he is now working a second job as a fitness coach. “I want to be able to say to my dad, ‘This is what I want to do,’ and with an amount of success he can visibly see, so he won’t have an argument anymore,” Brewster said. “If I’ve ever wanted to do anything, I’ve had to have the answer — if not this then what? This is what I want to do, and this is my answer.”

ADVERTISEMENT
(Published 21 June 2015, 15:53 IST)

Follow us on

ADVERTISEMENT
ADVERTISEMENT