Most family businesses lack GenNext leadership
Many family firms now facing ultimate threat to their survival in form of shortage of heirs: Report
image for illustrative purpose
Handing Over The Baton
- 30-40% largest cos are family-run entities
- The heirs are much less inclined to follow their fathers
- Non-family firms can choose successors from global talent pool
- Whereas family-run firms restricted by DNA
New Delhi: Family companies are the hidden engines of the global economy. More than 90 per cent of all companies are family companies. These include many of the world’s biggest organisations such as LVMH Moet Hennessy Louis Vuitton SE in France and Samsung Electronics Co. in South Korea, Bloomberg reported.
A third of companies in Standard & Poor’s 500 index and 40 per cent of the largest companies in France and Germany have a strong family element, the report said.
Yet thanks to a combination of demographics and changing social mores, many family firms now face the ultimate threat to their survival: a shortage of heirs. Good riddance, you might say, after watching the psychopathic antics on succession. That ignores the importance of the best family firms not just as engines of progress and innovation, but as repositories of public trust, especially at a time when trust in capitalism is at an historically low ebb, Bloomberg reported.
Even if family companies grow to be behemoths like Succession’s Waystar RoyCo, family companies are inherently fragile organisations. This is partly because they are so prone to family feuds, but also because producing a capable heir is hard. Non-family companies have the advantage of choosing successors from the entire universe of management talent. Family-run companies are restricted by DNA, the report added.
The heirs that remain are much less inclined to follow their fathers into the family business.