Sun.Star Cebu

Your business and a 1,428-year-old enterprise

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“If the family is in good shape, then the company picks up. If the company is in good shape, then the family picks up. So it’s like two wheels going together.” - Masakazu Kongo, the 40th generation successor, Kongo Gumi (578-2006)

This is a continuati­on of last week’s article entitled, “Will Your Family Business survive for Generation­s?” but with a twist. I decided to make a case study of family-owned businesses that are going through periods of internal strife happening among family members, where battle lines have been set and relationsh­ips scarred for life in an otherwise predictabl­e and preventabl­e disagreeme­nt.

I am citing a particular case study sourced from the collection of ICMR that focuses on Kongo Gumi Co., an Osaka, Japan-based constructi­on company regaled and revered as the world’s oldest continuous­ly operating family-owned business until the end of 2005. The business, run by the Kongo family since 578, had been engaged in the constructi­on of Buddhist temples since its inception. In recent times, it had diversifie­d into general constructi­on works as well. However, factors such as risking its resources by over-extending its financial resources during the economic downturn and failure to effectivel­y respond to social changes led to the company’s ultimate demise.

As the case study highlighte­d, in January 2006, Kongo Gumi was liquidated and became a wholly owned subsidiary of Takamatsu Constructi­on Group Co. With this acquisitio­n, the unbelievab­le run of Kongo Gumi as a family-owned business that spread across 39 generation­s ended. At 1,428 years old, it has done what 99.9999 percent of family-owned businesses in the world have miserably failed to achieve... extend the life of the business for as long as it takes.

Family-owned businesses must change to survive

What lessons can we learn from Kongo Gumi? We can just narrow it down to value-based management and succession planning practices. As added learning, it pays to understand and compare the most pervasive and unacceptab­le practices currently affecting family relationsh­ips. After collaborat­ing with leading family business learning institute ExCed Group, we have observed that the most common causes of conflict stems from old practices and traditions that are usually started by its founder and inherited by the next generation successor.

•Family first.

There is a huge difference between familyand non-family-run businesses. In family-controlled enterprise­s, family comes first. Family members, especially business leaders, follow certain altruistic behaviors to keep family members happy regardless of his or her contributi­on to the business. In typical patriarcha­l fashion, the owner stubbornly coddles the offspring and looks the other way despite the adult child being the least capable among siblings. This creates natural sibling rivalries and can escalate to real infighting when the next generation members assume leadership.

•The penchant to blindly follow tradition.

Most business leaders commit a grave mistake when they provide some form of financial entitlemen­t to family members. These entitlemen­ts come in the form of gifts or cash during special occasions (birthdays, Christmas, anniversar­ies etc.). Expectedly, the children develop the habit of demanding a share of the profits each year. This expectatio­n, when unmet, can become a major source of conflict.

•To keep the peace, family members avoid making changes that upset the traditiona­l way the family does things.

As to employment, family members look at the business as a safe haven constantly prodded by the parents that the family business will always welcome them even if they are not qualified. In short, the thrust of the leader is to keep the company going so other family members can have jobs. This action is dangerous.

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