Baltimore Sun

Biz owners mentor next generation

For proprietor­s of small firms, Plan B is training their kid

- By Joyce M. Rosenberg

NEW YORK — The plan was for Greg Goodman to sell his auto supply store and retire about the time he turned 60. Then his son Chandler decided to join and eventually take over the family business instead of becoming an architect.

Goodman, now 54, is focusing on building his Alta Mere franchise in Oklahoma City rather than getting it ready for sale. He’s also mentoring his son, although Chandler won’t graduate from college for another two years.

“I make sure he’s involved in every aspect of this business moving forward,” Greg Goodman says. “I let him in on everything and every decision I make.”

As small business owners contemplat­e retirement, many are thrilled to have the chance to teach their children or other relatives how to run their companies. There’s plenty of opportunit­y for that to happen — the government estimates that nearly a fifth of U.S. compa- Greg Goodman, right, is training his son Chandler to take over the family auto supply store in Oklahoma City. nies are family owned.

But owners looking to pass a company to their children or other younger relatives find themselves doing much more intensive training, including their heirs apparent in key decisions and entrusting them with major projects.

The savviest owners learn some things themselves — they listen to and embrace the different ideas and perspectiv­es their children bring.

Sometimes members of the next generation already have a business background and need to adapt what they know to the specifics of the family company.

Alison Tocci, 61, has been working with her nephew, Bryan Sawyer, so he’ll be ready to take over the family Bull Run restaurant when she retires. Sawyer left his job at an accounting firm in 2010 to help Tocci turn around the then-struggling restaurant in Shirley, Mass., that she had recently bought from a relative.

Bull Run, founded in 1946 by Tocci’s father, has quadrupled its revenue since she took it over, and she wants Sawyer to keep it on its trajectory. So while he takes part in day-to-day operations and weekly meetings, Tocci stresses to him that informal meetings with employees, other restaurate­urs, consultant­s and others can help with innovation.

“The most important lesson to transfer to the third generation is to not get stuck in the ‘This is the way we’ve always done it’ mode,” Tocci says.

In a successful transition from one generation to the next, a parent treats a child as they would any new hire, says David Lassman, a management professor at Carnegie Mellon University’s Heinz College.

“If you bring someone in from the outside, you’d say, ‘Here’s our business, what are our challenges, where should we go?’ ” Lassman says.

He also suggests that owners who tend to be domineerin­g in family situations tone that down, or their children won’t be able to think for themselves or take risks as business owners

successful transition can require an owner to let the child make significan­t changes to the company’s business model, even selling off parts of it, says Lauri Union, a professor of entreprene­urship at Babson College. While products, services or whole divisions may go, what does remain is what Union calls the family’s entreprene­urial legacy.

Union says parents need to, as she puts it, “let go.”

“There is a process for letting go — doing it too quickly can be as bad as doing it too slowly or not at all — and that process varies from family to family and business to business,” she says.

Rita Tabatchnic­k expects her son Jason to be more than her shadow or stand-in as he becomes increasing­ly involved in the family’s soup business, Tabatchnic­k Fine Foods. She is looking for him to put his own imprint on the business.

“The new generation comes up with new desires, new foods, new technology, and you have to listen to their ideas,” says Tabatchnic­k, 63, who plans to retire within the next 10 years.

Jason, who began working at the company when he was 13, is on the board and participat­es in Rita’s meetings, key phone calls and negotiatio­ns. When the company’s Somerset, N.J., factory needed extensive renovation­s last year, Jason evaluated contractor­s’ bids. When his mother had surgery recently, he took on some of her responsibi­lities.

Ultimately, though, owners and their children also need to be prepared for the possibilit­y that the planned handoff might not work out, Union says. Children need to have the room to say, “I don’t know if this is going to work for me. I may need an off-ramp,” Union says. If the son or daughter takes over a company and is unmotivate­d, it can be hard for the business to survive.

Kathleen Kuhn is realistic about the possibilit­y that her son Ryan might decide against taking over her HouseMaste­r inspection company. Ryan is doing home inspection­s, getting hands-on experience, and “little by little we’re exposing him to things,” says Kuhn, 57.

But while Ryan approached Kuhn and said he wanted to join the Bridgewate­r, N.J.-based business that Kuhn’s father started 30 years ago, he also thinks about moving out of the area.

“As a second-generation business owner, I never wanted to force my children to choose this path. They need to want it for themselves,” Kuhn says.

 ?? SUE OGROCKI/AP ??
SUE OGROCKI/AP

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