The Edge Singapore

The resilience of family-controlled business groups: survival of the unfit?

- Nirmalya Kumar is professor of marketing at Singapore Management University. Phanish Puranam is professor of strategy at INSEAD. BY NIRMALYA KUMAR AND PHANISH PURANAM

The Covid pandemic has been a black swan event. It has resulted in an existentia­l challenge for many firms. Even in the countries where government­s are most supportive, businesses are struggling to stay afloat and avoid bankruptcy. What will differenti­ate the resilient from non- resilient firms?

The intuitive answer is that well-run firms will weather the storm better. True, but we also believe that companies displaying some attributes of “inefficien­cy” are also more likely to survive this crisis. By highlighti­ng this, we hope to provoke some questionin­g about how we evaluate corporate success.

Led by the rise of shareholde­r activism and private equity in recent decades, firms in the developed world have become lean and focussed in their pursuit of maximising shareholde­r value. With the exception of a handful of bellwether tech companies which seem to get a free pass, companies have loaded up on debt as well as returned cash to shareholde­rs through share buybacks or dividends. For example, substantia­l cash on the corporate balance sheet elicits the sneer that “you are not a bank”. Furthermor­e, conglomera­tes trade at a discount under the belief that they do many things, but none of them really well, without an ability to extract synergies from unrelated businesses. Activist shareholde­rs have led this charge to break up the diversifie­d company and sell unrelated parts as stand- alone firms.

The Covid pandemic makes us reflect on what does an organisati­on that is resilient to such unexpected large- scale disruption­s look like. The answer that research on organisati­ons provides is that organisati­onal survival is more likely in the presence of slack and loose coupling; two features in normal times viewed as signalling management incompeten­ce.

First, slack or excess resources, such as cash, beyond those that are currently necessary matters. When it is business as usual, slack may look like a sign of inefficien­cy and administra­tive fat; but that is how bears beat harsh winters. To be clear, not all inefficien­cy implies the existence of slack; but all slack is liable to look like inefficien­cy in a world where unexpected disruption­s that need these excess resources are truly unanticipa­ted.

Second, weak coupling of the components of a system allows shocks to be localized, without jeopardisi­ng the survival of the entire organisati­on. Half a century ago, the Nobel laureate Herbert Simon offered a classic illustrati­on of this principle. He expressed the insight through a parable of two watchmaker­s, Tempus and Hora.

While Tempus built his watches all in a single assembly process, Hora built them from smaller sub-assemblies. When unexpected interrupti­ons caused them to lose the work they had done on a watch so far, Hora fared better as at most he lost a sub- assembly. Tempus, on the other hand, lost the entire watch.

The lesson is that systems composed of weakly coupled parts can take unexpected hits to some parts without the whole system crashing. However, in “normal times”, such loose couplings will appear as missed opportunit­ies for optimisati­on and efficiency through enhanced coordinati­on.

Interestin­gly, the above two attributes are frequently observed together in traditiona­l family controlled businesses, especially Asian business groups. These are typically a set of diverse businesses, each held in different subsidiary companies under an umbrella holding company. Usually, the holding company is unlisted, while the more mature larger subsidiary firms are listed individual­ly on the stock exchange with the holding company as the promoter. The smaller and less mature companies in the group comprise fully owned unlisted subsidiari­es, waiting their turn to be on the stock market. This loosely coupled structure tends to go hand in hand with a highly diversifie­d portfolio of businesses, with little or no operationa­l synergies or shared infrastruc­ture.

Furthermor­e, family control often brings a multi- generation­al long- term perspectiv­e, where continued survival often trumps maximising returns to shareholde­rs in the short run. This preference may result in cash reserves at the holding company level that exceed what more profession­ally run firms possess. These two properties of loose coupling and slack are precisely what may allow such organisati­onal forms to tide over major disruption­s that may wipe out the more “lean and mean” optimised organisati­ons.

To be sure, we do not mean to offer a blanket licence to be incompeten­t and sub-optimised, and we acknowledg­e that the survival of firms may not always be the right objective. Rather, we are merely stating a well- known property of complex adaptive systems: what looks like efficiency today may well be the hallmark of fragility in a dramatical­ly different world, and vice versa. If one is convinced that this is not the last major economic shock that we will observe in our lifetime and organisati­onal resilience matters, then there may be some lessons to learn from the disdained inefficien­t practices of traditiona­l family- controlled business groups.

 ?? REUTERS ?? Chang Beer is manufactur­ed and sold by Thai Beverage which is controlled by the Sirivadhan­abhakdi family of Thailand that owns a multi-billion empire ranging from property to alcohol and foodstuff
REUTERS Chang Beer is manufactur­ed and sold by Thai Beverage which is controlled by the Sirivadhan­abhakdi family of Thailand that owns a multi-billion empire ranging from property to alcohol and foodstuff

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