‘Forbidden issues can become highly-charged’

Posted by watchmen
July 17, 2018
Posted in OPINION

According to an online article culled from Business Harmonizer, “the natural mingling of personal and business interactions and decision-making in a family-owned business adds emotional complexity to every stage of the family-business life cycle. The communication and relationship dynamics between family members who are also co-workers or co-owners can result in unconscious or unspoken, often highly charged, emotional undercurrents that lead to conflict provoking behaviors.

One of the most common and pervasive causes of family tension that I have learned over my years as a Family Business consultant is that every family business has what is commonly referred to as an “elephant in the room.”

According to Wikipedia, an Elephant in the room is an “English-language metaphorical idiom that means that there is an obvious problem or risk that no one wants to discuss, or a condition that people do not want to talk about.” This has been a challenge for me coaching family businesses. They find merit in pursuing governance but when it’s time to talk about forbidden issues and I press them to let these “elephants” out of the room, they become uncomfortable and prefer to share the issues individually and in complete confidence.

For the sake of discussion, the word “elephant” suggests that the problem is so big and so heavy that no one wants to confront it or try to move it.

By virtue of its size, it takes up so much energy, time and productivity. The phrase “in the room” implies that the issue is large that no one can help but notice it. And since it is in the middle of the room, it means that family members have deliberately avoided and walked around it and worse, pretended it is not there rather than deal with it.

For family enterprises, the term refers to a question, problem or controversial issue that is obvious, but which is ignored by family members especially the business leader, generally because it causes embarrassment and may “rock the boat.”

Rocking the boat means stirring up trouble where none is welcome, disrupting things, promote disharmony, upset family members and cause disagreement.

There are qualitative truths that business leaders (usually patriarchs) must understand about elephants in the room:

  1. Ignoring the elephants in the family business does not make them go away. In fact, once they have found a home, they tend to stay for good
  2. Baby elephants tend to get bigger over time. Most of the time, the problem starts small and escalates into something weighty
  3. I am also highlighting the top “elephants” that must be addressed immediately lest setting them aside can cause disruption and will throw the family business off course creating unnecessary frayed nerves and strained relationships:
  4. A “Fredo” or a black sheep family member causing problems
  5. Sibling rivalry spilling over to power struggle
  6. Next generation sense of entitlement
  7. Patriarchal Shadow (refusing to hand over power to the next generation)
  8. Misaligned ownership
  9. A wide array of Conflict of interest and self-dealing among family members
  10. No succession plan in place
  11. No estate planning
  12. Having an elephant in the room is demotivating to the family and the business as well as to non-family members especially the professionals who will not hesitate to abandon ship when these issues are wantonly ignored by the patriarch
  13. If the elephant is not dealt with, the leader/patriarch is perceived as weak, ineffective, bias, and lacking in leadership skills

The consequences of ignoring “elephants” is extremely risky! And the “do nothing” attitude, aggravated by a procrastinating mindset among family members should never be an option! As a business leader and family member, it is important that you deal with these elephants with the help of experienced family business advisors before it’s too late.

Therefore, as the head, perhaps it is high time to ask yourself: Are you ignoring and tolerating “elephants” in your family business?/WDJ

 

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