Your Business, Your Family, Their Future: How to Ensure Your Family Enterprise Thrives for Generations
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About this ebook
Through extensive research and personal and professional experience as a member of and advisor to family enterprises, Griffiths-Hamilton has developed an unconventional approach that looks beyond narrow business considerations to focus on the critical aspect of every family enterprise—the “family factor.” Successful multi-generational family enterprises, she explains, are animated by a unifying vision that rests on shared values. Mutual trust and strong communication skills are vital for families to articulate these foundational elements, which will then inform a “family enterprise framework” that can endure for generations.
Planning for the long-term health of a family business doesn’t need to be complicated. Beginning with a single meeting, family enterprises of every shape and size can use the insights in this book to build robust frameworks that will reward their members for decades to come—not just financially, but with strengthened family connections, a shared sense of purpose, and perhaps most importantly, a bit of fun.
Emily Griffiths-Hamilton
Emily Griffiths-Hamilton is a chartered accountant, a family enterprise advisor, and a conflict resolution coach who brings three generations of experience to the subject of succession and wealth-transition planning. Her maternal grandfather, veterinarian Dr. William Ballard, was one of North America's greatest dynamic wealth creators. Her father, Frank A. Griffiths, FCA, built a highly successful sports and media empire. Griffiths-Hamilton herself has been the co-owner of a National Hockey League team, the Vancouver Canucks; a National Basketball Association franchise, the Vancouver Grizzlies; and a state-of-the-art arena. Griffiths-Hamilton's professional training, expertise, and unique first-hand experience have given her a deep understanding of the benefits of clear, considered succession planning. Today, she is passionate about advising individuals and families on the effective, responsible transition of wealth over generations. Emily Griffiths-Hamilton lives in Vancouver, British Columbia, with her husband, Paul Hamilton, a chartered accountant and Portfolio Manager. They are the parents of two adult sons.
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Your Business, Your Family, Their Future - Emily Griffiths-Hamilton
To my husband, Paul,
and our sons, David and Brandon,
For all that you have been,
all that you are,
and all that you will be.
Each and every day, I am grateful
for our shared journey.
I treasure you all.
Table of Contents
Foreword
Introduction
1: To Sell or Not to Sell
2: Why Family Business Transitions Fail
3: Family Enterprise Basics
4: Trust and Communication
5: Shared Values and Vision
6: Your Family Enterprise
7: The Elephant in the Room
8: Family Business Advisory Boards
9: Your Family Office
10: Family Enterprise Advisors
Conclusion
Bibliography
Acknowledgments
Index
About the Author
Copyright
Landmarks
Cover
Title Page
Table of Contents
Start of Content
Bibliography
Index
Foreword
Ihave known Emily and her family for decades—Boston Pizza was one of the first tenants in GM Place, the Vancouver arena that she and her partners financed, built and operated. I’ve seen her build and lead a high-profile family enterprise, and then focus her considerable education, training and experience to help other family enterprises reach their goals.
Your Business, Your Family, Their Future is loaded with insights that are presented clearly and concisely. Emily tackles important topics with deep knowledge and first-hand understanding: how to deal with the potential struggle of letting go
; successfully incorporating your family members into your business; working with unhappy or unqualified family members; making decisions while balancing the voting rights of family members, and many more.
There is value here for anyone involved with a private business of any kind, at any stage. This is a book you’ll want to keep around. In fact, this is a book I’ll keep coming back to. What an exciting read!
Jim Treliving
Chairman and owner, Boston Pizza International
Personality on CBC’s The Dragon’s Den
Introduction:
Put Your Family on the Path to Success
T here is no institution more enduring than the family business. Family businesses predate multinational corporations, the Industrial Revolution, the Enlightenment and even the Roman Empire. According to the Family Firm Institute, family businesses—businesses in which decision-making is influenced by a family—constitute between 70% and 90% of GDP annually and create 50%–80% of jobs in the majority of countries worldwide today. That makes family businesses economic powerhouses that drive local, national and global economies. For every high-profile family business like Ford, Walmart, The New York Times, Lavazza, Tata, Kikkoman, Taittinger and Samsung, there are thousands of lower-profile, private family-owned businesses making decisions about how to manage and grow their operations. In this book, I’ll share my insights about what successful families know and how they leverage that knowledge to remain strong across multiple generations.
A vast body of knowledge has been generated by business scholars and researchers investigating how successful family enterprises remain robust across generations. My goal is to consolidate this information, giving you and your family a useful entry point for building a multigenerational family enterprise. I’ll also share suggestions, tips and strategies based on the common patterns found within successful families.
To do this, I’ve drawn on personal experience, extensive independent research and years of work as a family enterprise advisor, a family business advisory board member and a family meeting facilitator. Growing up, I had a ringside seat at the family business table of my visionary maternal grandfather, veterinarian Dr. William Ballard. During the Great Depression, my grandfather came up with what turned out to be a wildly popular formula for dog food and then, in a revolutionary move, canned it for easier distribution. As the youngest of his many grandchildren, I grew up with first-hand knowledge of the workings of the family business and the results of its transition of ownership.
My father was also a visionary business builder and leader. Alongside his highly respected career as a chartered accountant (CA) in public practice, he built a media and sports empire that ultimately spanned radio, television and satellite communications across Canada and the ownership of our community’s beloved National Hockey League team, the Vancouver Canucks. Although I was the youngest of four siblings, I had a front-row, fully participating family-member seat at the table. The insights I gained in the years that followed came from the perspective of being the only sibling in my family to obtain a professional designation, as a CA, and to work entirely independently of my family.
As a member of the third generation, I became a decision maker, a role entirely different from simply having a seat at the table. The ownership group I belonged to—which included one of my brothers, Arthur Griffiths, and John and Bruce McCaw—bought the Vancouver Canucks, financed the construction of a state-of-the-art arena in the city of Vancouver and bought the Vancouver Grizzlies, one of the first two National Basketball Association (NBA) franchises awarded in Canada. That was a wild, all-consuming roller coaster ride. At a certain point, I made the decision to sell my interest in the sports and entertainment holdings and to reformat our family enterprise’s financial assets into the financial markets and direct real estate holdings and build our Family Office. Now into its fourth generation, our family enterprise continues to evolve and flourish.
In the decades over which my career developed, I began to focus on the topic of how successful family enterprises thrive for generations. As a CA working with other families who, like my own, had used the traditional tax- and control-driven tools to deal with family enterprise transitions, resulting in complex family corporate structures that often included trusts and holdcos, and later, as a family enterprise advisor, I started to see that successful families shared a number of traits. However, in so much of the information flooding the market on the subject of successful multigenerational family enterprises, these traits seemed lost in a sea of unnecessary complications.
Here’s one example. I receive regular emails from different sources on the latest research into family enterprises. A recent one caught my attention because of its vibrantly colored diagram: elongated oval shapes that overlapped and fanned out like the feathers on a peacock. Each tiny overlapping area was labeled with a different acronym: fifteen of them in total. Following the website link, I discovered this complex model existed to explain the role of governance
in a family enterprise. I shared the link with a business owner who responded, Wow! I can’t get my kids out of bed in the morning. How am I going to get through all this?
In this book, you will discover that the work required to make your family enterprise thrive isn’t complicated.
For instance, the topic of family business governance
in family enterprises implies the need for a complex, rigid structure, but that runs contrary to the trait that has made most business builders successful: their ability to be adaptable and flexible. For that reason, I use the term family enterprise framework
instead. Successful family enterprises know that it’s important to create a family enterprise framework that’s both flexible and solid enough to allow for sound decisions to be made when there are many decision makers in later generations, which in turn allows your family enterprise to evolve and thrive for many generations to come.
Many family business builders and owners are already living very busy professional and personal lives, and they want to know how much work and time will be required to ensure their family enterprise remains robust across multiple generations. This book addresses that question by walking you through the steps required and showing how each generation will share in the lifting. In fact, you’ll discover that your family enterprise will be strengthened when family members share the work to be done.
The traditional approaches to multigenerational family business transition lose sight of the most powerful element in any family business: a united family. While every family is unique, there are common traits to be found in the long-term journeys of sustainable family enterprises. The work you and your family do together to articulate your shared values and vision, establish a dynamic family enterprise framework and create effective, agreed-upon decision-making processes and policies will help position your family enterprise to make the best possible decisions going into the future. By working together, you will also strengthen family bonds of trust and unity across generations.
As I note in my earlier book, Build Your Family Bank, passion is a key element in any successful family business. When a family enterprise flourishes across many generations, the passion required to succeed can arise in any of the three family enterprise systems: the family, family business ownership or family business management. Because family members are increasingly mobile, less bound by place and less tied to lifelong careers, a multigenerational family enterprise can offer community and connectedness in an increasingly unconnected world. Younger members may find the source of their passion not in the family business but in the family itself.
The stories I use as examples in this book are an intentional co-mingling of my experiences, both personal and professional. I am fortunate to have shared in the journeys of so many remarkable families, including my own. In every situation, I am inspired and encouraged by the resilience, perseverance and selflessness of the families who work together on a shared family vision.
While no path is always perfectly smooth, your path to success doesn’t need to be bumpy. Armed with the ideas and approaches outlined in this book, you’ll be ready to head into the future, putting your family enterprise—and your family—on the path to continued success.
1
To Sell or Not to Sell
Let’s be honest , the ownership of your business must change at some point if the business is to continue beyond your lifetime. But therein lies a challenge. For many business owners, the answer to the question of whether to sell to non-family members or transfer ownership to the upcoming generation is not straightforward. The decision rests not only on a clear financial analysis but also on an often-unclear emotional analysis. In my work, I’ve come across three kinds of approaches to making this decision. I’ll call them Ollie the Ostrich,
Consider and Then Avoid
and Let’s Wrestle This Octopus.
The Ollie the Ostrich
Approach
The desire to ignore the question of selling or passing ownership to the upcoming generation comes about for many reasons, four common ones being fear of poverty, fear of conflict, fear of facing mortality and fear of losing control.
The accountant in me suggests the first of these fears is the easiest one to address, because it is mostly a quantitative exercise. As a business owner, you may worry that you have not amassed sufficient financial resources outside of your business to support your desired lifestyle for the remainder of your life. That makes transferring ownership and/or leadership to the upcoming generation feel like a big risk.
If you have questions about your personal financial position or your long-term lifestyle needs, it can be helpful to consult an independent financial planner—one who isn’t incentivized in any way by the firm they work for to sell you something like insurance or investment products—so that they can run projections based on your situation. You can even seek out a couple of financial planners in order to compare the outcomes of their likely differing projections. Keeping in mind that financial projections are estimates, they can paint a picture of your financial future, albeit with broad brush strokes rather than laser precision. The point is, this information can at least give you some idea as to whether or not your fear of poverty is realistic.
As for fear of conflict, fear of facing mortality and fear of losing control, this trio of concerns comes as a package deal. Conflict, or a difference of opinion, is a normal and natural part of life. Whether you sell and reinvent yourself or transfer ownership of your business to the upcoming generation, differences of opinion will surface. The more family members you have, the more differences of opinion there will likely be. However, burying your head in the sand and avoiding the sell-or-transfer question won’t eliminate conflict over your decision. It will simply defer the decision until you die. Given that the likelihood of mortality isn’t open for debate, letting your fear of conflict prevent you from making a proactive decision about the future ownership of your business ironically means giving up control over one of the most important decisions you will ever have the opportunity to make. It’s a decision that impacts not only your legacy but also the personal lives and career choices of your key stakeholders, including family members and key management. So consider embracing and welcoming a lively and engaged discussion—it will be beneficial.
In the worst-case Ollie the Ostrich scenario, ignoring this question and the reality of the future health of your business, a sale can become a forced crisis-management decision. You’ve suddenly reached a point where you’ve done all you can do, the financial projections for the business haven’t been good for a long time, and the future of the industry hasn’t looked favorable for years. Your business needs another cash injection, and your banker, venture capital partner, loan shark, etc., are nowhere to be found. At this point, your options have run out, and your ability to negotiate a decent sales price or a refinancing is non-existent. This is the worst possible time to pull your head out of the sand, because the decision has already been made for you and it’s unlikely to be to your financial advantage. So, plan now rather than becoming an Ollie the Ostrich.
The Consider and Then Avoid
Approach
Most in the Consider and Then Avoid group recognize that change is inevitable and that the question of a change in ownership is central to their business’s future potential for success or failure. They indicate as much to those around them. Yet these individuals, often already swamped by the day-to-day operations of their business, soon discover that grappling with this topic will involve time and effort, uncertainty and unknowns, especially at the start. The work might even involve some delicate conversations with family members and key management. Without some understanding at the outset about how to proceed and what to expect, the process of transferring ownership to the upcoming generation can appear to hold more potential for pain than for gain. That makes avoiding pain preferable.
The business owner in the Consider and Then Avoid group is confusing to deal with. It is difficult and nerve-wracking for key stakeholders—such as long-term senior employees, family members active in the business and inactive family members in the upcoming generation—to adjust their personal plans around a business owner’s plans that keep changing. Hearing from the business owner one day that they are thinking of selling the business and the next that they plan to transfer ownership to the upcoming generation leaves everyone who will be affected by the final decision frustrated.
Remember that key management and family members are trying to figure out their own career and life plans. If the future ownership of the family business remains unclear, the best and brightest key stakeholders may well leave the business or abandon efforts to prepare themselves for joining it, preferring to align their talents and efforts with a future opportunity they can reasonably depend on. There is no point in key management remaining in place if their future livelihood is in question, or in a talented upcoming-generation family member studying and training to become the future CEO of the family business if it is going to be sold. In these scenarios, the business suffers, since it can be robbed of critical human and intellectual resources, which it relies on for success. A business like this can become fragile, dying a slow death.