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This book focuses on a central success factor for family
businesses: maintaining the decision-making ability over
generations while not jeopardizing the business due to family
conflict, inefficient governance structures, or lack of
identification. The authors identify that this is not as easy as
the endeavor to bring two social systems together with
contradicting logic (family and business) leads to many dangerous
pitfalls. This book presents outcomes of a unique research project
in which family managers of eleven of the oldest and largest German
family businesses, at least the fourth generation, met for more
than three years on a regular basis and presented the essence of
their family governance structures to each other and to the
authors. It was a joint "learning journey" that admits identifying
twelve core questions that these families had been answering to
keep up the relationship between family and business successfully
over generations. Obviously, there is no "right" answer to these
questions. The key to success is rather engaging the families in a
process to find out their own answers and make them aware of the
"two sides": being a family is different from being a business
family.
This book focuses on a central success factor for family
businesses: maintaining the decision-making ability over
generations while not jeopardizing the business due to family
conflict, inefficient governance structures, or lack of
identification. The authors identify that this is not as easy as
the endeavor to bring two social systems together with
contradicting logic (family and business) leads to many dangerous
pitfalls. This book presents outcomes of a unique research project
in which family managers of eleven of the oldest and largest German
family businesses, at least the fourth generation, met for more
than three years on a regular basis and presented the essence of
their family governance structures to each other and to the
authors. It was a joint "learning journey" that admits identifying
twelve core questions that these families had been answering to
keep up the relationship between family and business successfully
over generations. Obviously, there is no "right" answer to these
questions. The key to success is rather engaging the families in a
process to find out their own answers and make them aware of the
"two sides": being a family is different from being a business
family.
-Family businesses are the archetype of all business activities.
Since family businesses provide even today about 70 percent of all
jobs in Germany, most people know these structures from their own
experience," writes Jon Baumhauer, the chief executive of the
family holding of the Merck Group, in his Preface to this volume.
The special thing about family businesses is that the persons
involved are simultaneously members of family and firm. These two
systems overlap with their very different emotional and rational
logic, and sometimes put their decisionmakers in situations that
are impossible to solve and have the quality of true paradoxes.
This circumstance is a great challenge to both the family and the
company and sometimes exposes both to such unreasonable and
untenable demands.The goal of this volume is to illuminate the
interaction of family, shareholders and company from various
perspectives and to ask questions that can help the reader to
better understand the complexity with which the parties concerned
are confronted.
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